Another Severe Weather Outbreak With Damaging Winds, A Few Tornadoes In Midwest, South, East Sunday and Monday

Yet another severe weather outbreak is forecast in parts of the South, Midwest and East Sunday into Monday with a threat of widespread damaging winds and a few tornadoes from Texas to the East Coast.

The Weather Channel

No, this isn't the movie "Groundhog Day." For the third time this month, a rash of severe thunderstorms is in the forecast, affecting some areas that have been hit repeatedly by severe weather in one or both of the previous outbreaks fromMarch 5-8andMarch 10-12.

This latest severe outbreak will happen on the warm side of an upper Midwest blizzard, named Winter Storm Iona by The Weather Channel.

(FORECAST:Upper Midwest Blizzard This Weekend Into Monday)

Sunday

Sunday morning, at least a few severe thunderstorms could flare up on the western and northern parts of the severe area shown below.

By Sunday afternoon, severe thunderstorms will become numerous from parts of the Midwest to the South, taking the form ofa squall line, a long line of severe thunderstorms. Some embedded tornadoes and damaging winds are increasingly likely. A locally higher threat exists from Evansville, Indiana, to Memphis.

Sunday night, this squall line will then surge east across the Ohio Valley, lower Mississippi Valley and Tennessee Valley through the easternmost areas covered in severe threat in the map below.

Monday

As the cold front from the intense Great Lakes low surges east, thunderstorms with damaging winds will likely be widespread Monday across much of the East, from north Florida to the Northeast.

For now, NOAA's Storm Prediction Center has highlighted the area with the highest chance of severe weather from parts of the mid-Atlantic states to the Carolinas.

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However, this damaging wind threat could extend through the Appalachians and entire Northeast from Monday morning through Monday night. It could accompany the squall line in the Northeast even if that section of the squall line is just a band of heavy rain without lightning.

Even a few tornadoes are possible Monday, either embedded in the squall line, or in any discrete rotating thunderstorms that could flare up ahead of the line.

Power outages and tree damage could be widespread in the East Monday and Monday night.

Prepare Now

- Prepare for a possible power outage,especially if it's forecast to turn coldafter the storm.

- Have multiple ways of receiving official National Weather Service watches and warnings including viasmartphoneandNOAA weather radio. Make sure alerts are enabled so you can be awakened, if sleeping.

- Know where to seek shelter when a severe thunderstorm or tornado warning is issued. If you live in a manufactured home, a community storm shelter, a nearby home or other substantial building is the safest choice.

- Move to shelter immediately when a warning is issued. Don't waste precious seconds looking out the window.

-Take severe thunderstorm warnings as seriouslyas tornado warnings. Winds over 60 mph are capable of downing trees on vehicles, homes and buildings,an underrated dangerin high wind events.

(MORE:14 Severe Weather Safety Tips)

Jonathan Erdman is a senior meteorologist at weather.com and has been covering national and international weather since 1996. Extreme and bizarre weather are his favorite topics. Reach out to him onBluesky,X (formerly Twitter)andFacebook.

Another Severe Weather Outbreak With Damaging Winds, A Few Tornadoes In Midwest, South, East Sunday and Monday

Yet another severe weather outbreak is forecast in parts of the South, Midwest and East Sunday into Monday with a th...
Sydney Sweeney Says She 'Never Felt Confident' About Her Boobs Until

Sydney Sweeney opened up in a new interview about having "never felt confident" in her body until her role as Cassie on Euphoria

People Sydney Sweeney in Los Angeles on Dec. 15, 2025Credit: Gilbert Flores/Variety via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • "I just wanted to hide," the actress recalled

  • Earlier this year, Sweeney launched a lingerie brand, SYRN, that she hopes will "empower other women"

Sydney Sweeneywasn't always so confident.

The actress, 28, opened up about her body image struggles in an exclusive interview withUs Weeklypublished on Thursday, March 12. She told the outlet that she particularly struggled with accepting the size of her chest.

"I grew up with boobs. I was wearing a 32DD in sixth grade, and I never felt confident," she shared. "I never had anything I felt good in, and I just wanted to hide."

Sydney Sweeney at a premiere of 'The Housemaid' in December 2025Credit: Manoli Figetakis/WireImage

TheHousemaidactress said that it wasn't until she played Cassie in the HBO seriesEuphoria"that I started realizing it's actually powerful to be confident; our bodies are incredible."

"We should embrace [them] and feel really good in our skin," Sweeney continued.

The star explained that while she enjoyed Cassie's wardrobe, she still struggled with the fit of the clothing.

"I'd always be like, 'Oh, this fit doesn't work,'" she recalled. "'I don't have the support I want. The straps are digging into my shoulders or it's kind of itchy and riding up.'"

The experience eventually led her to start her own lingerie line,SYRN. "I started a whole Pinterest board of thousands of photos of inspiration, and I [thought], 'I should actually do this.' And we put it together," she said.

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Sweeney celebrated the brand launch in January with a revealingCosmopolitancover shoot. One photo in the spread highlights the actress's curves as she stands sideways, wearing nothing but a black Miu Miu apron and white SYRN lingerie.

The actress told the magazine that she hopes to see her pieces on women of all types.

"My designers are all women, and I have an amazing diverse team," she said. "My models are a beautiful range of body types. I'm always like, 'I want to see it on every body.' I can't be the only model. I need to make sure everyone feels really good in it."

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She alsodefended herself from criticismthat the brand was created for the male gaze.

"People will say, 'Oh, she's doing this for guys' or 'Oh, she's a guy's girl,' " she said. "But I'm like, 'What is more girl's girl than owning your body and doing it for yourself?' I want it to be their choice—the choice of the wearer—whether this is for them, for somebody else, or for a camera lens."

Later on in the interview she added, "Yeah, this is me reclaiming my body and my narrative and using it to empower other women."

Read the original article onPeople

Sydney Sweeney Says She 'Never Felt Confident' About Her Boobs Until “Euphoria”

Sydney Sweeney opened up in a new interview about having "never felt confident" in her body until her role as ...
Doja Cat reveals BPD diagnosis while defending Chappell Roan: 'Let her have an attitude'

Doja Catopened up about her recent mental health struggles, including a BPD diagnosis, in a newTikTokresponding toChappell Roan's recent dust-up with paparazzi in Paris.

Entertainment Weekly Doja Cat attends the 96th Annual Academy Awards on March 2, 2025Credit: Frazer Harrison/WireImage

The "Need to Know" rapper shared that she will often "pretend to be happy" in order to keep appearances. However, she said this effort has caught up with her.

"I'm now struggling with BPD," she revealed. "I don't know how long I've been. I mean, probably forever. It's an agonizing condition."

Doja Cat performs at the Coachella Stage during the 2024 Coachella Valley Music and Arts FestivalCredit: Frazer Harrison/Getty Images for Coachella

BPD typically refers to borderline personality disorder, which is characterized by mood swings, impulsiveness, abandonment fears, unstable relationships, and issues with self-image, according to theMayo Clinic. Doja Cat said she has been in therapy "for years" but that her BPD treatment would take eight years.

While Doja Cat said she was not extending her diagnosis to Chappell Roan, she said that the "Hot to Go!" singer's boldness in the face of paparazzi made her want to be more honest. Roan had pushed back against paps during Paris Fashion Week, filming them as they were photographing her. "These are all the people that are completely disregarding all of my boundaries," Roan said in the video.

"I love that she can be uncomfortable, comfortably, in front of people, and protect herself and be honest," Doja Cat said of Roan. "I had to learn how to be honest. I had to learn how to be honest with myself. I lied to myself for years, for most of my life.... I love that she can do that without hurting people. She hasn't hurt one person by being herself."

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Chappell Roan attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Netflix's 'Olivia Rodrigo: GUTS World Tour' at NYA EAST on October 25, 2024Credit: FilmMagic

Entertainment Weeklyreached out to representatives for Roan and Doja Cat for comment.

Not everyone has been as complimentary about Roan's interaction with the photographers.Boy Georgegave his self-proclaimed "probably not helpful" thoughts in asocial media poston Tuesday.

"The trick is to own your fame," he wrote. "Yes, it's annoying at times but so is being ignored and told [you're] a 'has-been.' Life is always now and I think Chappell looks great but cheer up girl. The world is at your feet stop kicking it! It takes so much more time to say no to a picture or a signature. Boundaries are boring. Break them with the magic of kindness!"

Doja Cat had a different message: "f--k the paparazzi." She further explained that sometimes these tense interactions can make it look like an artist is being a diva toward fans. She said pop stars often deal with "hustlers" that hound them for signatures and photos that they later sell.

"These artists aren't just ignoring people because they're full of themselves, and Chappell Roan is not hurting anybody," she concluded. "So we can put that s--t to bed? Let her have an attitude, because I would love to have one as well, and I f---ing will, hopefully in the future."

Watch Doja Cat's video above.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Doja Cat reveals BPD diagnosis while defending Chappell Roan: 'Let her have an attitude'

Doja Catopened up about her recent mental health struggles, including a BPD diagnosis, in a newTikTokresponding toCh...
Steven Spielberg reveals his next film is a Western with 'no stereotypes'

Steven Spielbergis saddling up for a trip to the Wild West.

Entertainment Weekly Steven Spielberg at SXSW in Austin on March 13, 2026Credit: Gary Miller/FilmMagic

TheJurassic Parkfilmmaker discussed his body of work in a conversation withThe Big Picture's Sean Fennessey at SXSW in Austin on Friday. Fennessey asked Spielberg if he was at liberty to share any information about his next film.

"Well, I'm developing a Western," Spielberg said, prompting thunderous applause. "And it's gonna have horses. There will be guns."

However, theRaiders of the Lost Arkdirector noted that his Western will try to avoid the conventions — and baggage — of the genre's past. "But there'll be no tropes, I can just tell you that," he said. "There are gonna be no stereotypes, no tropes."

Steven Spielberg in Beverly Hills, Calif., on Feb. 10, 2026Credit: Monica Schipper/WireImage

Spielberg has expressed his desire to helm a Western for several years. While promotingWest Side Storyin an interview with Yahoo in 2021, the filmmakerreflected on genresthat he hadn't yet tackled in his illustrious directing career.

"I was asked that question over the last 40 years of my career, if not longer, and I always say, 'A musical is the one thing I haven't done.' The thing I neglected to say is the one genre I haven't really tackled yet is the Western," he said. "So who knows? Maybe I'll be putting on spurs someday. Who knows?"

Last year, Spielbergreiteratedthat he has "an appetite for a Western, which I will someday hopefully do" in an interview withTHR. "It's something that's eluded me for all of these decades," he told the outlet.

TheClose Encounters of the Third Kindfilmmaker has repeatedly emphasized his admiration for the Westerns of John Ford, particularlyThe SearchersandStagecoach, which he often revisits before beginning production on his own movies. "He inspires me, and I'm very sensitive to the way he uses his camera to paint his pictures, and the way he frames things," hetold AFI. "I really admireStagecoachbecause, for one thing, it was John Ford's first foray into Monument Valley, so he was starting to use landscape art to help tell his story."

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It's true that Spielberg has never directed a full-blown Western, but he has paid tribute to the genre in multiple instances throughout his filmography. 1989'sIndiana Jones and the Last Crusadeopens with an extended chase sequence aboard a train in the American Southwest that draws significant influence from classic Westerns.

And in his 2022 autobiographical dramaThe Fabelmans, the filmmaker also immortalized a conversation he had with Ford as a young man, wherein the legendaryHow the West Was Wondirector (played by David Lynch) uses cowboy paintings to teach a lesson about the importance of framing to a young Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle, the protagonist inspired by Spielberg's youth). Sammy and his friends also watch Ford'sThe Man Who Shot Liberty Valanceat their local theater earlier in the film.

Spielberg has also produced and executive produced several Western projects including the 1989 time travel sequelBack to the Future Part III, the 1991 animated movieAn American Tail: Fievel Goes West, the 2005 miniseriesInto the West, and the 2011 genre-benderCowboys & Aliens.

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Additionally, one of Spielberg's first home movies from his childhood filmmaking days was a Western, which he's referred to as bothThe Last GunandThe Last Gunfight. Spielberg madethe nine-minute moviewith his classmates to fulfill a merit badge requirement in his Boy Scout troop in Arizona when he was 13 years old.

Spielberg's latest movie,Disclosure Day, stars Josh O'Connor, Emily Blunt, Colman Domingo, Colin Firth, and Wyatt Russell. The film hits theaters on June 12.

Reporting by Tiffany Kelly and Selena Schorken.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Steven Spielberg reveals his next film is a Western with 'no stereotypes'

Steven Spielbergis saddling up for a trip to the Wild West. TheJurassic Parkfilmmaker discussed his body of ...
5 Rules You Didn't Know Awards Show Seat Fillers Have to Follow (Exclusive)

When you look out into the audience of a major awards show, packed in alongside some of the starriest names in Hollywood are seat fillers: an exclusive group of everyday people who spend the evening occupying the chairs of A-listers while they have to step away for a bathroom break or to present on stage.

People Credit: Arjun Manjunath

Though they are supposed to remain anonymous, a handful got a moment to shine during the Academy Awards' live broadcast in 2015, when hostNeil Patrick Harrisspent a few minutes wandering the aisle in search of seat fillers in the audience to chat with.

And, of course, seat fillers made headlines during aninfamous 2022 Oscars jokewhere hostAmy Schumerpretended to think thatKristen Dunstwas one — and not an actress nominated for her performance inThe Power of the Dogthat very night. (After receiving backlash, Schumersaid in a statementthat it was a "choreographed bit" and that she would "never disrespect" Dunst.)

Ahead of the 2026 Oscars, PEOPLE caught up withArjun Manjunath— a 22-year-old content creator from Pittsburgh, Pa., and a seat filler at the Grammy Awards in February — who shares the five rules you might not realize about being a seat filler for a major awards show.

Seat fillers must pay for their own travel and accommodations

Credit: Arjun Manjunath

Though coveted, the seat filler position is entirely volunteer, meaning they are not compensated for the upwards of 10 hours they're expected to work, and they have to cover the costs of travel and accommodations themselves.

For Manjunath, a full-time influencer, the costs to fly to Los Angeles for the Grammys with mere weeks of notice were not going to stop him, since the entire experience would make for great social media content.

"Any opportunity that arises like this, I will jump at it," he tells PEOPLE. "I will free my schedule if it's something like this."

Seat fillers can't have their phone during the ceremony

Seat filler check inCredit: Arjun Manjunath

For seat fillers, there is a strict no-phone policy.

When seat fillers for the Grammys checked in at the Los Angeles Convention Center in the afternoon before the ceremony began, they had to give up their phone and couldn't get them back until the ceremony was over.

This means that seat fillers can't take pictures — both of themselves and of the ceremony itself — though Manjunath says he convinced a non-seat filler he met to take a picture of him in front of the Grammys stage and text it to him later.

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Seat fillers can't eat or drink during the ceremony

Arjun ManjunathCredit: Sophie Hosna

Seat fillers have to give up more than their phones while on the job: Manjuath says that, while working the Grammys, he was not allowed to have any food or beverages, aside from water.

"They give you a warning," he tells PEOPLE. "They're like, 'Load up on breakfast.' "

This was especially emphasized for seat fillers who travel down to the floor of the arena, where some of the biggest names are seated by the stage: "They tell you that it's very strict that you're not allowed to eat any of the food — anything that's on the table," says Manjuath.

Seat fillers must follow a strict dress code

Arjun ManjunathCredit: Sophie Hosna

The dress code for seat fillers is formal, and those who do not follow the dress code will be denied entrance.

Female seat fillers were expected to wear dresses that are "formal but not overdone" in dark colors or a formal pantsuit, says Manjuath, reading from an email he received ahead of the show. Male seat fillers had to wear a black or dark blue suit or tuxedo with a jacket and tie. (For Manjuath, it meant wearing his first tux since his prom night!)

"They were very, very specific in instructions," says Manjuath. "They're like, 'We've had this happen in the past — please don't do this.' "

Seat fillers cannot interact with celebrities unless the celebrity initiates the interaction

Arjun ManjunathCredit: Sophie Hosna

While the position gets them inside one of the starriest rooms in Hollywood, seat fillers are not supposed to approach A-list talent for a conversation.

"You can't talk to them unless they talk to you first — only organic interactions," says Manjuath. "It was very dystopian. VeryHunger Gamesvibes."

During the Grammys, Manjuath was temporarily seated at a table withNoah Kahanand managed to have a sweet moment with the folk singer despite the strict rules, encouraging him to get up and dance asBruno Marslit up the room with a live performance of his hit"I Just Might"mere feet away from their table.

And after the ceremony was over, Manjuath rubbed elbows with comedianNikki Glaser, and saw plenty of other big names in the flesh, includingHeidi Klum,Tate McRaeandChappell Roan.

Read the original article onPeople

5 Rules You Didn’t Know Awards Show Seat Fillers Have to Follow (Exclusive)

When you look out into the audience of a major awards show, packed in alongside some of the starriest names in Hollywood...

 

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