What is it about Houston strip clubs and celebrities? Radar reports that after Drake's November 13 concert at the Toyota Center, the rapper visited the VLive International Gentleman's Club with Rihanna, who was in between "make-up" shows on her Diamonds world tour. (She had canceled several shows last spring due to health issues.)
According to reports, Drake attended Rihanna's show in Dallas Monday night, and she attended his show in Houston Wednesday night before performing at the Toyota Center on Thursday night.
E! reports the duo spent $17,000 at the Houston club, which gained attention last month when Justin Bieber dropped by with boxer Floyd Mayweather. (The Daily Mail published a video of staffers counting the cash that Drake, 26, and Rihanna, 25, reportedly left.)
A dancer at the Richmond Avenue club told E! that Rihanna arrived around 2 am Thursday, and Drake arrived around a half-hour later. They stayed for around three hours and left together.
Dancer Johnni Blaze said the duo "looked like a couple," sat close to each other and were even dressed alike. She added that she and Rihanna bonded over their partially shaved hairdos and that the singer even gave her advice about her budding singing career, telling the dancer to "dream big" and not be afraid to put herself out there.
But Drake was "too busy throwing money" to engage in conversation, the dancer said.
This photo of Drake at the club was posted on Instagram.
DailyMail Instagram
This photo of Drake at the club was posted on Instagram.
Mabel (Piper Kurda) and King George (Bobby Moynihan) in Hoppers.
For the first 15 years of their history, animation studio Pixar delivered one classic film after another, an astonishing streak that included their first 11 movies. Things got bumpy starting with Cars 2 in 2011, and even though the majority of their output has been good-to-great ever since, their releases are no longer considered slam dunks like they once were.
They’re back with an original film, Hoppers, trying to return to form by going back to the animal world. The film centers on Mabel (Piper Kurda), a 19-year-old environmentalist who’s trying to stop a new highway being built by Mayor Jerry (Jon Hamm) in the fictional city of Beaverton. Her activism has as much to do with helping displaced local animals as it does with being nostalgic for her youth, in which she spent years observing nature with her Grandma Tanaka (Karen Huie).
She finds an unlikely possible solution when she discovers that her college professors have created a system that allows them to transfer - or hop - their consciousness into animal-like robots. Hijacking a beaver robot, Mabel joins up with the local wildlife, including beaver King George (Bobby Moynihan) to try to convince them to help her execute her plan. But with the highway almost complete and Mayor Jerry willing to do anything to make it happen, Mabel might be too late.
Directed by Daniel Chong and written by Jesse Andrews from a story by Chong, the film cycles through a variety of genres in its 105-minute running time, including comedy, drama, thriller, and even a touch of Pixar-style horror. When Pixar has been at its best, it seamlessly goes back and forth between genres, trusting that audiences will go along with them for the ride, and Hoppers feels like a return to form in that respect.
Humor rules the day as Mabel adjusts to being part of the animal world while her professors desperately try to get her and their robot back. Mabel encounters not only wildly confusing things like “pond rules” (if a predator catches you, you don’t fight it), but also the existence of a hierarchy within the world that involves kings or queens from various animal classes like reptiles, birds, amphibians, fish, and insects. Her one-track mind and the way of the world she is invading clash in a variety of funny ways.
As the film goes along, Chong, Andrews, and the rest of the filmmaking team also find a way to burrow into the audience’s heart. There are many elements that threaten to tip into eye-rolling territory, but the filmmakers consistently pull back before that happens. The number of fun characters on both the human and animal side helps in that regard, as does the simple yet profound message they’re trying to convey.
Pixar has assembled one of the best voice casts in recent memory for this film, including such big names as Meryl Streep, Dave Franco, Melissa Villaseñor, Vanessa Bayer, and the late Isiah Whitlock, Jr. However, due to the sheer number of characters, only Kurda, Moynihan, and Hamm truly stand out. Still, they all fit together well and give the always-stellar animation even more life.
Since the pandemic, Pixar has only released one truly great film (Inside Out 2), but with Hoppers and the seemingly bulletproof Toy Story 5 coming within a few months of each other, they might go back-to-back on that front. Like the classic films from the studio, it has goofy, heartfelt, and exciting parts, mixing together for an enthralling time at the theater.