Chrissy Teigen sees a lot of John Legend in their daughter Luna Simone.
The 31-year-old Lip Sync Battle cohost and cookbook author shared a throwback photo of baby Legend (alongside his mother Phyllis Stephens, father Ronald Stephens and older brother Ronald Stephens II) on Instagram Friday, comparing her husband to their 1-year-old daughter in the post’s caption.
“Baby John = baby Luna,” she wrote.
It’s clear what she means, as baby John bears a striking resemblance to baby Luna.
Want all the latest pregnancy and birth announcements, plus celebrity mom blogs? Click here to get those and more in the People Babies newsletter.
The 31-year-old Lip Sync Battle cohost and cookbook author shared a throwback photo of baby Legend (alongside his mother Phyllis Stephens, father Ronald Stephens and older brother Ronald Stephens II) on Instagram Friday, comparing her husband to their 1-year-old daughter in the post’s caption.
“Baby John = baby Luna,” she wrote.
It’s clear what she means, as baby John bears a striking resemblance to baby Luna.
Want all the latest pregnancy and birth announcements, plus celebrity mom blogs? Click here to get those and more in the People Babies newsletter.
- 10/7/2017
- by Dave Quinn
- PEOPLE.com
It's the invisible car one! We look back at Pierce Brosnan's final outing as James Bond - it's Die Another Day...
Practically a curse for some this one, and now a contender for Worst Bond Ever. This is a bit harsh: Die Another Day doesn’t deserve the opprobrium heaped upon it. Not to say it’s good; just not utterly irredeemable. Perhaps its greatest problem is tonal. For a while it seems we might get the hard-hitting Bond that Pierce Brosnan so deserved; then suddenly we’re in an ice palace and Bond’s borrowed a car from Harry Potter. The second half of the film is utterly ludicrous but fun if you go along for the (invisible) ride; alas, the first half promised something far more intriguing. It wouldn’t be completely accurate to say it begins as Licence To Kill and ends as Moonraker; but nor is it totally unfair.
Practically a curse for some this one, and now a contender for Worst Bond Ever. This is a bit harsh: Die Another Day doesn’t deserve the opprobrium heaped upon it. Not to say it’s good; just not utterly irredeemable. Perhaps its greatest problem is tonal. For a while it seems we might get the hard-hitting Bond that Pierce Brosnan so deserved; then suddenly we’re in an ice palace and Bond’s borrowed a car from Harry Potter. The second half of the film is utterly ludicrous but fun if you go along for the (invisible) ride; alas, the first half promised something far more intriguing. It wouldn’t be completely accurate to say it begins as Licence To Kill and ends as Moonraker; but nor is it totally unfair.
- 10/3/2015
- by simonbrew
- Den of Geek
News Louisa Mellor 28 Jul 2013 - 19:19
So confident in Michael Bays new pirate show is Starz, it's ordered a second season before the first one has even aired...
In the being-confident-in-things-charts, this is more or less in the 'bringing a personalised desk tidy to a job interview/a toothbrush on a first date' range. The public hasn't yet seen a single episode of Michael Bay's Black Sails, but nonetheless, Starz has already okayed a second season.
Promising to present a grittier, sexed-up version of the Pirates of the Caribbean crews, Black Sails is a prequel to Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island, telling the story of Tony Stephens' Captain Flint and his meeting with Luke Arnold's John Silver (not yet bearer of the prefix, Long).
There are also rival captains, hot smuggler women, a tortured prostitute (fun) and more cannonballs than you could swash a buckle at.
So confident in Michael Bays new pirate show is Starz, it's ordered a second season before the first one has even aired...
In the being-confident-in-things-charts, this is more or less in the 'bringing a personalised desk tidy to a job interview/a toothbrush on a first date' range. The public hasn't yet seen a single episode of Michael Bay's Black Sails, but nonetheless, Starz has already okayed a second season.
Promising to present a grittier, sexed-up version of the Pirates of the Caribbean crews, Black Sails is a prequel to Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island, telling the story of Tony Stephens' Captain Flint and his meeting with Luke Arnold's John Silver (not yet bearer of the prefix, Long).
There are also rival captains, hot smuggler women, a tortured prostitute (fun) and more cannonballs than you could swash a buckle at.
- 7/29/2013
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
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