New Photo - Venmo users have trouble sending and receiving money during service outage

Venmo users have trouble sending and receiving money during service outage AUDREY McAVOY December 3, 2025 at 10:48 PM 0 FILE A Venmo mobile app shows it is not available during the Amazon Web Services outage, Oct. 20, 2025, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File) () Users of the payment app Venmo experienced trouble sending and receiving money on Wednesday amid widespread social media posts about service issues. Downdetector, a website that tracks online outages, showed reports that problems began spiking at about 6:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

- - Venmo users have trouble sending and receiving money during service outage

AUDREY McAVOY December 3, 2025 at 10:48 PM

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FILE - A Venmo mobile app shows it is not available during the Amazon Web Services outage, Oct. 20, 2025, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File) ()

Users of the payment app Venmo experienced trouble sending and receiving money on Wednesday amid widespread social media posts about service issues.

Downdetector, a website that tracks online outages, showed reports that problems began spiking at about 6:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time.

Venmo said in a post on the social platform X that it was working to address the breakdown.

"We're aware that some users are experiencing issues with Venmo right now," the company said. "Our team is working on a fix, and we'll update you as soon as it's resolved."

Some social media accounts replied that they were unable to pay for medication or buy dinner.

Later in the evening, multiple people reported the app was back up, but there was no official announcement.

Peer-to-peer payment apps have exploded in popularity in the last decade. Venmo had 92 million active users as of last year.

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Venmo users have trouble sending and receiving money during service outage

Venmo users have trouble sending and receiving money during service outage AUDREY McAVOY December 3, 2025 at 10:48 P...
New Photo - How a sperm bank for cheetahs might one day save the fastest land animal

How a sperm bank for cheetahs might one day save the fastest land animal GERALD IMRAYDecember 3, 2025 at 11:04 PM 0 FILE A cheetah descends from on top of a mound in the savannah of the Maasai Mara, Kenya, July 6, 2015. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File) () CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — For 35 years, American zoologist Laurie Marker has been collecting and storing specimens in a cheetah sperm bank in Namibia, hoping conservationists never have to use them. But she worries that the world's fastest land animal might be on the brink of extinction one day and need artificial reproduction to save it.

- - How a sperm bank for cheetahs might one day save the fastest land animal

GERALD IMRAYDecember 3, 2025 at 11:04 PM

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FILE - A cheetah descends from on top of a mound in the savannah of the Maasai Mara, Kenya, July 6, 2015. (AP Photo/Ben Curtis, File) ()

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — For 35 years, American zoologist Laurie Marker has been collecting and storing specimens in a cheetah sperm bank in Namibia, hoping conservationists never have to use them.

But she worries that the world's fastest land animal might be on the brink of extinction one day and need artificial reproduction to save it.

Marker says the sperm bank at the Cheetah Conservation Fund she founded in the southern African nation is a "frozen zoo" of cheetahs she's been building since 1990. It would be utilized in a worst-case scenario for the big cats, whose numbers have dropped alarmingly in the wild over the last 50 years.

"You don't do anything with it unless until it's needed," Marker, one of the foremost experts on cheetahs, told The from her research center near the Namibian city of Otjiwarongo. "And we never want to get to that point."

Conservationists mark World Cheetah Day on Thursday with less than 7,000 of them left in the wild, similar numbers to the critically endangered black rhino. There are only around 33 populations of cheetahs spread out in pockets mainly across Africa, with most of those populations having less than 100 animals, Marker said.

Like so many species, the sleek cats that can run at speeds of 70 miles per hour (112 kilometers per hour) are in danger from habitat loss, human-wildlife conflict and the illegal animal trade. Their shrinking, isolated groups mean their gene pool is shrinking also as small populations continuously breed among themselves, with repercussions for their reproduction rates.

Globally, cheetah numbers in the wild have dropped by 80% in the last half-century and they've been pushed out of 90% of their historical range.

Scientists believe that cheetahs already narrowly escaped extinction at the end of the last ice age around 10,000-12,000 years ago, which first reduced their gene pool.

Marker said the lack of genetic diversity, along with the fact that cheetahs have 70-80% abnormal sperm, mean they might need help in the future.

"And so, a sperm bank makes perfect sense, right?" Marker said.

A common conservation tactic

Storing sperm is not unique to cheetahs in the wildlife world. It's a tactic that conservationists have developed for other species, including elephants, rhinos, antelopes, other big cats, birds and others.

The value of animal reproductive research, Marker said, is seen in the desperate battle to save the northern white rhino from extinction.

There are just two northern white rhinos left, both females, making the species functionally extinct with no chance of reproducing naturally. Their only hope lies in artificial reproduction using northern white rhino sperm that was collected and frozen years ago.

Because both remaining northern white rhinos — a mother and daughter — can't carry pregnancies, scientists have tried to implant northern white rhino embryos in southern white rhino surrogates. The surrogates haven't managed to carry any of the pregnancies to term, but the conservation team has committed to keep trying to save northern white rhinos against all odds.

Other efforts around artificial reproduction have been successful, including a project that bred black-footed ferrets using artificial reproduction after they'd been reduced to a single wild population in Wyoming in the United States.

Last resort

Marker doesn't chase down cheetahs to collect their sperm but takes samples opportunistically. In Namibia, cheetahs are mostly in danger from farmers who view them as threats to their livestock, meaning Marker's team are called out for cats that have been injured or captured and will collect samples while treating and releasing them.

Sperm samples can also be taken from dead cheetahs. "Every cheetah is actually a unique mix of a very small number of genes. We will try to bank every animal we possibly can," Marker said.

The samples from approximately 400 cheetahs and counting are now stored at ultralow temperatures in liquid nitrogen at the Cheetah Conservation Fund laboratory. Marker's research does not involve any artificial insemination as breeding wild animals in captivity is not allowed in Namibia.

Should cheetahs be threatened with extinction again, the first backup would be the roughly 1,800 cats living in zoos and other captive environments. But, Marker said, cheetahs don't breed well in captivity and the sperm bank might be, like the northern white rhinos, the last resort.

Without it, "we're not going to have much of a chance," Marker said.

___

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New Photo - Ex-Honduran leader thanks Trump for pardon on US drug trafficking charges

ExHonduran leader thanks Trump for pardon on US drug trafficking charges Michael Rios, Lex Harvey, CNNDecember 3, 2025 at 11:09 PM 0 Honduras' President Juan Orlando Hernandez presents his national statement as a part of the World Leaders' Summit at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, on November 1, 2021. Andy Buchanan/Reuters Honduras' former President Juan Orlando Hernández thanked US President Donald Trump for pardoning his US drug trafficking conviction amid criticism from lawmakers that the pardon undermines the White House's efforts to stop drug trafficking.

- - Ex-Honduran leader thanks Trump for pardon on US drug trafficking charges

Michael Rios, Lex Harvey, CNNDecember 3, 2025 at 11:09 PM

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Honduras' President Juan Orlando Hernandez presents his national statement as a part of the World Leaders' Summit at the UN Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow, Scotland, on November 1, 2021. - Andy Buchanan/Reuters

Honduras' former President Juan Orlando Hernández thanked US President Donald Trump for pardoning his US drug trafficking conviction amid criticism from lawmakers that the pardon undermines the White House's efforts to stop drug trafficking.

"My profound gratitude goes to President (Trump) for having the courage to defend justice at a moment when a weaponized system refused to acknowledge the truth," Hernández wrote on X Wednesday.

President of Honduras from 2014 until 2022, Hernández was convicted and sentenced last year to 45 years in prison and given an $8 million fine by a US judge for drug trafficking offenses. Hernández insisted he was innocent, claiming his trial was "rigged" and that it relied on the accusations of criminals who sought revenge against him.

Both Republican and Democratic members of Congress have criticized Trump's decision to pardon someone with a drug trafficking conviction when his administration has been so focused on disrupting drug trafficking in Latin America, ramping up military activity and launching controversial strikes on alleged drug boats in the Caribbean.

Several lawmakers have pointed out the inconsistency in pardoning Hernández while going after Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, who is wanted in the US for similar charges.

"Why would we pardon this guy and then go after Maduro for running drugs into the United States? Lock up every drug runner! Don't understand why he is being pardoned," GOP Sen. Bill Cassidy posted on X.

GOP Rep. Maria Elvira Salazar told CNN she felt Trump's announcement sent a mixed message and she "would have never done that."

Trump, however, defended his decision to grant Hernández clemency, telling reporters Tuesday that he feels "pretty good about it."

"Well, he was the president, and they had some drugs being sold in their country, and because he was the president, they went after him – that was a Biden horrible witch hunt," Trump said. "A lot of people in Honduras asked me to do that, and I did it."

Prosecutors had accused Hernández of conspiring with drug cartels during his tenure as they moved more than 400 tons of cocaine through Honduras toward the United States. In exchange, prosecutors said, Hernández received millions of dollars in bribes that he used to fuel his rise in Honduran politics.

Several people in Trump's orbit lobbied for Hernández's pardon, including his longtime ally Roger Stone. Stone said he called on Trump in June to pardon Hernández, claiming the former Honduran leader was targeted by the Biden administration.

Though the White House is blaming Biden for targeting Hernández, Hernández's brother was prosecuted during Trump's first term by Emil Bove, who went on to become Trump's personal attorney.

Hernández has now been released from prison, according to his attorney. A US Bureau of Prisons database also shows that the former Honduran president was released from a prison in West Virginia.

In his social media post Wednesday, Hernández promised the people of Honduras that he would "continue defending everything we built together," but didn't say whether he has any plans to return to the country.

He added that he would share more "soon."

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New Photo - Will it be a white Christmas? Adjust your expectations.

Will it be a white Christmas? Adjust your expectations. Jeanine Santucci, USA TODAYDecember 3, 2025 at 12:45 PM 3 Christmas is fast approaching, and many parts of the United States have seen a glimpse (or a lot more) of snow already this winter season. But what are the chances of having a white Christmas in 2025? It's too early for meteorologists to say with much certainty where there will be enough snow to count as a white Christmas. (A white Christmas is at least 1 inch of snow is on the ground, whether or not it actually snows on Christmas Day, according to forecasters.) On Dec.

- - Will it be a white Christmas? Adjust your expectations.

Jeanine Santucci, USA TODAYDecember 3, 2025 at 12:45 PM

3

Christmas is fast approaching, and many parts of the United States have seen a glimpse (or a lot more) of snow already this winter season. But what are the chances of having a white Christmas in 2025?

It's too early for meteorologists to say with much certainty where there will be enough snow to count as a white Christmas. (A white Christmas is at least 1 inch of snow is on the ground, whether or not it actually snows on Christmas Day, according to forecasters.)

On Dec. 3, about 40% of the country was covered by snow, after recent snowstorms in parts of the Midwest, New England and Mid-Atlantic. More rounds of snow and arctic air are expected in the coming days and weeks, forecasters said.

Though the available data gives us a good idea of the chances of a white Christmas, NOAA says "the actual conditions in any year may vary widely from these because the weather patterns present will determine the snow on the ground or snowfall on Christmas day." Check back with USA TODAY's coverage and your local weather service office closer to Dec. 25 for a surer forecast.

Still, historical weather data can give us an idea of the odds for different parts of the country.

States with the best historical chance of a white Christmas

In any given year, your best bet for a white Christmas is in Minnesota, Maine, upstate New York, Idaho or some of the snowiest mountain ranges in the country, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which produced a map of the probabilities for a white Christmas based on climate data from 1991 to 2020.

Cities with the best historical chance of a white Christmas

None of the most-populated 25 cities in the United States have a very good chance (higher than one-in-three) of a white Christmas, according to AccuWeather's analysis of the historical data. Among the biggest cities, Denver is the most likely, with a 34% chance, followed by Chicago with about a 33.5% chance, AccuWeather reported.

Indianapolis, Boston and Columbus rounded out the top five major U.S. cities for best chances of a snowy Christmas setting.

Aside from major cities, mountain towns in the Rockies and New England have the best chances at a white Christmas, AccuWeather reported. Tahoe City, California, has an 83.4% chance. Ski towns in Colorado have chances from 94 to 99%.

1 / 10Let it snow! Revisit one of the coldest decades in the US.South Boston residents dig their cars out of the snow on Farragut Road on Jan. 22, 1978, following a massive storm over the previous weekend.States with the worst chances for a white Christmas

The least likely spots for a snowy Christmas scene? The West Coast, Deep South and Gulf Coast.

The worst chances for snow include much of the southeastern part of the country and the West Coast, according to the NOAA data. It might go without saying, but there is a 0% probability of a white Christmas in Miami, Houston and Los Angeles based on the data.

Why the obsession with white Christmas? Blame Dickens and the Little Ice Age

Map shows the national chances of a white Christmas in a map

A national map depicts the chances for at least an inch of snow on the ground on Christmas Day, based on data from the 1991-2020 U.S. Climate Normals. Darkest gray means less than 10% chance of a white Christmas, and white means greater than 90% chance.

Contributing: Doyle Rice, USA TODAY

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: White Christmas forecast? Data reveals best locations.

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New Photo - Scarlett Johansson in Talks for 'The Batman 2'

Scarlett Johansson in Talks for 'The Batman 2' Angelique JacksonDecember 4, 2025 at 6:38 AM 0 Getty Images/Everett Collection Scarlett Johansson is in negotiations to join the cast of "The Batman Part II," starring opposite Robert Pattinson's Caped Crusader. The DC Studios film, directed by Matt Reeves, is expected to begin shooting next spring for an October 2027 theatrical release from Warner Bros. "The Batman" opened in theaters in March 2022 and grossed $772 million at the worldwide box office; Reeves and cowriter Mattson Tomlin completed the script for the longawaited sequel in June.

- - Scarlett Johansson in Talks for 'The Batman 2'

Angelique JacksonDecember 4, 2025 at 6:38 AM

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Getty Images/Everett Collection

Scarlett Johansson is in negotiations to join the cast of "The Batman Part II," starring opposite Robert Pattinson's Caped Crusader.

The DC Studios film, directed by Matt Reeves, is expected to begin shooting next spring for an October 2027 theatrical release from Warner Bros. "The Batman" opened in theaters in March 2022 and grossed $772 million at the worldwide box office; Reeves and co-writer Mattson Tomlin completed the script for the long-awaited sequel in June. Zoe Kravitz's Catwoman is not expected to return for the film, according to sources with knowledge of the production.

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"It's been a long journey, but I am so incredibly excited. I'm really proud of the script me and Mattson did," Reeves told Variety at the Emmys in September, revealing the lengths to which "The Batman" team went to keep the story under wraps. "We put [the script] into a secret pouch that literally has a lock on it with a code. [Robert Pattinson] was in New York at the time, and everything is high security."

Likewise, details of Johansson's potential role have not been revealed, but the move is the latest major franchise deal for the actor, who most recently starred in the box office smash "Jurassic World Rebirth" (which grossed more than $800 million for Universal) and will appear in "The Exorcist" reboot. Most notably, Johansson joining the Batman sequel means swinging across the comic book street from the Marvel Cinematic Universe (of which she is a founding Avenger as Natasha Romanoff, aka Black Widow) to DC's factory of heroes.

Johansson, a two-time Oscar nominee, has been plenty busy outside of the realm of franchise IP, too. She made her directorial debut with the drama "Eleanor the Great," which debuted at the Cannes Film Festival and was released by Sony Pictures Classics. She'll next be seen starring in James Gray's "Paper Tiger." She is represented by CAA and Yorn Levine LLC.

Nexus Point News first reported news of Johansson eyeing a role in the film. DC Studios had no comment on the casting.

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Oscar Predictions: 'Sinners' Surges, 'No Other Choice' Climbs and 'Wicked: For Good' Isn't Dead, No Matter What Social Media Claims

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Scarlett Johansson in Talks for ‘The Batman 2’

Scarlett Johansson in Talks for 'The Batman 2' Angelique JacksonDecember 4, 2025 at 6:38 AM 0 Getty Images/Everett...
New Photo - Brigitte Bardot says a 'miracle' saved her from multiple suicide attempts in new documentary

Brigitte Bardot says a 'miracle' saved her from multiple suicide attempts in new documentary Shania RussellDecember 3, 2025 at 11:38 PM 0 Gilles BASSIGNAC/GammaRapho via Getty; John Kisch Archive/Getty Brigitte Bardot in 2007 and 1963 Brigitte Bardot says it's because of a "miracle" that she is still alive today. In Bardot, a new documentary about her life, the 91yearold French film star gets candid about her battle with depression and the toll that stardom took on her mental health.

- - Brigitte Bardot says a 'miracle' saved her from multiple suicide attempts in new documentary

Shania RussellDecember 3, 2025 at 11:38 PM

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Gilles BASSIGNAC/Gamma-Rapho via Getty; John Kisch Archive/Getty

Brigitte Bardot in 2007 and 1963

Brigitte Bardot says it's because of a "miracle" that she is still alive today.

In Bardot, a new documentary about her life, the 91-year-old French film star gets candid about her battle with depression and the toll that stardom took on her mental health. While looking back on her career, Bardot revealed that she made several attempts on her life during the height of her fame.

"I was taking my own life," Bardot said in the doc, according to The Sunday Times. "And I was saved by a miracle."

Bardot did not elaborate on what the miracle was, but did note that her battle with depression is something she is working through to this day.

"Every morning I wake up, and I am sad," she shared.

Marceau-Cocinor/Les Films Concordia/ Georges de Beauregard/ Carlo Ponti/ Collection Sunset Boulevard/Corbis via Getty

Brigitte Bardot on the set of "Le Mepris" ("Contempt")

Bardot previously referenced her suicide attempts and other self-destructive behavior in her 1998 autobiography, where she also opened up about dealing with alcohol abuse.

"When you live such intense moments as I have done there is always a bill to pay," she told The Guardian while promoting the book that year. She admitted that prior to retiring from acting in 1973, she was at one point drinking two bottles of champagne and three bottles of wine a day.

"You cannot escape the distress which follows great happiness," she added, when discussing her suicide attempts.

Charly Hel/Prestige/Getty Images Brigitte Bardot

The former actress and current animal rights activist rocketed to fame as a sex symbol of the '50s and '60s. She gained recognition for roles in Roger Vadim's And God Created Woman and Jean-Luc Godard's Le Mépris and soon became an international fashion icon. Following her retirement, Bardot became known as an outspoken activist for animal rights and for voicing strong, controversial opinions — such as denouncing the #MeToo movement in 2018.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.

Her new documentary comes a few months after French newspaper Var-matin reported in October that Bardot had undergone surgery "as part of a serious illness" and received three weeks of hospital treatment. The nature of the illness was not disclosed.

Around the same time, rumors emerged that she had died — which she swiftly dispelled on social media.

"I am doing well and I have no plan on taking my bow," Bardot wrote in a translated post X.

If you or someone you know is considering suicide, please contact the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255), text "STRENGTH" to the Crisis Text Line at 741-741, or go to suicidepreventionlifeline.org.

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Brigitte Bardot says a 'miracle' saved her from multiple suicide attempts in new documentary

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New Photo - Robert Downey Jr. teases Gwyneth Paltrow for being 'forever confused' by her own Marvel movies an...

&34;'Who's that?'&34; Downey Jr. said Paltrow once asked him. &34;He's Tom Holland. You've done four movies with him.&34; Robert Downey Jr. teases Gwyneth Paltrow for being 'forever confused' by her own Marvel movies and costars &34;'Who's that?'&34; Downey Jr. said Paltrow once asked him. &34;He's Tom Holland. You've done four movies with him.&34; By Sydney Bucksbaum :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/headshotb5dc24df8d5d43d1a16c9ce0e0383119.jpg) Sydney Bucksbaum Sydney Bucksbaum is a staff writer at . She has been working at EW since 2019 and is a published author.

"'Who's that?'" Downey Jr. said Paltrow once asked him. "He's Tom Holland. You've done four movies with him."

Robert Downey Jr. teases Gwyneth Paltrow for being 'forever confused' by her own Marvel movies and costars

"'Who's that?'" Downey Jr. said Paltrow once asked him. "He's Tom Holland. You've done four movies with him."

By Sydney Bucksbaum

Sydney Bucksbaum author photo

Sydney Bucksbaum

Sydney Bucksbaum is a staff writer at **. She has been working at EW since 2019 and is a published author. Her work has previously appeared in *TV Guide Magazine*, E! News/E! Online, *The Hollywood Reporter*, Mashable, Bustle, IGN, DCComics.com, Inverse, *The Daily Northwestern*, and more.

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Pepper Potts (Gwyneth Paltrow) and Tony Stark (Robert Downey Jr.) in Iron Man 2

Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. in 'Iron Man 2'. Credit:

Francois Duhamel/Industrial Light & Magic

Robert Downey Jr. is not letting Gwyneth Paltrow off the hook for not knowing her own Marvel movies or costars.

During *The Hollywood Reporter'*s 2025 Women in Entertainment breakfast gala at the Beverly Hills Hotel on Wednesday, Downey Jr. gave a speech honoring his former onscreen love interest as she accepted the 20th annual Sherry Lansing Leadership Award.

And while most of his remarks were heartfelt, he also made sure to tease Paltrow for her constant confusion over the Marvel Cinematic Universe — especially her own movie appearances.

"[She's] impossibly intelligent, yet forever confused by the basic tenets of the Marvel Cinematic Universe and its inhabitants," Downey Jr. said, according to *THR*.

Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. in Iron Man

Gwyneth Paltrow and Robert Downey Jr. in 'Iron Man'.

Zade Rosenthal/Marvel Studios

He then revealed she once asked him who Tom Holland was, despite starring alongside him several times.

"'Who's that?'" Downey Jr. remembered, to which he responded, "'That's Spider-Man. He said his name was Peter. His character's name is Peter. He's Tom Holland. You've done four movies with him.'"

Downey Jr. then praised Paltrow for "building [her company] Goop between takes on the set of *Iron Man,*" while also raising her kids and consistently working in Hollywood.

Paltrow and Downey Jr. played love interests Pepper Potts and Tony Stark, respectively, across many MCU movies, beginning in 2008's* Iron Man* through 2019's *Avengers: Endgame*. Despite her lengthy Marvel resume, Paltrow has gone viral many times for not remembering key details, including the fact that she was literally in some films.

Gwyneth Paltrow has no memory of being in 'Spider-Man: Homecoming'

spider-man

Gwyneth Paltrow says 'Iron Man' was pitched to her as 'indie film'

Gwyneth Paltrow poses for a photocall during the Red Sea International Film Festival 2023

Paltrow got into a hilarious exchange with MCU director Jon Favreau and celebrity chef Roy Choi in the first episode of Netflix's *The Chef Show* in 2019, where she confidently claimed she wasn't in *Spider-Man: Homecoming.*

"Remember when we were in *Spider-Man*?" Favreau asked Paltrow.

"We weren't in *Spider-Man*," Paltrow responded.

"Yes we were," Favreau said.

"*Homecoming*," Choi helpfully added.

"You were in *Spider-Man*," Favreau said again.

"No, I was in *Avengers*," Paltrow responded.

"You were in *Spider-Man* also," Favreau pointed out.

"What?" Paltrow asked.

***Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with our EW Dispatch newsletter.***

"Remember, it's *Spider-Man* at the end, and Tom Holland's there, and you're gonna walk out and do a press conference?" Favreau prompted.

"Oh yes!" Paltrow finally exclaimed.

"That was *Spider-Man*," Favreau said.

"That was *Spider-Man*??" Paltrow realized. "Oh my god."

More recently, Paltrow exposed her MCU confusion again by publicly admitting that she doesn't understand Downey Jr.'s upcoming onscreen return as new character Dr. Doom. In July 2024, Paltrow posted a comment on his Instagram post revealing his return: "I don't get it, are you a baddie now?"

Hopefully by the time *Avengers: Doomsday* comes out on Dec. 18, 2026, Paltrow will have studied up on her MCU lore.**

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