Zoe surpasses JohanssonActor and writer Colin Jost joked on Saturday Night Live about his wife Scarlett Johansson being overtaken by Zoe Saldana as Hollywood’s highest-grossing actor. Reacting to a graphic comparing their box-office totals, Jost quipped that Johansson’s earnings would drop if his own films were included, drawing laughs from the audience. Saldana’s record is driven largely by the success of James Cameron’s Avatar franchise, with her films grossing about USD 16.8 billion worldwide. Johansson previously held the top spot.Collins claps back at rumoursCountry singer Karley Scott Collins has firmly denied rumours linking her romantically to Keith Urban following his divorce from Nicole Kidman. The 26-year-old artist called reports claiming she was dating and living with Urban “absolutely ridiculous and untrue” on Instagram. The speculation arose after Collins opened for Urban on his 2025 tour and shortly after Urban and Kidman finalised their divorce. The former couple agreed to amicable co-parenting of daughters Sunday and Faith, prioritising a supportive, respectful family environment.”Don’t ask me about the raft, people!”Legendary filmmaker James Cameron has once again addressed the decades-old debate surrounding the ending of Titanic, making it clear that he is exhausted by questions over whether Leonardo DiCaprio’s character, Jack Dawson, could have survived by sharing the floating raft with Kate Winslet’s Rose. “Don’t ask me about the raft, people!” Cameron, 71, said bluntly. Despite his exasperation, Cameron revealed that experiments were conducted to assess whether both characters could have lived. “Look, we even went to the lengths of doing an experiment to see if Jack could have in any way survived.” Experiments were conducted to test survival possibilities, but conditions in 1912 made it impossible. He emphasised that Jack lacked the scientific knowledge needed to endure hypothermia, making survival unrealistic. Cameron, the first director with four films crossing USD 1 billion globally, also noted the massive success of the Avatar franchise.Breaking the good-man imageSharad Kelkar, long known as Indian TV and OTT’s dependable “good man,” stunned audiences with his Netflix crime drama Taskaree. Playing a ruthless mastermind in a smuggling syndicate, Kelkar deliberately broke from his wholesome image, creating shock and discomfort by design. He embraced his established reputation, letting the audience’s emotional expectations amplify the impact. Kelkar acknowledged that his background played a key role in how the character is being received, “Television creates long-term intimacy. People feel they know you for years, almost decades. When you enter a morally dark space after that, the reaction is stronger. I was very conscious of using that history rather than fighting it and that’s exactly why I enjoyed the role far more. No one could think of me as the bad guy and I love that for this role!”


