Woman allegedly throws substance on former Fleetwood Mac member: Sources

A woman who has allegedly been stalking former Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham is believed to have thrown an unknown substance on the singer-guitarist before running off, sources told ABC News.

ABC News

The incident unfolded on Wednesday as Buckingham arrived at an appointment in Santa Monica, California, sources told ABC News.

While Santa Monica police are not commenting, sources said the woman is known to law enforcement from previous incidents.

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Jim Bennett/Getty Images, FILE - PHOTO: In this April 10, 2022, file photo, singer, songwriter and producer Lindsey Buckingham performs live on stage at the Neptune Theatre in Seattle.

The Los Angeles Police Department's Threat Management Unit is taking the lead on the case. The LAPD said in a statement, "To protect the integrity of the open and ongoing investigation, no further comment will be provided, at this time."

Buckingham joined Fleetwood Mac with his then-girlfriendStevie Nicksin 1975, and the couple became part of Fleetwood's best-known lineup, along with bassist John McVie and singer-keyboardist Christine McVie. Buckingham was a member of the group from 1975 to 1987 and from 1996 to 2018.

ABC News' Matthew Friedlander contributed to this report.

Woman allegedly throws substance on former Fleetwood Mac member: Sources

A woman who has allegedly been stalking former Fleetwood Mac member Lindsey Buckingham is believed to have thrown an unk...
Courtney Love Recalls Visit with 'Repulsive' Marlon Brando, Who She Thought for Years Was Her Grandfather

Courtney Love believed Marlon Brando might be her grandfather due to his alleged relationship with her grandmother Paula Fox

People Courtney Love on The Magnificent Others; Marlon BrandoCredit: The Magnificent Others with Billy Corgan/YouTube; Screen Archives/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Love met Brando through Warren Beatty but found him "super repulsive"

  • Paula Fox, Love's biological grandmother, gave up Love's mother for adoption

Courtney Lovethought for years thatMarlon Brandomight be her grandfather — and even though she's now certain he's not, she's opening up about their unimpressive meeting.

The Hole frontwoman, 61, said on Billy Corgan'sThe Magnificent Otherspodcast on Wednesday, April 1 that she long believed the legendary actor to be her grandfather, as he'd allegedly slept with her grandma, the novelist Paula Fox.

"When I met him, I thought he was super repulsive and that tracked. I was like, 'Oh, I must be related to this guy,'" she told Corgan.

Love said she was friendly with Brando's neighborWarren Beatty, and eventually "lobbied him" to facilitate a meeting between the two.

"'I just want to meet him. I don't want anything from Marlon Brando,'" she recalled telling Beatty. "And then Warren, he said, 'Marlon wants a note from you.' So I wrote him a note. 'I don't want anything from you.'"

At one point, after giving the Oscar winner her "word" that she had no ulterior motives, she used Brando's bathroom and eyed his toothbrush, knowing she could easily swipe it and use his DNA to uncover the truth about her lineage.

"Nah. Like, nah. Maybe I'm too much of a feminist, but I was like, 'I don't need your last name.' That's how I felt," she said. "Also, I gave my word. But I'm glad I didn't because it turned out he wasn't even my grandfather, so there's the comedy there."

Love did not identify her actual grandfather, but noted he was a very tall man.

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Both Fox, who died in 2017 at age 93, and Brando lived with noted acting teacher Stella Adler in the early 1940s, when Fox conceived Love's mother, Linda Carroll.

Courtney Love in Paris in January 2023.Credit: Arnold Jerocki/Getty

She later gave Carroll, now 81, up for adoption, and Love only learned in adulthood that Fox was her biological grandmother.

The two met just once, and the meeting was a volatile one.

"She's awful, she's awful. She's terrible!" Fox said of Love inThe Observerin 2013. "I met with her for an hour, and the hour was like an hour in the devil's pocket, for both of us… I don't want to be mean."

The singer, meanwhile, called Fox's "absolute dislike" of her "shocking and inexplicable."

Still, Love quipped to the outlet that "if you look at me before my first nose job, I kind of look like Marlon Brando."

Brando was the father of at least 11 children. He died in 2004 at 80 years old.

Read the original article onPeople

Courtney Love Recalls Visit with 'Repulsive' Marlon Brando, Who She Thought for Years Was Her Grandfather

Courtney Love believed Marlon Brando might be her grandfather due to his alleged relationship with her grandmother Paula...
Trump uses Iran war address to urge an increasingly skeptical electorate to give him a bit more time

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumpused hisfirst major addresssince launching hiswar in Iranto assure Americans that all of his military objectives will be completed "shortly" and urge an increasingly skeptical electorate to give him a little bit more time.

Associated Press President Donald Trump speaks about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) President Donald Trump arrives from the Blue Room to speak about the Iran war from the Cross Hall of the White House on Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, Pool) President Donald Trump is seen speaking about the Iran war on a television screen in the James Brady Press Briefing Room of the White House, Wednesday, April 1, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree Nikhinson)

Trump Iran US

Trump in hisWednesday evening speechdialed back the bluster that's dominated his rhetoric in recent days as world markets convulse and a badly battered Iran is still landing some effective blows on Gulf neighbors' infrastructure and U.S. bases.

But the Republican president's promise to "finish the job" hardly built confidence with a jittery market asoil prices surged and Asian stocks fellas he vowed that the U.S. will continue to hit Iran very hard.

He offered no detail about the state of negotiations with Iran that could bring about a promised endgame that he insists could come in a matter of weeks. There was also no overtlashing out at NATO alliesfor failing to fall in line and help him reopen the critical Strait of Hormuz waterway — something White House officials had said would be a prominent part of his roughly 20-minute address.

The U.S. will continue to hit Iran hard for the next two or three weeks, he said, without saying how much longer the war would last. But he offered a plea to Americans to show a little patience.

"We are in this military operation, so powerful, so brilliant, against one of the most powerful countries for 32 days, and the country has been eviscerated and essentially is really no longer a threat," Trump said. "This is a true investment in your children and your grandchildren's future. The whole world is watching, and they can't believe the power, strength and brilliance."

But Trump finds himself not only negotiating with an enemy that refuses to throw in the towel but also dealing with an American tolerance for a conflict that's being stretched.

Most Americans believe recentU.S. military action against Iranhas gone too far, and many are worried about affording gasoline, according to an AP-NORC poll conducted in mid-March, a couple of weeks after the war started. While Trump isdeploying more warships and troopsto the Middle East, about 59% of Americans say U.S. military action in Iran has been excessive.

Meanwhile, 45% are "extremely" or "very" concerned about being able to afford gas in the next few months, up from 30% inan AP-NORC pollconducted shortly after Trump won reelection withpromises that he would improve the economyand lower the cost of living.

Americans, Trump noted, have certainly shown patience during times of war.

"American involvement in World War I," he said, "lasted one year, seven months and five days. World War II lasted for three years, eight months and 25 days. The Korean War lasted for three years, one month and two days. The Vietnam War lasted for 19 years, five months and 29 days. Iraq went on for eight years, eight months and 28 days."

Hours before his address, Trump seemed to reflect on the domestic pressure he's feeling to wrap up the war.

Speaking at a private lunchat the White House to mark Easter, Trump argued that the U.S. could "very easily" use this moment to take Iran's oil. It is "unfortunate," he lamented, that there did not seem to be patience among the American people for such an effort.

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"They want to see it end," he said. He added, "People in the country sort of say, 'Just win. You're winning so big. Just win. Come home.' And I'm OK with that, too."

Democrats lash at Trump for failing to offer a coherent argument for conflict

Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., said Trump's speech was "grounded in a reality that only exists in Donald Trump's mind."

The president, Democrats fumed, offered no plan for how he would go about reopening Hormuz, the critical waterway for oil tankers that a battered Iran has effectively choked off even though Trump claims it's been defeated.

For allies worried about a global economy that's been rattled by rising oil prices, Trump suggested they "buy oil from the United States of America" and "build up some delayed courage" and help the U.S. secure the strait. Trump made no attempt to answer his European critics who say he entered hiswar of choice against Iranwithout consulting global allies but is now expecting the world to help himfix the unintended damagethat it has caused.

"We are losing this war," Murphy added. "We cannot destroy all their missiles or drones, nor their nuclear program. Iran projects more power in the region than they did before the war, especially if they now permanently control the Strait of Hormuz. We are spending billions we don't have and losing American lives in a war that is destabilizing the world and making us look feckless."

President steers clear of suggesting ground troops deployment could be coming

Trump offered cautious optimism that those now in power in Iran after more than a month of U.S. and Israeli strikes are "less radical and much more reasonable" with much of the pre-war Islamic Republic's hierarchy taken out. He didn't explicitly mention a Monday deadline he has set for Iran to open the strait or face attacks from U.S. forces on its energy infrastructure, though he made clear that he remains open to targeting the heartbeat of Tehran's economy.

"If there is no deal, we are going to hit each and every one of their electric generating plants very hard and probably simultaneously," Trump said. "We have not hit their oil, even though that's the easiest target of all, because it would not give them even a small chance of survival or rebuilding. But we could hit it, and it would be gone."

Trump also notably did not signal that he's making any preparation for a ground invasion by American troops.

He seemed to steer away from the possibility of sending ground troops to secure Iran's nearly 1,000 pounds (450 kilograms) ofhighly enriched uranium, saying it "would take months" for Iran to get to it as it's buried under the rubble created by last year's American bombing campaign of Iran's nuclear sites.

Trump has offeredshifting reasonsfor launching the war, but he has been consistent in articulating that a primary objective in joining Israel in the military action is ensuring that Iran will"never have a nuclear weapon."

But over the course of the conflict, he has been more circumspect about how far he's willing to go to follow through on his pledge to destroy Iran's weapons program once and for all, including seizing or destroying the near-bomb-grade nuclear material that Iran possesses.

"We have it under intense satellite surveillance and control," Trump said in his prime-time speech. "If we see them make a move, even a move for it, we'll hit them with missiles very hard again. We have all the cards. They have none."

Associated Press writers Collin Binkley, Michelle L. Price and Konstantin Toropin contributed to this report.

Trump uses Iran war address to urge an increasingly skeptical electorate to give him a bit more time

WASHINGTON (AP) —President Donald Trumpused hisfirst major addresssince launching hiswar in Iranto assure Americans that...
Check the space toilets

Welcome to the Daily Briefing. Start the morning with these reads:

USA TODAY

Nicole Fallerthere.Just did some pilates. Thursday's news includes an update on the Artemis II mission, takeaways from a presidential address last night and one mother's journey to have her symptoms be acknowledged.

Astronauts are off to the moon!

NASA'sArtemis II missionis on the way to the moon Thursday, when crewwill be in a high Earth orbitand conduct systems checks, such as testing the Orion capsule's life support, propulsion, navigation and communications systems to ensure the spacecraft is ready to travel deeper into space. And yes,they'll make sure the space toilets work.

It's a historic moment:The Artemis II mission comes more than50 years after humanity last left Earth's orbit. The four astronautswon't land on the moon, but they'll complete essential steps for moonwalks to come.

"We are going for all humanity," astronaut Jeremy Hansen saidseconds before lifting offon at 6:35 p.m. ET on April 1 from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

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For my fellow space nerds:Check out Artemis II'scute mascotand follow the mission withonline Artemis II tracker.

More news to know now

Supreme Court

SCOTUS debates Trump's birthright citizenship policy

A demonstrator outside the US Supreme Court as the court hears Trump v. Barbara in Washington, DC, on April 1, 2026.

Demonstratorsrallied outside the Supreme Courton Wednesday asjustices debateda lower court's rejection ofTrump's argumentthat children of parents who are in the country illegally or temporarily are notentitled to citizenship. While not issuing a quick rejection, key conservative justicesseemed skeptical of the administration's argumentsfor its legality.

Health & Wellness

Doctors blamed her symptoms on motherhood. She actually had mold illness.

In 2018, pregnant with her third child, Kate Ames was exhausted. Her OB/GYN told it was normal mom fatigue and suggested therapy. Years later, when doctors and air quality experts found her symptoms were caused by undiscovered mold in her home, her relief turned to anger.Why hadn't they listened to her in the first place?

Before you go

Have feedback on the Daily Briefing? Shoot Nicole an email at NFallert@usatoday.com.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Top US news today: Latest on Iran, Artemis II in the Daily Briefing

Check the space toilets

Welcome to the Daily Briefing. Start the morning with these reads: A deal was reached to end the Homeland Se...
Lili Reinhart Defends Director Who Told Her to 'Suck In Stomach'

Lili Reinhart's stomach comment has caught everyone's attention. During a candid conversation with her "Forbidden Fruits" cast, the actress revealed that once a director told her to "suck in your stomach." While this revelation triggered her co-stars, she seemingly defended the filmmaker, claiming he might be thinking professionally. However, the "Riverdale" alum later agreed with her girlfriends — Lola Tung, Victoria Pedretti, and Alexandra Shipp.

Lili Reinhart says his intentions were not bad

Lili Reinhart defended a director's comment on Cosmopolitan's "Group Therapy Couch." She appeared on the candid talk show with her "Forbidden Fruits" cast, including Lola Tung, Victoria Pedretti, and Alexandra Shipp. Each of them took turns sitting on the couch and answering their co-stars' questions.

When it was Reinhart's turn, her question was: "What is one acting note that you took personally?" Rolling her eyes, the 29-year-old revealed, "When I had a male director come up to me, and silently lean over and go, 'just suck in your stomach a little." Her answer left the other actresses in shock, and they gasped in surprise.

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The girl gang immediately came to Reinhart's support, pushing her to "say the name" of the director. While the "Chemical Hearts" star promised to reveal it later, her co-stars appeared to be triggered and angry on her behalf. Seeing their reaction, she tried to calm the situation down by defending the filmmaker.

Reinhart said, "You know, weirdly, I don't think his intentions were bad. But I genuinely think he didn't want me to look at the footage later and be like, 'Oh, someone maybe should have told me it was unflattering." Meanwhile, Tung, Pedretti, and Shipp intervened and made her understand that it was not appropriate for the director to make such a comment.

The girls cheered her on, saying that Reinhart doesn't have an unflattering angle. Moreover, Shipp corrected the "Swim" MV star that it was the director's job to shoot a "flattering" angle.

The postLili Reinhart Defends Director Who Told Her to 'Suck In Stomach'appeared first onReality Tea.

Lili Reinhart Defends Director Who Told Her to ‘Suck In Stomach’

Lili Reinhart's stomach comment has caught everyone's attention. During a candid conversation with her "Forbidden Fruits...

 

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