New Photo - Chappell Roan Acknowledges She's in a 'Very Privileged Position' to Be Able to Delete Her Social Media: 'I'll Be Fine'

Chappell Roan Acknowledges She&x27;s in a &x27;Very Privileged Position&x27; to Be Able to Delete Her Social Media: &x27;I&x27;ll Be Fine&x27; Daniela AvilaMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:15 PM UTC 0 Chappell Roan in Paris in March 2026Credit: Aurore Marechal/Getty Chappell Roan said she&x27;s deleted social media apps to protect her mental health and creative process The singer acknowledged her privilege in being able to step away from social media without career consequences Roan&x27;s last musical release was 2025&x27;s "The Subway" Chappell Roan is opening up about her evolving relationship with s...

Chappell Roan Acknowledges She's in a 'Very Privileged Position' to Be Able to Delete Her Social Media: 'I'll Be Fine'

Daniela AvilaMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:15 PM UTC

0

Chappell Roan in Paris in March 2026
Credit: Aurore Marechal/Getty -

Chappell Roan said she's deleted social media apps to protect her mental health and creative process

The singer acknowledged her privilege in being able to step away from social media without career consequences

Roan's last musical release was 2025's "The Subway"

Chappell Roan is opening up about her evolving relationship with social media.

In a new episode from the P&G and iHeartRadio's Elton John Impact Awards podcast on Monday, June 1, the "Good Luck, Babe!" singer was asked about how she's navigated her presence on social media.

"It's very... disheartening sometimes to really go into the comment section," Roan, 28, said, adding that she currently doesn't "have social media on my phone."

"I just delete it when it becomes too much and keep it moving," she continued. "Because at the end of the day, no matter what anyone says about me online or in person, it's not gonna stop people like Elton [John] and I [from] donating money, donating time, writing about things that matter to us."

Then, the "Casual" singer said that it can be difficult as an artist to separate "social media and your job and being a good person." And though there is plenty of negativity, there are people who stand up for her as well.

"It's such a difficult world to navigate that personally, if I just delete it and keep it moving, I kind of make it out of that hurricane," she explained. "But that's hard for a lot of artists because, if you really rely on social media to fuel your momentum, that can be really disheartening and it can feel very hopeless."

She concluded, "I'm in a very privileged position where I can be like, 'I'm not gonna be on this and I'll be fine.' But not everyone is like that."

In April 2025, Roan went on Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang and said she deleted Instagram and TikTok because her comments section was getting to be too much.

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"If I want to protect my creative psyche, because I'm writing right now, I have to build a force field around it. If I want to for sure have a bad day... I read the comments and I just have to remind myself, 'If you open these, you're not going to feel good.'"

"It just hurts my feelings," she continued.

Chappell Roan in Paris, France in March 2026
Credit: Pierre Suu/Getty

When asked how she protects herself creatively, Roan said she's "really gentle" with her artistry, but she's "not good" at respecting her feelings outside of it.

"When it comes to me making a mistake in life, that's when I'm not good at giving myself some grace," she said. "My creativity is sacred."

Roan's last musical release was 2025's "The Subway." In August of last year, the "Pink Pony Club" singer told Vogue in an interview that there was still "no album" after the release of her debut The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess in 2023.

Roan said that her debut album took five years to write and "it's probably going to take at least five to write the next."

"I'm not that type of writer that can pump it out," she said. "I don't think I make good music whenever I force myself to do anything."

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Published: June 2, 2026 at 01:36AM on Source: MORNING MAG

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Chappell Roan Acknowledges She's in a 'Very Privileged Position' to Be Able to Delete Her Social Media: 'I'll Be Fine'

Chappell Roan Acknowledges She&x27;s in a &x27;Very Privileged Position&x27; to Be Able to Delete Her Social Media: ...
New Photo - Serena Williams timeline: From going pro to her tennis return at 44

Serena Williams timeline: From going pro to her tennis return at 44 Mark Giannotto, USA TODAYMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:09 PM UTC 0 Serena Williams is back in professional tennis. The 44yearold revealed on Monday, June 1 that she&x27;s planning to return to the court to play doubles at the 2026 HSBC Championships. The warmup event for Wimbledon will serve as Williams&x27; first competitive match since losing in the third round of the 2022 U.S. Open. "Queen’s Club feels like the perfect place to begin this next chapter," Williams said in the tournament&x27;s release announcing her return.

Serena Williams timeline: From going pro to her tennis return at 44

Mark Giannotto, USA TODAYMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:09 PM UTC

0

Serena Williams is back in professional tennis.

The 44-year-old revealed on Monday, June 1 that she's planning to return to the court to play doubles at the 2026 HSBC Championships. The warm-up event for Wimbledon will serve as Williams' first competitive match since losing in the third round of the 2022 U.S. Open.

"Queen’s Club feels like the perfect place to begin this next chapter," Williams said in the tournament's release announcing her return. "Grass has given me some of the most meaningful moments of my career, and I’m excited to be back competing on one of the sport’s most iconic stages.”

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Williams is a 23-time Grand Slam champion, which is the most by a woman in the Open era. Her career will now span more than 30 years since her debut as a professional thanks to this comeback attempt, with accolades and achievements that place her among the greatest athletes of all-time, regardless of sport.

Here's a timeline of every major moment in Williams' tennis journey, from her first matches and an unbelievable run of dominance within the sport to this latest chapter that will unfold in England beginning later this month:

OPINION: Serena Williams, at 44, will shatter myth that women have a 'use by' date

Serena Williams timeline: Biggest moments in her tennis careerEarly years -

Oct. 28, 1995: Williams made her pro debut as a 14-year-old in a qualifying match at the Challenge Bell in Quebec City, Canada. Williams lost in straight-sets to fellow American Annie Miller (6-1, 6-1)

Oct. 27, 1997: Williams made her main draw debut at the 1997 Kremlin Cup in Moscow, Russia. She lost her first-round match to Kimberly Po in straight sets.

November 1997: Williams won her first professional matches at the 1997 Ameritech Cup in Chicago. She upset Elena Likhovtseva (No. 27 in the world at the time), and then upset Mary Pierce (No. 7) and Monica Seles (No. 4) before eventually losing to Lindsey Davenport in the tournament semifinals. Williams moved into the top 100 in the world for the first time as a result of performances.

January 1998: Williams entered her first Grand Slam at the 1998 Australian Open and faced her sister, Venus Williams, for the first time in their professional careers in the second round. Venus Williams won in straight sets.

March 1, 1998: Williams teamed with her sister to win their first WTA doubles titles together at the 1998 IGA Tennis Classic in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Venus Williams won her first WTA singles title about 30 minutes prior to the start of the doubles final, according to reports.

June 7, 1998: Williams made her first Grand Slam final in the mixed doubles competition at the 1998 French Open at Roland Garros. She was partners with Luis Lobo of Argentina and they lost in straight sets to the team of Venus Williams and Justin Gimelstob in the final.

July 5, 1998: Williams captured her first Grand Slam title by winning the mixed doubles competition at Wimbledon in 1998 playing alongside Max Mirnyi.

Sept. 11, 1998: Williams and Mirnyi teamed to win their second-straight Grand Slam title in mixed doubles at the 1998 U.S. Open in New York.

Feb. 28, 1999: Williams won her first singles title as a professional at the 1999 Open Gaz de France by beating Amelie Mauresmo

March 13, 1999: Williams won her first WTA 1000 event by beating Steffi Graf in the 1999 Evert Cup final.

March 28, 1999: Venus Williams defeated Serena Williams to win the 1999 Lipton Championships in the first all-sister women's singles final since Wimbledon in 1884.

June 6, 1999: Serena and Venus Williams team up to win their first Grand Slam doubles title together at the 1999 French Open by defeating Martina Hingis and Anna Kournikova.

Sept. 11, 1999: Serena Williams won her first Grand Slam title in women's singles by defeating Martina Hingis in the 1999 U.S. Open final after Hingis had beaten Venus Williams in the semifinals.

Sept. 28, 2000: Williams captured her first Olympic gold medal by winning the women's doubles competition at the 2000 Sydney Games playing with her sister, Venus.

Jan. 24, 2001: Serena and Venus Williams completed the career golden slam in women's doubles by winning the 2001 Australian Open.

Sept. 8, 2001: Venus Williams defeated Serena Williams in the first U.S. Open women's singles final broadcast in primetime, and the first-ever U.S. Open final involving two sisters.

Serena Williams celebrates after winning the 1999 U.S. Open.Rising up the rankings and the first 'Serena Slam' -

March 30, 2002: Serena Williams defeats world No. 3 Martina Hingis, No. 2 Venus Williams and No. 1 Jennifer Capriati en route to winning the 2002 Nasdaq-100 Open without losing a set.

June 8, 2002: Serena Williams captures her first French Open title in women's singles by beating Venus Williams in the final in straight sets.

July 7, 2002: Serena Williams knocked off her sister, the two-time defending Wimbledon champion, in straight sets again to capture her first Wimbledon title in women's singles.

July 8, 2002: Serena Williams ascended to No. 1 in the world rankings for the first time.

Sept. 7, 2002: Serena Williams beats her sister in a third-straight Grand Slam final to win her second US Open title in women's singles.

Jan. 25, 2003: Serena Williams completed the "Serena Slam" by winning her fourth Grand Slam in a row, beating her sister in the final once more. Serena Williams became the sixth woman in the Open Era to complete a career grand slam in women's singles.

June 4, 2003: Williams suffered her first loss in a Grand Slam in two years at the 2003 French Open, dropping a semifinal match to Justine Henin that featured controversy. Henin appeared to raise her arm in the middle of Williams' serve during the third set as the Roland Garros crowd booed Williams. The chair umpire didn't see Henin and Henin declined to admit she had asked Williams to stop her serve. Williams broke down in tears afterwards discussing the ruling and accused Henin of "lying and fabricating."

July 5, 2003: Williams won Wimbledon again by beating Henin in the semifinals and her sister in the women's singles final.

Injuries, controversy and return to No. 1 -

April 3, 2004: Williams won the 2004 NASDAQ-100 Open in her first tournament in eight months after undergoing knee surgery.

Sept. 8, 2004: Williams lost to Jennifer Capriati in the 2004 US Open quarterfinals and told reporters she felt "cheated" and "robbed" after several calls went against her and replays showed Williams should have won all the points. The match is credited with helping ushering in the usage of the Hawkeye replay review system currently used by most major tennis tournaments.

Jan. 29, 2005: Williams won the women's singles title at the Australian Open for the second time.

Jan. 26, 2007: Williams became just the second player in the Open era to win the Australian Open as an unseeded player. She entered the event ranked No. 81 in the world after missing most of the 2006 season due to injury.

Aug. 17, 2008: Williams won her second Olympic gold medal at the Beijing Games in women's doubles playing with her sister, Venus.

Sept. 7, 2008: Serena Williams won her third U.S. Open title and returned to No. 1 in the world for the first time in five years.

Jan. 31, 2009: Williams won her fourth Australian Open women's singles title and 10th Grand Slam singles title overall to reclaim the No. 1 ranking again.

July 4, 2009: Williams won Wimbledon for the second year in a row, defeating her sister in the final again.

Sept. 12, 2009: Williams' attempt to repeat as U.S. Open champion ended in a semifinal loss to Kim Clijsters in which Williams was penalized a point on match point after yelling expletives and threatening an official who had called a foot fault on her. She was fined and placed on a two-year probation by U.S. Open officials as a result of the incident.

Jan. 30, 2010: Williams won the Australian Open in back-to-back years for the first time, spoiling Henin's return from retirement in the final for her 12th Grand Slam singles title.

June 4, 2010: Williams teamed with her sister to win their fourth-straight Grand Slam title in women's doubles at the 2010 French Open and became just the third doubles team in tennis history to hold all four Grand Slam titles at the same time.

July 2, 2010: Williams beat Vera Zvonareva soundly to capture her fourth Wimbledon singles title and move past Billie Jean King for sixth all-time on the female Grand Slam winner list.

July 7, 2010: Williams told USA TODAY Sports she cut both her feet after stepping on glass while leaving a restaurant in Munich, Germany. Williams needed 18 stitches and later underwent surgery to repair a lacerated tendon in her right big toe. She missed the remainder of the 2010 season as a result.

March 5, 2011: Williams confirmed she had to be hospitalized in Los Angeles for a hematoma and pulmonary embolism after at least two surgeries on her injured foot.

June 14, 2011: Williams returned to action for the first time since the 2010 Wimbledon final and lost in the second round at the WTA's Eastbourne event.

Sept. 11, 2011: Williams lost the U.S. Open final to Sam Stosur in controversial fashion after she was penalized by the chair umpire for causing a hindrance when she shouted "come on" after a forehand winner. Williams later called the chair umpire a "hater" and "unattractive inside," but tournament officials deemed it to not be a major violation of her two-year probation instituted in 2009.

Making history and the second 'Serena Slam' -

July 7, 2012: Williams won the Wimbledon women's singles title for a fifth time after a surprising upset loss in the first round of the French Open a month earlier.

Aug. 4, 2012: Williams joined Steffi Graff as only the second woman to complete the Golden Slam when she won the women's singles gold medal at the 2012 London Olympics.

Sept. 9, 2012: Williams won her fourth U.S. Open singles title and became the first women's tennis player to cross $40 million in earnings.

Feb. 13, 2013: Williams returned to No. 1 in the WTA rankings for the sixth time and became the oldest tennis player to achieve that ranking at 31 years old.

June 8, 2013: Williams won her second French Open title 11 years after her first one by beating Maria Sharapova in straight sets for her 31st win in a row

Sept. 8, 2013: Williams bested Victoria Azarenka to win the U.S. Open in back-to-back years, and the fifth time overall.

Sept. 7, 2014: Williams didn't drop a set en route to winnnig her third-straight U.S. Open. She tied Martina Navratilova and Chris Evert for fourth all-time with 18 Grand Slam singles titles in the Open era.

Jan. 31, 2015: Williams beat Sharapova for the 16th-straight time to win her sixth Australian Open and move past Evert and Navratilova for second all-time with 19 Grand Slam singles titles.

June 6, 2015: Williams won her third French Open while playing through the flu and joined Margaret Court and Graff as the only female tennis players to win each Grand Slam at least three times.

July 11, 2015: Williams completed her second "Serena Slam" by winning Wimbledon for the fifth time and became the oldest Grand Slam champion of the modern era at 33 years old.

Sept. 11, 2015: Williams was upset by unseeded Roberta Vinci in the 2015 U.S. Open semifinals, ending Williams' bid to win all four Grand Slam events in the same calendar year.

July 9, 2016: Williams tied Graf for the most Grand Slam titles in the Open era (22) by winning her seventh Wimbledon title.

Sept. 5, 2016: Williams tied Graf for the most-consecutive weeks holding the No. 1 ranking in women's tennis (186), but she could not surpass the mark after suffering a loss to Karolína Plíšková in the U.S. Open semifinals.

Jan. 28, 2017: Williams defeated her sister to win the Australian Open for the seventh time and move past Graf for the most Grand Slam titles of the Open era (23).

Serena's mom era and 'evolving away' from tennis -

April 17, 2017: Williams announced that she was 20 weeks pregnant and would not play again the rest of the 2017 season. It meant she was pregnant while winning the 2017 Australian Open.

Sept. 1, 2017: Williams gave birth to her first child and later revealed she suffered a pulmonary embolism after delivery that forced her to remain in bed for six weeks.

Dec. 30, 2017: Williams played her first match since giving birth, losing in an exhibition against Jelena Ostapenko in Abu Dhabi.

Feb. 11, 2018: Williams formally returned to competitive tennis with a loss in a Fed Cup doubles match playing alongside Venus Williams.

July 14, 2018: Williams made the Wimbledon final in her fourth tournament back from pregnancy, but lost to Angelique Kerber in straight sets

Sept. 8, 2018: Williams lost to Naomi Osaka in the 2018 U.S. Open final in a match marred by several code violations given to Williams for allegedly receiving coaching in the middle of a game, smashing her racket and verbal abuse. The third violation cost Williams a game and led to boos from the crowd that grew so loud during Osaka's trophy ceremony, Williams asked fans to stop.

July 13, 2019: Williams' attempt to tie Court's all-time Grand Slam record fell short again when she lost the 2019 Wimbledon final to Simona Halep.

Sept. 7, 2019: Williams was upset by 19-year-old Canadian Bianca Andreescu in the 2019 U.S. Open women's final.

Jan. 12, 2020: Williams won her first singles title as a mother, and first title in three years, by beating Jessica Pegula in the ASB Classic final in Auckland, New Zealand.

May 12, 2021: Williams played her 1000th career match in the second round of the Italian Open, but suffered a loss to Nadia Podoroska.

June 29, 2021: Williams was forced to retire from her first-round match at Wimbledon after suffering a hamstring injury. She later revealed it was a torn hamstring and she also pulled out of the 2021 U.S. Open as a result.

June 21, 2022: Williams returned to the court for the first time in nearly a year and won a mixed doubles match playing with Ons Jabeur at the WTA's Eastbourne event.

June 29, 2022: Williams lost her first-round match at Wimbledon to Harmony Tam and told reporters afterwards she wasn't sure if it was her last Grand Slam appearance at the All-England Club.

Aug. 9, 2022: Williams announced in a first-person story for Vogue that she would be "evolving away" from tennis to focus on her family and her venture capital firm.

Sep. 2, 2022: Williams staved off five match points to win second set before losing to Ajla Tomljanovic in a 2022 U.S. Open third-round match. When asked afterwards if she might consider returning, Williams said, "I don't think so, but you never know."

Oct. 6, 2025: Williams first appeared again on the list of players in the International Tennis Integrity Agency's doping pool, a requirement for her to play in sanctioned tournaments. When her name was reported as on the list in December 2025, Williams wrote in a tweet, "Omg yall I’m NOT coming back."

June 1, 2026: Williams announced she would be returning to tennis as a wildcard to play doubles with Victoria Mboko at the 2026 Queen's Club Championships

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Serena Williams timeline: From turning pro to her 2026 tennis return

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Serena Williams timeline: From going pro to her tennis return at 44

Serena Williams timeline: From going pro to her tennis return at 44 Mark Giannotto, USA TODAYMon, June 1, 2026 at 10:09 PM UTC 0 S...
New Photo - What's the latest on the Freedom 250 Great American State Fair? Trump steps in

What&x27;s the latest on the Freedom 250 Great American State Fair? Trump steps in Fernando Cervantes Jr., USA TODAYMon, June 1, 2026 at 7:29 PM UTC 0 After several planned artists pulled out of the Great American State Fair over the weekend, President Donald Trump announced on May 30 that the musical performances were gone and the show would have a new headliner: himself. In a Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump went on to criticize the musicians for getting what he called "the yips," and said that he was planning to organize instead what he called an "AMERICA IS BACK Rally.

What's the latest on the Freedom 250 Great American State Fair? Trump steps in

Fernando Cervantes Jr., USA TODAYMon, June 1, 2026 at 7:29 PM UTC

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After several planned artists pulled out of the Great American State Fair over the weekend, President Donald Trump announced on May 30 that the musical performances were gone and the show would have a new headliner: himself.

In a Truth Social post on Saturday, Trump went on to criticize the musicians for getting what he called "the yips," and said that he was planning to organize instead what he called an "AMERICA IS BACK Rally."

Trump went on to say the change in lineup may be for the best, since he is "the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World" and "the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime."

Among the latest cancellations were R&B group The Commodores and country music star Martina McBride, who said they were originally under the impression that the event would be entirely nonpartisan.

"That turned out to be misleading," McBride said May 28 in a statement posted on X.

The cancellations come as the Great American State Fair, a 16-day event organized by the president's nonprofit, Freedom 250, is set to be held between June 25 and July 10 at the National Mall in Washington, DC.

Here's the latest on the Great American State Fair.

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Who's in and out of the Great American State Fair?

Here are the performers who have called out:

Morris Day

Young MC

Milli Vanilli

The Commodores

Martina McBride

Bret Michaels

Workers continue to build the Freedom 250's Great American State Fair on the National Mall on May 28, 2026 in Washington, DC.

Artists listed to perform at the Freedom 250 event, who have not yet commented, according to the group's post on X, so far include:

C+C Music Factory (June 26)

Vanilla Ice (June 26)

Flo Rida (July 2)

Despite the cancellations, the group has teased that new artist names are set to be released in the near future.

What is the Great American State Fair?

The fair, set to run from June 25 through July 10, is being organized by Freedom 250, a nonprofit group Trump created to plan the semiquincentennial celebration. It’s among the many events planned by Freedom 250 for the Nation's Capital, including World Cup watch parties, an IndyCar race and an athletic competition for high schoolers.

The event will transform the National Mall into "the biggest, boldest state fair in the country," according to the group's website. Scheduled attractions include a Ferris wheel and carousel; rodeo and livestock competitions are also planned.

Contributing: Mike Snider, Saman Shafiq and Zachary Schemerle, USA TODAY

Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at fernando.cervantes@usatodayco.com and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: What's the latest on the Freedom 250 State Fair? Trump stepping in

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Published: June 1, 2026 at 10:54PM on Source: MORNING MAG

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What's the latest on the Freedom 250 Great American State Fair? Trump steps in

What&x27;s the latest on the Freedom 250 Great American State Fair? Trump steps in Fernando Cervantes Jr., USA TODAYMon, June...
New Photo - Let's talk Han spoilers! Sung Kang and Justin Lin on shocking F9 mid-credits scene, Tokyo Drift s...

Let's talk Han spoilers! Sung Kang and Justin Lin on shocking F9 midcredits scene, Tokyo Drift sequel By Derek Lawrence :maxbytes(150000):stripicc()/derek160e1b72b3389c74b8ca03743731e346949.jpg) Derek Lawrence Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at . He left EW in 2022. EW's editorial guidelines June 25, 2021 1:40 p.m. ET Warning: This article contains spoilers for F9. Sung Kang is more than ready to talk. "It's such a relief," he tells EW. "No more calls, and no more texts of how is Han back: 'Come on, spill the beans, we're boys.' Nope, look at the movie.

Let's talk Han spoilers! Sung Kang and Justin Lin on shocking F9 mid-credits scene, Tokyo Drift sequel

By Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence

Derek Lawrence is a former associate editor at **. He left EW in 2022.

EW's editorial guidelines

June 25, 2021 1:40 p.m. ET

**Warning: This article contains spoilers for *F9*.**

Sung Kang is more than ready to talk. "It's such a relief," he tells EW. "No more calls, and no more texts of how is Han back: 'Come on, spill the beans, we're boys.' Nope, look at the movie."

It was way back in January 2020 when the action-packed first trailer for *F9* ended with a bang — and a crunch. The always-snacking and long-presumed-dead Han (Kang) was revealed to be alive. Kang's return as the fan-favorite character, who last appeared in 2013's *Fast & Furious 6*, left fans in desperate need of answers. But after an unexpected 13-month delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic, *F9* was finally released in theaters Friday.

For a spoiler-filled *F9* chat, which can be seen in full above, *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga* was joined by Kang, fellow stars Jordana Brewster and Helen Mirren, and director Justin Lin. If you don't want to know the specifics of Han's revival and that tasty mid-credits scene, or juicy plans for what is next, then go grab a Corona and come back when you've seen the film.

1:46 Vin Diesel and John Cena Riff About the Toretto Family Rules

Han vs. Shaw, let's ride! Going in, we knew that Han was returning and "justice for Han" had been teased — but Jason Statham wasn't expected to appear in *F9*, even recently telling EW of his *Fast* future, "They better bring me back, because I need to put out that fire. If he's got any score to settle, it's with me." Well, consider the score ready to be settled, because *F9*'s mid-credits scene brings back Shaw (Statham) and finds him hitting a punching bag that happens to contain an unidentified man, until there's a knock on the door. Who's there? Han, the beloved family member who audiences and seemingly Shaw himself believed he had killed, as depicted in the mid-credits scene of 2013's *Fast & Furious 6*.

When asked what audiences should take from the *F9* stinger, Kang has a simple yet intriguing tease: "I think there's just one word — Gisele. All roads lead to Gisele."

"I feel like it's making a big promise," Lin adds. "It's so funny because I'd called [Statham] and he came and did the tag for *6*, and we had talked about all this stuff. Then I called him one day and said, 'Hey Jason, I'm not going to do *7*.' He's like, 'What?!' And so then I called him and I say, 'Hey Jason, I'm going to have you do the tag for *9*.' And he's like, "But we get to work together after this!'"

Fast & Furious 6, F9

Jason Statham as Deckard Shaw and Sung Kang as Han. Universal Pictures; Giles Keyte/Universal

Shaw's presence is key to Lin and *Fast* following through on "justice for Han," a campaign that began when fans became frustrated with how the aftermath of Han's death was handled, as Shaw went from family-killing villain to hero of his own spin-off, 2019's *Hobbs & Shaw*. Lin and Kang have been adamant that "justice for Han" is ongoing and won't just be magically solved in one film, but they view this reveal as a good start.

"The angst isn't there anymore, right?" says Kang. "I think when people see that scene, their feelings towards Deckard Shaw are going to be a little different. Like the idea of him being part of the family, we're one step closer to making that respectable and sincere. Because look, at the end of the day, everybody loves Jason. I want him to be part of the family, I want to have scenes with him — who doesn't want Jason in their movie? So we got to figure it out, and I know he wants to be a part of it. But you never know; what you think is going to happen is usually not where we're going."

Now let's go back a few steps to how Han is even alive to begin with. In *F9*, on a fact-finding trip to Tokyo, Mia (Brewster) and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) are saved by a young woman named Elle (Anna Sawai) and her protector… Han. Upon returning to the team's new base, Han explains what happened to him: Shortly after the death of Gisele (Gal Gadot) in *Fast 6*, our old friend — and Gisele's former boss — Mr. Nobody (Kurt Russell) reached out to Han to recruit him for some spy work. An early mission found Han breaking into a Tokyo home to steal part of Project Aries, only for the owners to be assassinated, prompting Han to step in and save their daughter, Elle, who would turn out to be the literal key to Aries. With Han set to look after Elle and the threat of a rogue Mr. Nobody agent (John Cena's Jakob), the arrival of Shaw in that infamous *Tokyo Drift* crash scene was used to fake Han's death, albeit without Shaw's knowledge, as far as we know. Speaking of Mr. Nobody, his fate is left up in the air in *F9*, but Lin doesn't want to give away too much because "it definitely plays into something bigger."

"I feel there is a lot of pressure, but I would also say that the pressure shouldn't be on this film," Lin says of paying off "justice for Han" and the character's latest revival. "I think the way it's being presented, I feel like there's a whole film with Han, Elle, Mr. Nobody, and even Gisele. There was something about the connection between Gisele and Mr. Nobody that I don't know why, [but] it brought me back to casting Gal."

Fast Five

Gal Gadot as Gisele and Sung Kang as Han in 'Fast Five'.

The idea of a Han vehicle outside the main *Fast* series, which is set to wrap up with two more installments, is clearly something that Lin and Kang have talked about, with Kang even throwing out the possibility of a *Tokyo Drift Part 2*.

"There's great tools here to tell the stories that we want to tell," Kang says. "And instead of these ideas of 'Let's go do this movie, let's go do this franchise,' I realize how mature Justin has become because he said, 'I'm really comfortable in my skin now and I'm really proud of what we've accomplished within the *Fast *universe. And let me quench my thirst to tell other stories within this world, and let me use the characters that already exist because we have a shorthand, there's a trust, there's a support from the studio, there's a fan base.' That's a level of enlightenment and kind of comfort in yourself and your place that I think opens the door to so many possibilities. So with that perspective, I think there's room for a *Tokyo Drift 2*."

While Lin, who made his *Fast* debut with 2006's *Tokyo Drift*, is already prepping for *Fast 10* and *11*, the filmmaker is doing his best to conceal his future plans for Han.

"I've been talking to Sung a lot," he says of his friend and collaborator since 2003's *Better Luck Tomorrow*. "I've been working on something, and, oh boy, I shouldn't say more than that, but Han is obviously such a special character… There was a big chunk of time where I'm like, we're going to do 'justice for Han,' but he's not coming back. The fact that we did that in *9* and he's now back for real, I want to make sure that we don't take that lightly. I can assure you I've definitely been working on a lot of stuff, been talking a lot about Han."

**To listen, subscribe to *EW's BINGE: The Fast Saga* feed via Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. You can also subscribe to EW's YouTube page to catch all the video interviews, and stay tuned to EW.com for even more *Fast *coverage**.******Related content:**

- Sung Kang and Justin Lin on the road to 'justice for Han,' and what it means to them

- Sung Kang on embracing 'rare' journey of Han, 'Hollywood story' return in *F9*

- 2 Brothers 2 Furious: How Vin Diesel and John Cena are redefining *Fast* family in F*9*

- Action Movies

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Published: June 1, 2026 at 05:19PM on Source: MORNING MAG

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Let's talk Han spoilers! Sung Kang and Justin Lin on shocking F9 mid-credits scene, Tokyo Drift s...

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New Photo - BP sells 5% stake in Australian Browse LNG project to South Korea's GS Energy

BP sells 5% stake in Australian Browse LNG project to South Korea&x27;s GS Energy ReutersMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:34 AM UTC 0 FILE PHOTO: A BP logo is seen at a petrol station in London, Britain, January 15, 2015. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor/File Photo SYDNEY, June 1 (Reuters) BP said ‌on Monday it ‌agreed to sell 5% ​of its stake in the Browse liquefied natural ‌gas project ⁠in Western Australia to South ⁠Korea&x27;s GS Energy.

BP sells 5% stake in Australian Browse LNG project to South Korea's GS Energy

ReutersMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:34 AM UTC

0

FILE PHOTO: A BP logo is seen at a petrol station in London, Britain, January 15, 2015. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor/File Photo

SYDNEY, June 1 (Reuters) - BP said ‌on Monday it ‌agreed to sell 5% ​of its stake in the Browse liquefied natural ‌gas project ⁠in Western Australia to South ⁠Korea's GS Energy.

"The dilution reflects BP's ​disciplined ​approach ​to portfolio ‌management by bringing in a committed partner," the British energy company said ‌in an ​emailed statement.

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The ​5% ​selldown leaves ‌BP with a ​39% ​stake in Woodside's $35 billion project.

(Reporting ​by ‌Christine Chen in ​Sydney; Editing by ​Jacqueline Wong)

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BP sells 5% stake in Australian Browse LNG project to South Korea's GS Energy

BP sells 5% stake in Australian Browse LNG project to South Korea&x27;s GS Energy ReutersMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:34 AM UTC 0 F...
New Photo - 4 Chip Stocks That Look Like Brilliant Buys

4 Chip Stocks That Look Like Brilliant Buys Keithen Drury, The Motley FoolMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:35 AM UTC 0 Key Points Nvidia and Broadcom are headed for a showdown. Micron and Taiwan Semiconductor are enjoying their neutral positioning. 10 stocks we like better than Nvidia › Chip stocks are making investors a ton of money right now. These businesses are booming because they&x27;re direct beneficiaries of the AI buildout. For them, there&x27;s no waiting to see what the return on investment actually is; it&x27;s here right now.

4 Chip Stocks That Look Like Brilliant Buys

Keithen Drury, The Motley FoolMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:35 AM UTC

0

Key Points -

Nvidia and Broadcom are headed for a showdown.

Micron and Taiwan Semiconductor are enjoying their neutral positioning.

10 stocks we like better than Nvidia ›

Chip stocks are making investors a ton of money right now. These businesses are booming because they're direct beneficiaries of the AI buildout. For them, there's no waiting to see what the return on investment actually is; it's here right now. That makes these stocks great to buy and hold, and I've got a few of them that look like solid picks now.

The stocks I'm eyeing are Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA), Broadcom (NASDAQ: AVGO), Taiwan Semiconductor (NYSE: TSM), and Micron (NASDAQ: MU). All four of these have performed phenomenally over the past few years, but there's still more ahead.

Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »

Inspector looking at a chip.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Nvidia

Nvidia was the original chip investment in the AI arms race. It made good on the original pick by delivering huge growth early and often, although some investors thought that could be going away in the middle of last year. Now, Nvidia continues to post impressive revenue results, including 85% growth during its first quarter.

Despite that strong growth rate, Nvidia trades at a pretty cheap 24 times forward earnings. If Nvidia can continue delivering solid results like this throughout the remainder of 2026, I have no doubt that the stock will start rising and make investors a solid chunk of change.

2. Broadcom

Nvidia is focused on providing broad computing devices. Broadcom is challenging that approach by offering custom AI chips that are designed with the end user in mind. There are several advantages to these chips, but it mostly comes down to being more cost-effective than GPU-based training.

This isn't a major business for Broadcom today, but by the end of next year, it could be generating more than $100 billion in annual revenue from its custom AI chips. That's a major boost, as Broadcom had less than $70 billion in revenue over the past 12 months. Custom AI chips are becoming a larger part of Broadcom's business, and it's a top reason to buy today.

3. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing

Neither Nvidia nor Broadcom has the capability to produce chips themselves, so they farm that work out to a company like Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing (also known as TSMC). The company is the largest logic chip producer in the world, and the chips it makes are found in devices all around the world. TSMC is a major AI chipmaker, and with the enormous amount of money being spent on AI infrastructure, it's doing great. Management believes that its AI-related chip revenue will rise at nearly a 60% compound annual growth rate (CAGR) from 2024 to 2029.

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AI chips aren't the only part of TSMC's business, but nothing else is growing quite like AI is. Still, TSMC is posting strong revenue growth, and Wall Street analysts project over 35% growth this year. That's a ton of growth in a short time frame, and with TSMC's neutral position, it makes for a great chip stock to buy now and hold onto for the remainder of the AI buildout.

4. Micron

Last on the list is Micron, the world's newest $1 trillion company. Micron and TSMC are two similar companies, but Micron makes memory chips. There's a major shortage of memory chips right now, which is causing the price to spike. Micron is making a killing from these high memory chip prices, and with no alleviation in sight, this trend could continue for some time.

Micron is the fastest-growing of all four companies on this list, and Wall Street expects Micron to deliver more than 260% revenue growth next quarter. That's unreal growth, and will likely last for some time due to the massive shortage of memory chips. As long as there is a shortage of memory chips, Micron will be a great AI chip stock to buy and hold.

Should you buy stock in Nvidia right now?

Before you buy stock in Nvidia, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Nvidia wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years.

Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $463,900!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you’d have $1,294,401!*

Now, it’s worth noting Stock Advisor’s total average return is 978% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 211% for the S&P 500. Don't miss the latest top 10 list, available with Stock Advisor, and join an investing community built by individual investors for individual investors.

See the 10 stocks »

*Stock Advisor returns as of June 1, 2026.

Keithen Drury has positions in Broadcom, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Broadcom, Micron Technology, Nvidia, and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

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Published: June 1, 2026 at 10:18AM on Source: MORNING MAG

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4 Chip Stocks That Look Like Brilliant Buys

4 Chip Stocks That Look Like Brilliant Buys Keithen Drury, The Motley FoolMon, June 1, 2026 at 6:35 AM UTC 0 Key Points Nvidia an...
New Photo - Bryce Mitchell receives last-minute opponent change at UFC Fight Night 278

Bryce Mitchell receives lastminute opponent change at UFC Fight Night 278 Tristen CritchfieldMon, June 1, 2026 at 1:13 AM UTC 0 Advertisement Bryce Mitchell was successful in his bantamweight debut. |Getty/UFCBryceMitchell has received a new opponent less than a week beforeUFC Fight Night 278.Mitchell will square off against SantiagoLuna at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Luna is a replacement forVictorHenry, who withdrew from the bantamweight bout for undisclosedreasons. The promotion confirmed the change following an intiialreport from

Bryce Mitchell receives last-minute opponent change at UFC Fight Night 278

Tristen CritchfieldMon, June 1, 2026 at 1:13 AM UTC

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Bryce Mitchell was successful in his bantamweight debut. |Getty/UFCBryceMitchell has received a new opponent less than a week beforeUFC Fight Night 278.Mitchell will square off against SantiagoLuna at the UFC Apex in Las Vegas. Luna is a replacement forVictorHenry, who withdrew from the bantamweight bout for undisclosedreasons. The promotion confirmed the change following an intiialreport from

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Published: June 1, 2026 at 04:27AM on Source: MORNING MAG

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Bryce Mitchell receives last-minute opponent change at UFC Fight Night 278

Bryce Mitchell receives lastminute opponent change at UFC Fight Night 278 Tristen CritchfieldMon, June 1, 2026 at 1:13 AM UTC 0 A...

 

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