Scarlett Johansson and Jack Antonoff's 2002 Class Yearbook Photo Resurfaces in Vintage Batch of Photos Shared by Christy Carlson Romano

Christy Carlson Romano posted an Instagram gallery that included a high school photo of her former classmates, Scarlett Johansson and Jack Antonoff

People Scarlett Johansson in March 2025 (left); Jack Antonoff in April 2024 (right)Credit: Kevin Mazur/Getty; Taylor Hill/FilmMagic

NEED TO KNOW

  • The three attended the Professional Children's School in New York City

  • Romano also shared a throwback photo with Hilary Duff

Christy Carlson Romanois pulling from the archives.

When theEvens Stevensstar announced her memoir,Once Upon A Trainwreck, on Tuesday, March 24, herInstagramgallery post included several throwback pictures from her life. She included a high school picture that featured two of her famous classmates,Scarlett JohanssonandJack Antonoff. Romano, 42, attended the Professional Children's School in New York City with the future Oscar nominee and Grammy winner, who were high school sweethearts.

The high school photo shows Johansson, 41, and Antonoff, 41, posing together at the top of a staircase. Romano is spotted smiling while posing to the right of the staircase.

Romano, 42, included various images from her childhood, from a snap withHilary Duffto her high school class portrait, featuring Johansson and Antonoff. The latter two attended the Professional Children's School in Manhattan alongside Romano.

In 2005, Antonoff and his band Steel Train released the song "Better Love," which has been speculated to be about Johansson. "Scars are in her name / And she scars me in blame / Hey Scarlett, you're not the same," the song's lyrics read.

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Scarlett Johansson and Jack Antonoff in September 2002Credit: Evan Agostini/ImageDirect/getty

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Romano's Instagram post included her book cover, a picture with Hilary Duff and photos of Carlson with her family.Once Upon a Trainwreck: The Rise and Fall of a Child Starwill be published on Oct. 6.

"It took me two grueling years to write this memoir. I had to relive my lowest lows, my highest highs, and find the courage to share my most vulnerable moments with you," Carlson caption the post. "It's risky. It's honest. It's the most empowered I've ever felt. And I'm proud to finally share it."

Scarlett Johansson and Jack Antonoff in New York City on September 19, 2002.Credit: Evan Agostini/ImageDirect

Romano reflected on her gratitude for growing up in the spotlight in an exclusive interview with PEOPLE in 2024,saying, "There were a lot of gifts to being a young performer, so I am tremendously grateful for starting as young as I did and the positive experiences that I had. And I know that kind of sounds wishy-washy, but it's not."

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Scarlett Johansson and Jack Antonoff’s 2002 Class Yearbook Photo Resurfaces in Vintage Batch of Photos Shared by Christy Carlson Romano

Christy Carlson Romano posted an Instagram gallery that included a high school photo of her former classmates, Scarlett ...
Roblox will introduce new controls in Indonesia to comply with child social media block

JAKARTA, March 25 - Videogame ‌platform ‌Roblox will introduce ​content and communications controls for ‌players ⁠under 16 in ⁠Indonesia to comply ​with ​the ​country's social ‌media block for children, Matt Kaufman, Roblox's ‌Chief ​Safety ​Officer, ​said ‌in an emailed ​statement ​on Wednesday.

Reuters

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(Reporting by ​Stanley ‌Widianto; Editing ​by David ​Stanway)

Roblox will introduce new controls in Indonesia to comply with child social media block

JAKARTA, March 25 - Videogame ‌platform ‌Roblox will introduce ​content and communications controls for ‌players ⁠under ...
TSA officers describe tears, tough choices and dwindling savings from working without pay

A woman in Indiana who put off dental surgery because she doesn't know if she can afford the copay. A Florida couple with young children who are depleting their savings. A grandmother in Idaho who plans to sell her car to pay the rent.

Associated Press Taylor Desert, a TSA agent, checks in to pick up groceries at Gleaners Food Bank in Indianapolis, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) Taylor Desert, a TSA agent, leaves Gleaners Food Bank after picking up groceries in Indianapolis, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy) Signage reading A Transportation Security Administration (TSA) workers's patch is displayed at Philadelphia International Airport, Tuesday, March 24, 2026, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke) A Transportation Security Administration agent leaves the terminal following their shift at Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport in Baltimore, Monday, March 23, 2026. (AP Photo/Stephanie Scarbrough)

Travel Delays TSA Officers

They are among the tens of thousands Transportation Security Administration officers set to receive another $0 paycheck this week.A dispute in Congressover funding the Department of Homeland Security has held up their salaries since mid-February. With monthly bills coming due, many of these federal employees, who screen passengers and luggage at airports across the U.S., are making difficult choices about how to make ends meet.

High absentee rates atsome major airportshave produced long lines and frustrated passengers at understaffed security checkpoints. Union leaders and federal officials say empty gas tanks, childcare expenses and the threat of eviction keep more screeners from showing up the longer the shutdown continues. At last count, more than 455had quitinstead of weathering the ongoing uncertainty, according to DHS.

"Stop asking me about the long lines. Ask me if somebody's gonna eat today," Hydrick Thomas, president of the national American Federation of Government Employees union council that represents TSA employees, told reporters Tuesday.

Indiana TSA agent turns to food pantry for groceries

Before starting her shift at Indianapolis International Airport on Monday, Taylor Desert stopped ata food bankfor meat, eggs, vegetables and dairy products.

"I never thought I would be in a position where, working for the federal government, I would need to go to a food bank to supplement my groceries," she said as she loaded bags into her car.

Desert, who has been a TSA officer for seven years, said her last full paycheck came on Feb. 14, the day the shutdown started.

She had some savings to draw on despite a record 43-day shutdown last fall but put some personal plans on pause.

For example, Desert needs to get her wisdom teeth removed but says the TSA isn't approving time off during the shutdown. She also worries about costs from the surgery not covered by insurance.

Wednesday was the 39th day of the DHS funding lapse. If it goes another 21 days, Desert said she would seek another job.

"I don't want to have to spend my entire savings just to afford to keep living," she said.

Florida TSA couple worry about their young children

Oksana Kelly, 38, and her husband, Deron, 37, both work as TSA agents at Orlando International Airport. They have two young children and don't know how they will keep supporting their family without any income coming in.

Kelly said they're dipping into savings for now, but it's running dry. Ifthe shutdownpersists, they will ask relatives for help or take out a loan, which she worries would put them deeper in debt.

Her husband has worked as a DoorDash delivery driver in his spare time since the shutdown in October and November. He's considered resigning from the TSA to put the couple on more stable financial footing.

"It's very mentally exhausting," said Kelly, who is an organizer for the labor union representing TSA workers across central and northern Florida. "How do we even decide between being able to feed our kids or come to work?"

Kelly said strangers might criticize the couple for "putting all eggs in one basket" since both choose to work for the TSA for the past decade.

"All we want is to pay our bills and get the pay we deserve," she said.

A veteran officer in Idaho fears homelessness

Rebecca Wolf cries every day. She tries to hide it from her grandchildren, ages 11 and 6.

"They don't understand why grandma's crying," Wolf said. "I try not to cry in front of them, but sometimes it's just too much."

The 53-year-old TSA officer and union leader in Boise, Idaho, joined the agency soon after its creation in the wake of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. She was homeless at the time but turned her situation around with steady work and the benefits of federal employment.

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Now, Wolf can't help but dwell on where she was 24 years ago. "I don't want to be in that position again," she said.

Her Feb. 28 paycheck amounted to $13.53, sending her "into a spiral right away."

With no savings to fall back on, she is preparing to sell her car to cover her rent due in a week. She calls nonprofits daily seeking rental assistance, but hasn't had any luck.

Supporting six family members — four children and two grandchildren — has always been challenging, but the repeated shutdowns have made it nearly unsustainable.

Wolf, who serves as president of AFGE TSA Local 1127, is hesitant to walk away from both the job that turned her life around and her role advocating for fellow officers.

"I worked hard to get to where I am now, and the thought I might lose it all scares me," she said, her voice breaking as she tried to stifle the sound of weeping.

Massachusetts agent digs into savings to get by

Mike Gayzagian, a TSA officer at Boston's Logan International Airport, says long stretches without pay have become enough of a "new normal" that he's prepared for them.

The 56-year-old says he has a financial cushion of about six months to tap but that his situation is "an exception to the rule."

"The majority live paycheck to paycheck and don't have those kinds of reserves available," said Gayzagian, who is president of his localTSA unionchapter.

It shouldn't be this way for federal workers, he said.

"The financial situation adds an additional burden to what is already a stressful job," Gayzagian said. "I didn't go into public service to make a lot of money. I went into public service because it has a certain stability and reliability and predictability that other jobs don't have."

A father in Utah leaves TSA

Robert Echeverria quit his job as a TSA agent at Utah's Salt Lake City International Airport about two weeks into the current shutdown.

The 45-year-old, who has a wife and three children, counted five government shutdowns in the nine years he worked for the agency. The toughest waslast year's record shutdownthat ended in mid-November around the start of the holiday season.

Echeverria said his family skipped Christmas and took months to recover financially. He began looking for a new job in February when it became clear Congress was headed for another budget battle.

"Emotionally I was already distraught," Echeverria said last week. "We were barely recovering from the last shutdown."

He now works for the department that manages the airports in Utah's capital. Leaving federal service "was a hard decision for me," Echeverria said.

"I really believed in the mission of the TSA," he said. "We took an oath, and it was a way for me to give back to the country that gave me so much."

He's still based at Salt Lake City International, where his 20-year-old daughter works as a TSA agent, and says that seeing his former colleagues struggling is difficult.

"They all feel betrayed by their government because they're showing up to work," Echeverria said. "They're there, but they feel that the government doesn't care for them," he said.

Marcelo reported from New York, Lamy reported from Indianapolis and Yamat reported from Las Vegas.

TSA officers describe tears, tough choices and dwindling savings from working without pay

A woman in Indiana who put off dental surgery because she doesn't know if she can afford the copay. A Florida couple...
Joy Behar leaves

Joy Behar left The View table ahead of an interview with Carrie Underwood.

Entertainment Weekly Carrie Underwood on 'The View' and performing at Donald Trump's inauguration, Joy Behar on 'The View'Credit: ABC; SHAWN THEW / POOL / AFP via Getty

Key Points

  • Behar previously criticized the American Idol winner's decision to perform at Donald Trump's inauguration.

  • Former cohost Elisabeth Hasselbeck called out Behar's criticism in an incendiary series of social media posts in January 2025.

CohostJoy Behartemporarily leftThe Viewtable Tuesday morning ahead of a high-profile interview withAmerican IdolwinnerCarrie Underwood, skipping the conversation a year afterpublicly criticizing the singer's decisionto perform atDonald Trump's second presidential inauguration.

When the talk show returned Tuesday from a commercial break, Behar and colleagueSara Haineswere noticeably absent from the Hot Topics table, where the remaining cohosts sat to interviewIdoljudges Lionel Ritchie, Luke Bryan, and Underwood. Both panelists were present for the first half of the show, including discussions about current headlines.

Often, when groups of interview guests are slated to join the show, selectViewcohosts will leave the table to allow them more room. Behar's absence, however, comes after she courted intense criticism from former cohostElisabeth Hasselbeck, who publicly blasted the 83-year-old comedian's criticism of Underwood in January 2025.

Whoopi Goldberg, Lionel Ritchie, Carrie Underwood, Luke Bryan, Sunny Hostin, and Abby Huntsman on 'The View'Credit: ABC

At the end of the live broadcast, Behar returned to her seat at the table, with moderator Whoopi Goldberg telling the audience that Behar would be the day's guest on the program's companion podcast,Behind the Table.

Entertainment Weeklyhas learned that the move was a "production decision" as a result of three interview subjects.

EW has reached out to representatives forThe Viewand Underwood for comment.

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Behar and Haines' temporary absence at the table came after Behar's aforementioned public criticism of Underwood, whoperformed at Trump's inauguration ceremonyat the United States Capitol.

In early 2025,Behar voiced on the talk show her oppositionto Underwood's decision to perform at the event, with Hasselbeck slamming her ex-colleague online in the aftermath.

"That @TheView @JoyVBehar needs to simmer down off my friend," Hasselbeck wrote onX, later adding that she lamented Behar "calling Carrie Underwood Un-American." It should be noted, however, that Behar did not use the phrase "un-American" to describe Underwood in her comments onThe View.

Underwood performing on the day of Trump's inauguration at the Rotunda of the US Capitol on January 20, 2025Credit: Kevin Lamarque / POOL / AFP via Getty

Still, Hasselbeck shared an image of Behar — with whom she previously sat onThe Viewpanel as a permanent cohost — to her Instagram Story at time time, writing, "Joy — @carrieunderwood is an INCREDIBLE WOMAN. You could learn from her strength."

Hasselbeck eventually returned to cohostThe Viewearlier this year amid permanent panelist Alyssa Farah Griffin's ongoing maternity leave,though she and Behar did not address the January 2025 incident.

The Viewairs weekdays on ABC.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Joy Behar leaves “The View” table, skips Carrie Underwood interview after criticizing singer's Donald Trump performance

Joy Behar left The View table ahead of an interview with Carrie Underwood. Key Points Behar previously cri...
Matt Lauer makes rare outing with girlfriend Shamin Abas in wake of accuser Brooke Nevils' explosive memoir

FormerTodayanchorMatt Lauerwas seen with his girlfriend Shamin Abas on March 23 in Sag Harbor, N.Y.

Entertainment Weekly Matt Lauer at a gala in Southampton, N.Y., in 2023Credit: Michael Ostuni/Patrick McMullan via Getty

The public appearance was a rare one, as he was last seen in public in November, perPEOPLE. The outing came seven weeks after Brooke Nevils, another formerTodayemployee, accused Lauer of raping her in 2014 in her book,Unspeakable Things: Silence, Shame, and the Stories We Choose to Believe, allegations she made back in 2017.

Lauer wasfired from NBCin 2017, after Nevils filed an official complaint with the network, alleging that he had raped her while they covered the Sochi Winter Olympics and that they'd had other non-consensual sexual encounters later.

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At the time, Lauer's former co-hostSavannah Guthrieread a statement fromNBC NewsChairman Andy Lack that said the network had received a complaint of "inappropriate sexual behavior in the workplace." It was the first, Lack noted, but he added, "we were also presented with reason to believe this may not have been an isolated incident."

Lauer has previously confirmed that he had engaged in a sexual relationship with Nevils, butdenied the alleged rape, saying that encounters with her and other women who accused him of sexual misconduct wereconsensual.

Lauer and Abas have been dating since 2019. The longtime broadcaster's wife Annette Roque had filed for divorce from him the same year.

Nevils' book recalling her history with the former broadcaster was released Feb. 3.

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In an excerpt published inThe Cutdays before, Nevils said her life had been upended by the scandal.

"After his firing was announced the next morning — Wednesday, November 29, 2017 — the [New York] TimesandVarietypublished a slew of other allegations against Matt," Nevils wrote. "The next day, an investigative reporter was texting my personal cell phone. Eventually a tabloid began calling my co-workers at 30 Rock, apparently asking whether they were aware that I was Matt's 'mistress who'd gotten him fired.'"

'Unspeakable Things: Silence, Shame, and the Stories We Choose to Believe,' by Brooke NevilsCredit: Penguin Random House

As for Nevils, she wrote in her book that her life changed significantly post-Lauer.

She struggled at first, leaving the network a few months after Lauer.

"I barely recognized the train wreck I'd become," Nevils remembered. "I was compulsive, paranoid, and drinking all the time. I felt I'd ruined everything, hurt and embarrassed everyone I loved."

Her feelings led to her seeking mental health treatment.

"Soon I would find myself in a psych ward," she said, "believing myself so worthless and damaged that the world would be better off without me."

Eventually, though, she "painstaking rebuilt my life," she wrote, marrying and and having two children.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Matt Lauer makes rare outing with girlfriend Shamin Abas in wake of accuser Brooke Nevils' explosive memoir

FormerTodayanchorMatt Lauerwas seen with his girlfriend Shamin Abas on March 23 in Sag Harbor, N.Y. The publ...

 

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