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Ayesha Curry reveals unnerving fan interaction in new 'Red Table Talk' interview with Jada Pinkett Smith
SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- Ayesha Curry, celebrity chef and wife to Golden State Warriorsstar Stephen Curry, is opening up about a disturbing fan interaction.
In a new episode of Jada Pinkett Smith's Facebook talk show, "Red Table Talk," Curry says the incident happened years ago when her daughter Riley was an infant. She says she was breastfeeding in the car when a group of Warriors fans came to ask her husband for photos and autographs.
"The woman opens the car door, sticks her body in the car and she is like, 'Oh, let me see,'" Ayesha said.
When she asked for privacy, the woman reportedly replied, "Oh honey, you know what you signed up for."
Ayesha also revealed how she feels about something every athlete's significant other deals with: groupies.
"Stephen is very nice by nature, and he's very talkative," she said. "Everything's very friendly and sometimes to the point where I'm like, okay I'm a grown woman. So I just insert myself and be like 'Hello, how are you doing?'"
Ayesha also admitted those same groupies sometimes make her feel insecure, something Pinkett Smith admitted as well.
In a new episode of Jada Pinkett Smith's Facebook talk show, "Red Table Talk," Curry says the incident happened years ago when her daughter Riley was an infant. She says she was breastfeeding in the car when a group of Warriors fans came to ask her husband for photos and autographs.
"The woman opens the car door, sticks her body in the car and she is like, 'Oh, let me see,'" Ayesha said.
When she asked for privacy, the woman reportedly replied, "Oh honey, you know what you signed up for."
Ayesha also revealed how she feels about something every athlete's significant other deals with: groupies.
"Stephen is very nice by nature, and he's very talkative," she said. "Everything's very friendly and sometimes to the point where I'm like, okay I'm a grown woman. So I just insert myself and be like 'Hello, how are you doing?'"
Ayesha also admitted those same groupies sometimes make her feel insecure, something Pinkett Smith admitted as well.
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Tyra Banks makes her return to modeling with third Sports Illustrated Swimsuit cover
Tyra Banks made a huge return to modeling to grace the cover of Sports Illustrated Swimsuit for the third time. The 45-year-old model and mogul made history in 1997 as the first black woman to get her own solo cover for the publication's annual swimsuit edition.
The theme for the issue is "Shattering Perceptions." For the cover photo, Banks sported a yellow Andi Bagus bikini and her signature smize in Great Exuma, Bahamas, photographed by Laretta Houston.
"This is for everybody that has been told that they are not good enough because of their body, their age, their everything," Banks wrote on Twitter. "#BanX is here to tell you that you ARE friggin' fierce no matter what anybody says!"
Banks first appeared on the pages of the magazine in 1993. She landed the cover in 1996 alongside fellow model Valeria Mazza, and returned a year later for her history-making solo cover. She paid homage to that iconic shot in another photo for the 2019 spread — bringing back the red polka dot bikini.
Since Tyra's first cover in 1996, she's transformed herself into nothing less than a mogul, a cultural force and a supernova of inspiration and empowerment," said SI Swimsuit editor MJ Day. "She's kind of the Swimsuit Issue ethos come to life, everything we know this franchise can be."
Banks retired from modeling in 2005, after walking in her final Victoria's Secret Fashion Show. She's since turned herself into a media mogul, creating the long-running reality television series "America's Next Top Model," hosting her talk show, "The Tyra Banks Show," writing a young adult novel called "Modelland" and founding her cosmetics company, "Tyra Beauty." She had a son, named York Banks Asla, with photographer Erik Asla in 2016.
In addition to Banks' cover, soccer star and Olympic gold medalist Alex Morgan and model search winner Camille Kostek also landed solo S.I. Swimsuit covers this year. "The three women that make up the covers of the 2019 Sports Illustrated Swimsuit issue represent the brand in the most powerful way possible," Day said. "While each individual woman is so unique, they come together cohesively to tell a spectacular story."
Lucas Moura, Pochettino and Tottenham's "gift from god"
Tottenham's miraculous second-leg recovery against Ajax was, according to second-half hat-trick scorer Lucas Moura, a "big gift from god". Yet unwavering belief has been a constant in the club's journey to a first UEFA Champions League final.
Even so, for all his pre-match talk about belief and after all his players have been through this season, Spurs boss Mauricio Pochettino must – perhaps somewhere in the deepest recesses of his soul – have been doubting whether his side could really pull off this spectacular heist when Moussa Sissoko sent his Hail Mary pass high into the Amsterdam night.
Jan Vertonghen's crossbar-bound effort notwithstanding, an Ajax side fuelled by their own sense of destiny had been successfully repelling Tottenham's late advances and were closing in on a first final in over 20 years. Yet Moura's intervention, which plenty of Spurs fans will no doubt suggest was divine, means that it is Tottenham who will be in Madrid on 1 June.
The Spanish capital seemed a long way away on the club's last visit to the Netherlands – a 2-2 draw with Ajax's Eredivisie title rivals PSV Eindhoven in late October. After that result, Pochettino conceded that his side's hopes were "nearly over" and that there was "minimum possibility" of progression.
Minimum possibility, though, is not quite the same as elimination. In some ways this Amsterdam turnaround was in keeping with Tottenham's continental campaign, which has been chock-full of late drama, fuelled by a singularity of purpose.
Harry Kane scored an 89th-minute winner against PSV in London whileChristian Eriksen left it to until the 80th minute to strike against Internazionale. Moura has previous, too: he converted with five minutes to spare in Barcelona in the final round of group games.
This trumped the lot, though; surely the greatest night in Tottenham's modern history. "Thank you, football, thank you to my players," an emotional Pochettino said. "I have a group of players who are heroes. The second half was amazing. It is impossible to live this type of emotion without football. Thank you to everyone who has believed in us. To describe this in words is difficult."
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Tottenham stuns Ajax to make Champions League final B
Lucas Moura scored a dramatic last-minute winner to send Tottenham Hotspur into the Champions League final for the first time in its history after an astonishing comeback against Ajax in Amsterdam.
Trailing 2-0 at the interval and 3-0 overall, Moura scored three times in the second half, including a last-gasp winner, to set up an all-English final against Liverpool in Madrid next month.
"It's impossible to explain what I'm feeling," Brazilian Moura told BT Sport after the game on Wednesday.
"We gave everything on the pitch and deserved this moment -- we are family.
"Football is amazing, its gives us moments like this. We cannot imagine. It's the best moment in my life, and in my career."
Such a scoreline seemed unfathomable when Ajax moved two goals ahead on the night inside the opening 35 minutes courtesy of Matthijs de Ligt's header and Hakim Ziyech's fine strike.
But Tottenham roared back after the interval with Moura scoring twice in four minutes to drag his side level on the night as Ajax began to wilt under constant waves of pressure.
And as the game moved into the final minute of stoppage time, Moura produced another moment of magic to send Tottenham through and leave this young Ajax side stunned.
But it was not just Dutch faces with tears streaming down their faces. Mauricio Pochettino, the Tottenham coach, cried with the sheer emotion of the achievement clearly too much for him to handle.
Wiping away the tears, Pochettino paid tribute to his players after their remarkable second-half showing.
"Thank you football," he told BT Sport. "My players are heroes. I'm so emotional now. It's an amazing moment, it's difficult to describe in words.
"When you work, when you feel the love, it's not a stress. It's a passion and we showed that passion."
Lightning strikes twice
For the second night in succession, football's ability to constantly shock and surprise came to the fore.
Even after the events at Anfield 24 hours earlier, where Liverpool had fought back from a three-goal first leg deficit to overcome Barcelona by winning 4-0 on the night, 4-3 on aggregate, few believed Tottenham could achieve similar feats especially after a nightmare opening period.
For Ajax, this will be a night that will live long in the memory, the night it somehow contrived to throw away the opportunity of a first Champions League final since 1996.
Quite how it managed to fritter away a two-goal lead on the night and a three-goal advantage overall will no doubt be discussed until the early morning across the bars of Amsterdam.
For 45 minutes at least, this was Ajax's opportunity. This team of young players had already surpassed all expectations in defeating Real Madrid and Juventus on its way to the last four of the competition.
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