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Cardi B is Expecting a Child with Stefon Diggs

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Cardi B is expecting fourth child with Stefon Diggs

“Cardi B has officially shared some life-changing news: she is pregnant with her fourth child, her first with New England Patriots wide receiver Stefon Diggs. The rapper revealed the news during an interview with Gayle King on CBS Mornings, ending weeks of whispers with a clear confirmation.

The Bronx-born star already has three children (Kulture, Wave and Blossom) with her estranged husband Offset. She admitted she had chosen to hold off on announcing this pregnancy until she felt ready. “I wanted to close some deals first and make sure the baby was healthy before I told the world,” she explained, adding that seeing reassuring sonograms gave her confidence.

Cardi B- Instagram

With an arena tour kicking off in February 2026, Cardi confirmed the baby is due before she takes the stage. “I feel happy, I feel strong,” she said, describing how Diggs has supported her throughout. She also shared that the NFL star gives her a sense of security both mentally and physically, something she values deeply.

In a typically candid moment, the 31 Year-old admitted her parents had not yet been told the news. “They’ll know before the interview airs,” she laughed, hinting at the balance she strikes between family life and her career.

Cardi B- Instagram

Cardi spoke warmly about her relationship with Diggs, describing him as someone who makes her feel grounded at a time when her life is constantly under the spotlight.

As she prepares for both motherhood once again and a major tour, Cardi B is proving she can control her narrative on her own schedule. For fans, the countdown is now twofold: to the start of her 2026 shows, and the arrival of her newest baby.

 

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All the Artist Who Took Home Awards at 2026 Grammys

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Photo credit: Getty images

The 68th Grammy Awards took place on Sunday, February 1, 2026, at the Crypto.com Arena in Los Angeles, where 86 awards were handed out to artists, producers, rising stars, and songwriters who delivered outstanding performances in the music industry over the past year. The event was hosted by Trevor Noah.

Bad Bunny: Getty images

Many celebrities had major wins last night. Bad Bunny, for one, made history with his 2025 album Debi Tirar Más Fotos, which became the first Latin LP to win Album of the Year. Other big wins of the night included Kendrick Lamar and SZA, won Record of the Year for their 2024 song “Luther”.

Billie Eilish: Getty images

Billie Eilish, a multi-Grammy winner, took home Song of the Year for “Hit Me Hard” and her album track “Wildflower.” Lady Gaga won Best Pop Vocal Album for her 2025 pop opus Mayhem.

Kendrick Lamar: Getty images

Kendrick Lamar led the night with five Grammys, followed by Bad Bunny with three. Other multiple winners included Lady Gaga, Cirkut, Kehlani, Leon Thomas, SZA, Jack Antonoff, Jelly Roll, and composer Ludwig Göransson, each with two awards.

Below is a list of celebrities who won the Grammy awards

Bad Bunny

Album of the Year: Debí Tirar Más Fotos

Best Música Urbana Album: Debí Tirar Más Fotos

Best Global Music Performance: “Eoo”

Kendrick Lamar

Record of the Year: Kendrick Lamar & SZA: “Luther”

Best Rap Album: GNX

Best Rap Song: “TV Off” [ft. Lefty Gunplay]

Best Melodic Rap Performance: Kendrick Lamar & SZA: “Luther”

Best Rap Performance: Clipse, Kendrick Lamar, Pusha T & Malice: “Chains & Whips”

Billie Eilish

Song of the Year: “Wildflower”

Lady Gaga

Best Pop Vocal Album: Mayhem

Best Dance Pop Recording: “Abracadabra”

Best Remixed Recording: Lady Gaga & Gesaffelstein: “Abracadabra (Gesaffelstein Remix)”

Cirkut

Producer of the Year, Non-Classical

Kehlani

Kehlani: Getty images

Best R&B Song: “Folded”

Best R&B Performance: “Folded”

Leon Thomas

Best R&B Album: Mutt

Best Traditional R&B Performance: “Vibes Don’t Lie”

Jelly Roll

Best Contemporary Country Album: Beautifully Broken

Best Contemporary Christian Music Performance/Song: Brandon Lake & Jelly Roll: “Hard Fought Hallelujah”

Best Country Duo/Group Performance: Shaboozey & Jelly Roll: “Amen”

Olivia Dean

Best New Artist

Lola Young

Best Pop Solo Performance: “Messy”

Durand Bernarr

Best Progressive R&B Album: Bloom

Amy Allen

Songwriter of the Year, Non-Classical

Justin Gray

Best Immersive Audio Album: Immersed

Pino Palladino & Blake Mills

Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical: That Wasn’t a Dream

The Cure

Best Alternative Music Album: Songs of a Lost World

Best Alternative Music Performance: “Alone”

Turnstile

Best Rock Album: Never Enough

Best Metal Performance: “Birds”

Yungblud, Nuno Bettencourt & Frank Bello Featuring Adam Wakeman & II

Yungblud: Getty images

Best Rock Performance: Changes (Live From Villa Park / Back to the Beginning)”

Nine Inch Nails

Best Rock Song: “As Alive as You Need Me to Be”

John Williams

Best Music Film: Music by John Williams

Doechii

Best Music Video: “Anxiety”

Huntr/x

Best Song Written for Visual Media: “Golden”

Austin Wintory

Best Score Soundtrack for Video Games and Other Interactive Media: Sword of the Sea

Ludwig Göransson

Best Score Soundtrack for Visual Media (Includes Film and Television): Sinners

Various Artists

Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media: Sinners

Best Regional Roots Music Album: A Tribute to the King of Zydeco

Gloria Estefan

Best Tropical Latin Album: Raíces

Carín León

Best Música Mexicana Album (Including Tejano): Palabra de To’s (Seca)

Ca7riel & Paco Amoroso

Best Latin Rock or Alternative Album: Papota

Natalia Lafourcade

Best Latin Pop Album: Cancionera

FKA twigs

Best Dance/Electronic Album: Eusexua

Tame Impala

Best Dance/Electronic Recording: “End of Summer”

Cynthia Erivo & Ariana Grande

Best Pop/Duo Group Performance: “Defying Gravity”

Gabriela Ortiz

Best Contemporary Classical Composition: Ortiz: Dzonot

Los Angeles Philharmonic, Gustavo Dudamel & Alisa Weilerstein

Best Classical Compendium: Gabriela Ortiz: Yanga

Amanda Forsythe, Robert Mealy, Paul O’Dette & Stephen Stubbs

Best Classical Solo Vocal Album: Telemann: Ino – Opera Arias for Soprano

Yo-Yo Ma & Andris Nelsons

Best Classical Instrumental Solo: Shostakovich: The Cello Concertos

Dalai Lama

Best Audio Book, Narration, and Storytelling Recording: Meditations: The Reflections of His Holiness the Dalai Lama

Nate Bargatze

Best Comedy Album: Your Friend, Nate Bargatze

Fyütch & Aura V

Best Children’s Music Album: Harmony

Arkai

Best Contemporary Instrumental Album: Brightside

Alan Pierson & Alarm Will Sound

Best Chamber Music/Small Ensemble Performance: “Donnacha Dennehy: Land of Winter”

Houston Grand Opera, Kwamé Ryan, Janai Brugger, Jamie Barton & J’Nai Bridges

Best Opera Recording: “Jake Heggie: Intelligence”

Andris Nelsons & Boston Symphony Orchestra

Best Orchestral Performance: “Messiaen: Turangalîla-Symphonie”

Nate Smith & Säje

Best Arrangement, Instruments and Vocals: “Big Fish”

The 8-Bit Big Band

Best Arrangement, Instrumental or A Cappella: “Super Mario Praise Break”

Nordkraft Big Band, Remy Le Boeuf & Danielle Wertz

Best Instrumental Composition: “First Snow”

Elaine Martone

Producer of the Year, Classical

Sandbox Percussion

Best Engineered Album, Classical: Cerrone: Don’t Look Down

Samara Joy

Best Jazz Vocal Album: Portrait

Carla Patullo

Best New Age, Ambient, or Chant Album: Nomadica

Keznamdi

Best Reggae Album: Blxxd & Fyah

Caetano Veloso & Maria Bethânia

Best Global Music Album: Caetano e Bethânia Ao Vivo

Tyla

Best African Music Performance: “Push 2 Start”

Laufey

Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album: A Matter of Time

Nate Smith

Nate Smith: Getty images

Best Alternative Jazz Album: Live-Action

Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Yainer Horta & Joey Calveiro

Best Latin Jazz Album: A Tribute to Benny Moré and Nat King Cole

Christian McBride

Best Large Jazz Ensemble Album: Without Further Ado, Vol 1

Sullivan Fortner

Best Jazz Instrumental Album: Southern Nights

Chick Corea, Christian McBride & Brian Blade

Best Jazz Performance: “Windows (Live)”

The Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir

Best Roots Gospel Album: I Will Not Be Moved (Live)

Israel & New Breed

Best Contemporary Christian Music Album: Coritos, Vol. 1

Darrel Walls & PJ Morton

Best Gospel Album: Heart of Mine

Cece Winans & Shirley Caesar

Best Gospel Performance/Song: “Come Jesus Come”

I’m With Her

Best Folk Album: Wild and Clear and Blue

Best Americana Roots Song: “Ancient Light”

Billy Strings

Best Bluegrass Album: Highway Prayers

Jon Batiste

Best Americana Album: Big Money

Mavis Staples

Best Americana Performance: “Godspeed”

Best American Roots Performance: “Beautiful Strangers”

Joni Mitchell

Joni Mitchell Archives, Vol. 4: The Asylum Years (1976-1980)

Miles Davis

Best Album Notes: Miles ’55: The Prestige Recordings

Tyler, the Creator

Best Album Cover: Chromakopia

Bruce Springsteen

Best Recording Package: Tracks II: The Lost Albums

Robert Randolph

Best Recording Package: Preacher Kids

Buddy Guy

Best Traditional Blues Album: Ain’t Done With the Blues

Zach Top

Best Traditional Country Album: Ain’t in It for My Health

Tyler Childers

Best Country Song: “Bitin’ List”

Chris Stapleton

Best Country Solo Performance: “Bad as I Used to Be”

Skillz

Best Spoken Word Poetry Album: Words for Days, Vol. 1

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Catherine O’Hara Dies at 71: The Comic Virtuoso who made Every Single Character Unforgettable

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Catherine O’Hara: Instagram

Catherine O’Hara built a decades-long career in character comedy. Her timing and facial control was deliberate. For more than five decades, she shaped some of the widely recognized characters in modern film and television, across satire, absurd comedy, and drama.

The Canadian-American actress and comedian died on January 30, 2026, at age 71 following a brief illness, according to her representatives. Her passing marks the loss of a distinctive comedic performer whose work balanced theatricality with emotional realism.

Catherine O’Hara: Instagram

Born on March 4, 1954, in Toronto, O’Hara began in Toronto’s improv scene. She joined The Second City at a young age, a well-known improv institution. There, she developed the a character-driven approach. Her breakthrough arrived with SCTV, the cult sketch series that launched several careers. O’Hara stood out for her wide range. One moment she was playing a melodramatic soap actress, the next a hilariously mundane suburban mother Her timing was consistent.

Hollywood soon followed. To many audiences, she became widely recognizable as Kate McCallister in Home Alone the frantic, determined mother racing across continents to reach her child. The performance anchored the film emotionally and helped establish it as a holiday classic. She brought similar comic energy to Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice, crafting a portrait of eccentric domesticity that remains popular and lent her voice to animated classics like The Nightmare Before Christmas. In Christopher Guest’s mockumentaries. Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show, and A Mighty Wind she worked extensively in improvised mockumentaries sculpting characters that were detailed and character-specific.

Catherine O’Hara: Instagram

Later, she reached a new audience. As Moira Rose on Schitt’s Creek, O’Hara created a character that was highly theatrical, sculptural wigs, ornate diction, and a wardrobe that seemed to exist in its own universe. The character also showed vulnerability and fierce maternal loyalty. The role earned her an Emmy, a Golden Globe, and a Screen Actors Guild Award, and received widespread attention.

Even in her seventies, she continued working, appearing in streaming series and high-profile productions that included dramatic roles. Off-screen, O’Hara kept her personal life private. She married production designer Bo Welch in 1992, and the couple raised two sons while maintaining long careers in the industry. Colleagues frequently described her as generous, sharp, and collaborative.

Catherine O’Hara: Instagram

Her legacy rested in her careful performance choices. The timing of a line, the subtle reaction that lingered longer than words, the ability to make supporting roles stand out. She emphasized careful performance over showiness. Over decades, she built a body of work defined by deliberate character choices a consistency that made her work enduring.

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Justin Bieber Set to Perform at the 2026 Grammys for the First Time in Years

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Photo: Getty images

After taking time off to focus on his health and quietly step back from the spotlight, Justin Bieber is easing his way back. The Recording Academy confirmed on Wednesday that the singer will perform at the 68th Annual Grammy Awards on February 1. This is a major milestone in a long-awaited comeback from his fans.

Photo: The Global

It’s been four years since Justin last graced the Grammy stage. Since that 2022 performance, his life has looked very different. After being diagnosed with Ramsay Hunt Syndrome, he made the difficult but necessary choice to cancel the Justice World Tour to focus on his recovery. Since then, his appearances have been rare.

The return coincides with the massive success of his latest album, SWAG. Far from just “making a comeback, He’s got nominations in several major categories this year:

• Album of the Year

•  Best Pop Vocal Album

• Best Pop Solo Performance

• Best R&B Performance

Photo: Getty images

The Grammys are just the beginning. With a Coachella headlining slot also on the horizon for later this year, it’s clear that the “Bieber Era” is officially back in full swing.

You can follow the performance live on CBS and Paramount+ this Sunday. After everything he’s walked through over the last few years, seeing him back under the lights is bound to be one of the night’s most emotional moments.

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