Jesse Jackson: Five key moments in Civil Rights icon's career

TheRev. Jesse Jackson, who died Feb. 17 at 84, was a tireless activist, dynamic orator, skilled diplomat and influential politician whosetwo campaignsfor the White House transformed politics and diversified the Democratic Party.

USA TODAY

Renowned for his ability to weave unity across borders of race, class, gender and religion, his legacy is a tapestry of efforts to promote civil and human rights, peace, equality andeconomic and social justice.

Here are five key moments in Jackson's career.

Jackson's evolution as an activist

As a freshman at the University of Illinois, Jackson was one of eight young Black high school and college students arrested after conducting a sit-in at a Whites-only library in his native Greenville, South Carolina, in the summer of 1960. The protest by the so-calledGreenville Eightwould help spur the library's desegregation two months later.

<p style=The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a towering civil rights icon who battled alongside Martin Luther King Jr., negotiated global hostage releases, and shamed corporations for their lack of corporate diversity and failure to support voting rights, has died. He was 84. Jackson was hospitalized on Nov. 12 following a lengthy battle with the neuromuscular disease progressive supranuclear palsy, a condition similar to Parkinson's disease.

See his journey and path to politics in photos.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> In July 1960, Jesse Jackson (second row, left) and seven other students were arrested for trying to integrate the Greenville County Library in South Carolina. Pictured with Jackson are, front row, from left, Joan Mattison Daniel, Elaine Means, Margaree Seawright Crosby, Dorris Wright, Hattie Smith Wright; second row, Benjamin Downs; back row, Willie Joe Wright and attorneys Donald Sampson and Willie T. Smith Jr.. Jesse Jackson speaks with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in 1966. Jesse Jackson, wearing a button from his organization Operation PUSH (People United to Save Humanity), attends the 1972 Democratic National Convention at the Miami Beach Convention Center. Democratic presidential candidates Walter Mondale (L) and Jesse Jackson (2nd, L) participate in the Democratic debate at Columbia University on March 28, 1984 in New York, while Gary Hart (R) answers a question from journalist and TV presenter Dan Rather (back). Jesse Jackson speaks at a news conference in London en route to tour of southern African nations. August 14, 1986. Former president-elect George Bush(L) shakes hands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Nov. 30 1988 after a luncheon meeting at the White House in Washington. Aretha Franklin and Jesse Jackson join Mayor Coleman Young at a Rally for the Mayor at the New St. Paul Tabernacle, Church of God in Christ in Detroit in November 1989. Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton (R) joins hands with Rev. Jesse Jackson in Atlanta, Sept. 9, 1992 during the National Baptist Convention. Rev. Jesse Jackson is arrested March 15, 1993 after blocking 5th Avenue as part of a group protesting the Clinton Administration's policy of maintaining a detention camp for Haitian political refugees who are HIV positive. The Rev. Jesse Jackson marches to protest of the Georgia State flag on Jan. 30 1994 at the Georgia Dome, site of Super Bowl XXVIII. Various groups protested the association of the confederate flag in the Georgia flag as racist and demeaning. Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. (C, holding banner) leads a march of some 4,000 people in Memphis on April 4, 1998 to honor the late civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King who was assassinated 30 years ago on this day in Memphis. Former basketball star Michael Jordan talks with the Rev. Jesse Jackson before Jordan was awarded the Jackie Robinson Foundation Rev. Jesse Jackson surveys damage to the Lower Ninth Ward during a visit October 4, 2005 in New Orleans. The 9th Ward sustained extensive flood damage during Hurricane Katrina. Former South African President Nelson Mandela and Rev. Jesse Jackson attend a news conference in Johannesburg Oct. 26, 2005. Instrumental in getting the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial build, the Rev. Jesse Jackson (C left) comforts Ambassador Andrew Young as Young gives an invocation at the groundbreaking of the Martin Luther King Jr. National Memorial Nov. 13, 2006 in Washington, DC. The memorial to the slain civil rights leader has been in the works for 10 years and will be situated on the National Mall near the Tidal Basin between the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials. Rev. Jesse Jackson reacts after projections show that Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) will be elected to serve as the next President of the United States of America during an election night gathering in Grant Park on Nov. 4, 2008 in Chicago. Rev. Jesse Jackson stares at devastaded buildings in Port au Prince on Jan. 20, 2010. A powerful new earthquake rumbled across the ruins of Haiti Wednesday, sending thousands of already traumatized survivors running through the streets, screaming in terror. The 6.1-magnitude earthquake struck eight days after the Haitian capital was leveled by a massive earthquake in which at least 75,000 people were killed, and a million left homeless. Jesse Jackson poses for a portrait during the 55th Anniversary of Ben's Chili Bowl on August 22, 2013 in Washington, DC. <p style=Reverend Jesse Jackson (C) leads demonstrators down State Street to protest the death of Laquan McDonald and the alleged cover-up that followed on Dec. 6, 2015 in Chicago, Illinois. Chicago Police officer Jason Van Dyke shot and killed 17-year-old McDonald on Oct. 20, 2014, hitting him with 16 bullets. Van Dyke was charged with murder more than a year after the shooting after a judge ordered the release to the public of a video which showed McDonald backing away from Van Dyke while being shot.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Consistently active in the Democratic party, the Rev. Jesse Jackson attends the evening session on the fourth day of the Democratic National Convention at the Wells Fargo Center, July 28, 2016 in Philadelphia, Pa. Rev. Jesse Jackson takes a selfie with several members of the Class of 2017 at Cass Technical High School in Detroit, Michigan on Wednesday, Sept. 7, 2016. Jackson was at the school to talk about the importance of registering to vote if they are of age to do so. Movie director Spike Lee with Rev. Jesse Jackson in the 2017 NBA All-Star Game on Feb. 19, 2017 in New Orleans. Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. speaks, as his family stands near him, from the balcony outside room 306 at the Lorraine Motel, where he was when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated on April 4, 2018 in Memphis, Tennessee. The city commemorated Dr. King's legacy before his death on the balcony outside his hotel room on April 4, 1968. Democratic Georgia gubernatorial candidate Stacey Abrams with Rev. Jesse Jackson, left, on the campaign trail stopping at the Busy Bee Cafe in Atlanta on Nov. 6, 2018 in the final hours of campaigning on election day. Monica Conyers stands at the casket of her her husband the late Congressman John Conyers Jr. with former President Bill Clinton and Rev. Jesse Jackson before the start of his funeral on Monday, Nov. 4, 2019 at Greater Grace Temple in Detroit. Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) and Rev. Jesse Jackson greet the crowd during a campaign rally in Calder Plaza on March 08, 2020 in Grand Rapids, Mich. Rev. Jesse Jackson, speaks at a press conference near 63rd street and Sheridan on Thursday, Aug. 27, 2020.  Jackson was joined by other local and state community leaders. Jackson is in town today to address the unrest in Kenosha that stemmed from the shooting of Jacob Blake by a Kenosha Police Officer on Sunday and the shooting deaths of two protesters. Civil rights leader Rev. Jesse Jackson pays respects over the casket of George Floyd prior to the start of the George Floyd family memorial service in the Frank J. Lindquist sanctuary at North Central University in Minneapolis, Minn. on June 4, 2020. Reverend's Jesse Jackson (2nd L) and Al Sharpton (2nd R) gesture ahead of the tenth Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidential campaign season co-hosted by CBS News and the Congressional Black Caucus Institute at the Gaillard Center in Charleston, South Carolina, on Feb. 25, 2020. Jesse Jackson, left, listens while Wisconsin Congresswoman Gwen Moore, center, speaks about the recent events surrounding the shooting of Jacob Blake by a Kenosha Police Officer at a community event for the Blake family in honor of jacob Blake on Tuesday, Sept. 1, 2020, where the shooting happened. On the right is Jacob Blake's uncle Justin Blake. Rev. Jesse Jackson speaks to marchers during jury deliberations in the trial of former Officer Derek Chauvin on April 19, 2021 in Minneapolis. Rev. Jesse Jackson views a Black Wall Street poster board alongside community residents during a Prayer Wall memorial gathering at the AME Church during commemorations of the 100th anniversary of the Tulsa Race Massacre on May 31, 2021 in Tulsa, Okla during centennial commemorations of when a white mob started looting, burning and murdering in Tulsa's Greenwood neighborhood, then known as Black Wall Street, killing up to 300 people and displacing thousands more. French President Emmanuel Macron poses with Veteran American civil rights activist Reverend Jesse Jackson after awarding him with the Legion of Honour at the Elysee Palace in Paris on July 19, 2021. Reverend Jesse Jackson and Reverend Dr. William J. Barber II rally in front the Phoenix office of Sen. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Ariz., to demand that she end the filibuster on July 26, 2021. The rally, march and sit-in, in front of Sinema's Phoenix office looked to end the filibuster, passage of voting and workers' rights legislation and raising the federal minimum wage to $15/an hour. Jackson said he was arrested for his act of civil disobedience but was then processed and released on the office park site without being booked to jail. Rep. Cori Bush (D-MO) (C) holds hands with civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, as they rally against the end of the eviction moratorium at the U.S. Capitol on Aug. 3, 2021 in Washington, DC. The Rev. Jesse Jackson jokes with his doctor, Dr. Leslie Rydberg, right, and physical therapist Talia Shapiro, center, as he is released from therapy at the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab after recovering from COVID-19, Wednesday, Sept. 22, 2021. President Joe Biden, left center, marches across the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., on Sunday March 5, 2023 to commemorate the 58th anniversary of the Bloody Sunday bridge crossing. President Joe Biden greets Rev. Jesse Jackson at  the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Ala., on Sunday March 5, 2023 to commemorate the 58th anniversary of the Bloody Sunday bridge crossing. Rev. Jesse Jackson attends the first day of the Democratic National Convention at the United Center on Aug. 19, 2024 in Chicago. Jesse Jackson (2L) is honored onstage during the first day of the Democratic National Convention (DNC) at the United Center in Chicago on Aug. 19, 2024. Martin Luther King III, Rep. Maxine Waters (D-CA), Rev. Al Sharpton, Rev. Jesse Jackson, and Rep. Jonathan Jackson (D-IL) walk across Edmund Pettus Bridge as they commemorate the 60th anniversary of (L-R) Yusef Jackson, Jesse Jackson, Janai Nelson, George Takei, and Brad Takei attend the 37th National Equal Justice Awards Dinner at The Glasshouse on May 15, 2025 in New York City.

Jesse Jackson dies at 84. See his from preacher to civil rights leader

The Rev. Jesse Jackson, a towering civil rights icon who battled alongside Martin Luther King Jr., negotiated global hostage releases, and shamed corporations for their lack of corporate diversity and failure to support voting rights,has died. He was 84. Jackson was hospitalized on Nov. 12 following a lengthy battle with the neuromuscular disease progressive supranuclear palsy, a condition similar to Parkinson's disease.See his journey and path to politics in photos.

After transferring to North Carolina A&T State College, Jackson became a student leader in efforts to desegregate establishments in Greensboro before beginning studies at the University of Chicago's theological seminary.

Bloody Sundaywould alter Jackson's life and career. The March 1965 incident inSelma, Alabama, in which peaceful marchers were attacked by state troopers with tear gas and billy clubs, ultimately led to the passage of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. It also spurred Jackson to leave Chicagoto join the efforts in Selmaand to become involved in theSouthern Christian Leadership Conference, the civil rights organization founded by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

The following year, King would make Jackson director of the Chicago chapter ofOperation Breadbasket, the conference's economic arm, fighting for greater Black representation in the business workforce.

Jackson's activism moves to the national level

In 1971, Jackson left the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and launched Operation PUSH, or People United to Save Humanity ("Save" was later changed to "Serve"), dedicated to Black self-help, youth development and economic opportunity.

Using persuasion, boycotts and prayer vigils, the group successfully won concessions from White-owned corporations and businesses to employ more diverse workforces.

The Rev. Jackson, center, president of Operation PUSH, holds a press conference with the Rev. James Lawson, left, and Dr. Alvin Poussaint following their meeting with James Earl Ray, the convicted assassin of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., at Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary in Petros, Tenn., on Aug. 10, 1978.

In 1984, as Jackson made his foray into politics, he founded the National Rainbow Coalition, a Washington, D.C.-based social justice organization which promoted equal rights for Blacks, women and gays. Among its key initiatives was advocating for minority groups affected by President Ronald Reagan's moves to cut domestic spending, especially efforts targeted at inner cities.

The two organizations would merge in 1996, becoming theRainbow/PUSH Coalitionand continuing to fight for civil rights and economic and academic opportunity in the U.S. and worldwide. Jackson's groupshelped many causesgain mainstream acceptance such as national health care, peace negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians and embrace of the LGBTQ community.

Jacksonstepped downas leader of the coalition in 2023.

A pair of transformative presidential runs

A year after leading a voter registration drive thathelped Harold Washingtonwin election as Chicago's first Black mayor, Jackson sought the Democratic presidential nomination – only the second Black candidate, afterShirley Chisholm in 1972, to vie for the presidency at the national level. While he finished third in primary voting, he became thefirst Black politicianto win any major-party state primary race and his grassroots campaign helped reenergize the Democratic Party by inspiring hundreds of thousands of people to register to vote.

Pop star Michael Jackson sits with Al Sharpton, left, and Jesse Jackson during a public viewing and funeral for legendary singer James Brown in Augusta, Ga. on Dec. 30, 2006.

In 1988, Jackson again ran for president, doubling his share of 1984's primary vote with a progressive, unifying platform that served as an antidote to what many saw as racially divisive policies under Reagan.

According tojournalist David Masciotra, Jackson's campaigns sparked the Democratic Party's diversification and a new wave of Black leadership across the country, including Douglas Wilder of Virginia, who in 1990 became the first Black governor of any state since Reconstruction; David Dinkins, who was elected as New York City's first Black mayor in 1989; and Norm Rice, who was elected Seattle's first Black mayor the same year.

A global diplomat

In the late 1970s, Jackson began traveling abroad to help resolve global disputes and bring attention to world causes, decryingSouth African apartheidandadvocating for Palestinian statehood.

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In 1984, Jacksonnegotiated the releaseof Navy Lieutenant Robert Goodman, who had been captured by Syria. The same year he secured the release ofCuban prisonersin Cuba.

In 1997, President Bill Clinton appointed Jackson asspecial envoy to Africa, where he would meet with leaders such as Nelson Mandela of the Republic of South Africa, Kenya's Daniel T. Arap Moi and Zambia's Frederick Chiluba.

Democratic presidential candidate Bill Clinton (R) joins hands with Rev. Jesse Jackson in Atlanta, Sept. 9, 1992 during the National Baptist Convention.

Jackson brokered the release of U.S. soldiers held in Kosovo in 1999; then helped arrange release of four British-employed journalists being held by Liberia the following year.

Health issues began to slow Jackson's work

In August 2000, Clinton awarded Jackson the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor.

But even as Jackson continued to push for justice, equality, voting rights and an end to poverty, growing health issues began to take their toll.

In 2017, he issued a letter announcing that he had been diagnosed four years earlier with Parkinson's disease, which he said had also affected his father.

"I find it increasingly difficult to perform routine tasks, and getting around is more of a challenge," he wrote. "For a while, I resisted interrupting my work to visit a doctor. But as my daily physical struggles intensified, I could no longer ignore the symptoms."

Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr. speaks, as his family stands near him, from the balcony outside room 306 at the Lorraine Motel, where he was when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated on April 4, 2018 in Memphis, Tennessee. The city commemorated Dr. King's legacy before his death on the balcony outside his hotel room on April 4, 1968.

Jackson was treatedin November 2021after falling and hitting his head at Howard University.

In April 2025, doctorsupdated Jackson's initial diagnosistoprogressive supranuclear palsy, a rare and chronic neurodegenerative disorder known as PSP whose early symptoms are often mistaken for Parkinson's, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

The experience of being arrested as a young college student, he had said, provided a certain adrenaline.

"We finally had the courage to fight back standing up," he toldthe Greenville News, part of the USA TODAY network. As the Civil Rights movement spread to the northern U.S., "we became soldiers of a domestic war."

In more recent years, as attacks on civil rights began anew, he maintained optimism.

"Even though we face a chilly wind of real meanness, as a body of American people, White and Black and brown, we are going forward."

Former president-elect George Bush(L) shakes hands with the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Nov. 30 1988 after a luncheon meeting at the White House in Washington.

He said he wanted to be remembered as someone who cared deeply for people and racial reconciliation.

"I think people who learned to survive apart must now learn to live together," he said. "… I want to be remembered as a soldier in that struggle to make America better and the world more secure."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Jesse Jackson dies at 84. Five key moments in his Civil Rights career

Jesse Jackson: Five key moments in Civil Rights icon’s career

TheRev. Jesse Jackson, who died Feb. 17 at 84, was a tireless activist, dynamic orator, skilled diplomat and influential...
Adrienne Bailon-Houghton (left), Ricky Martin Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; VALERIE MACON / AFP via Getty

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; VALERIE MACON / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Adrienne Bailon-Houghton appeared on SiriusXM's Page Six Radio on the Feb. 12 episode

  • Bailon-Houghton, 42, told hosts Danny Murphy and Evan Real about her connection to Ricky Martin

  • The singer explains how Martin helped her experience a moment that cemented singing was in her future

Adrienne Bailon-Houghtonis thankful toRicky Martinfor playing a pivotal role in her music career.

Appearing onSiriusXM's Page Six Radio, the entertainer, 42, talked about her connection to Martin, 54, as she celebrated his guest appearance duringBad Bunny's Apple Music Super Bowl LX Halftime Show.

Bailon-Houghton explained how Martin, 54, helped snag her a huge opportunity at a young age.

"I always loved music. I grew up singing in church. I actually was the only like young kid in my church's mass choir. Like they let me sneak in. I sang in children's choir and I also sang in the mass choir," she began.

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"I got to do a church conference at Madison Square Garden. It was maybe like the day or two before Ricky Martin was doing his concert at MSG for his Vuelve tour. And I guess he was just like there, or maybe one of his people were there and they were like, 'Oh my gosh, whoever that choir is, we should have them join us at the end of the concert. They do the song "Vuelve" and we could have a choir behind us.' "

The hundred-plus-person choir was narrowed down to around 30 people, one of whom was Bailon-Houghton.

"Because I was the shortest, they had us in like size order. I was the first one that had to walk out. We were, you know, when you come out like this, like from both sides and you meet in the middle," she recalled.

"So I was coming out on this side and guys, Heineken was the sponsor. And I remember the little blue, they had on green buttons and all you could see was just this sea of flickering green. And I was like, 'Oh my gosh, this is such a rush. This is a high, do I wanna be a singer? Is this something I wanna do?' And that was my first moment."

Bailon-Houghton laughed that the moment was "not too shabby, as a New Yorker."

Whenever she runs into Martin, she makes sure to share her gratitude for that introduction to performing on stage.

"I've seen him many places and just been like, 'Oh my gosh, thank you for that opportunity.' Because he handpicked who he wanted."

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Adrienne Bailon-Houghton Explains How Ricky Martin Made Her First Madison Square Garden Performance Possible

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; VALERIE MACON / AFP via Getty NEED TO KNOW Adrienne Bailon-Houghton appeared on SiriusXM's Page Six Radio...
Twiggy, J. Alexander, Tyra Banks, and Nigel Barker Michael Yarish/CBS Photo Archive/Getty

Michael Yarish/CBS Photo Archive/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • America's Next Top Model rewarded its winners with various brand campaigns and modeling contracts

  • The groundbreaking reality competition series ran for 15 years from 2003 to 2018

  • In addition to the actual prize, several contestants and winners also utilized the exposure for other aspects of their career

America's Next Top Modelintroduced hundreds of people to the modeling world during its 15-year run.

The competition series, which was hosted by supermodelTyra Banks, featured aspiring models embarking on challenges — from typical photoshoots to walking on a runway with swinging pendulums — in hopes of being crowned the winner.

After 24 "cycles" during the hit show's run, 24 winners ultimately took home the grand prize. While the reward differed for cycles depending on sponsors and partnerships (and one winner claimed to not receive her prize) the champions typically secured a six-figure brand contract, modeling agency signing and a magazine spread.

In addition to the package itself, the winners and other contestants scored major exposure. However, the show was not without its flaws, as past contestants and Banks, herself, havecriticized aspects of the competition.

The Netflix three-part docuseriesReality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model, which hit the streamer on Feb. 16, features interviews with Banks and former contestants discussing the show's legacy, controversial judging moments and offensive challenges.

Here's everything to know about what the winners ofAmerica's Next Top Modelgot.

What did the winners ofAmerica's Next Top Modelget?

Contestants on 'America's Next Top Model' UPN / Courtesy Everett Collection

UPN / Courtesy Everett Collection

Over the course ofAmerica's Next Top Model15-year circuit, the competition series primarily awarded its winners with a modeling agency contract, a fashion magazine cover or spread and a $100,000 contract with one of the show's partners — including CoverGirl.

As the show progressed, the prize changed and featured additional components, such as campaigns with major brands, such as Sephora, Guess and Zappos.

WhenAmerica's Next Top Modeldebuted its first cycle in 2003,Adrianne Currywas declared the inaugural winner. She was awarded a modeling contract with Wilhelmina Models, a spread inMarie Claireand a Revlon cosmetics contract, although she claimed to never receive the latter.

Over the years,America's Next Top Modelwinners were signed to a variety of agencies — including IMG Models, Ford Models, Elite Models and NEXT Model Management.

The magazine that included the winner's photos also changed over the years, but frequent participants includedNylon, Seventeen, Vogue, ElleandPaper.

Did the winners get anything in addition to the prize package?

J. Alexander, Nigel Barker, host Tyra Banks, Lauren Conrad on 'America's Next Top Model'  Everett

While the ultimate prize onAmerica's Next Top Modelwas to take home the crown, there were several other benefits to advancing on the show.

When the series was airing, it was one of the most viewed programs of its time and was the highest-rated show on the CW for three years in a row. Even if someone didn't win, they could launch their modeling — or other entertainment-related — career with the exposure alone.

Since appearing on the show, winners and other contestants alike have pivoted from modeling to acting, hosting or social media influencing.

For instance,YaYa DaCostalost to cycle 3 winnerEva Marcille (née Pigford), but she transitioned her career to acting and has appeared in several shows, fromChicago MedtoThe Lincoln Lawyer.

Another notable contestant who made a name for herself on the show isWinnie Harlow, who was eliminated in the earlier rounds of cycle 21. She has gone on to have a successful career in modeling — including walking theVictoria's Secret Fashion Show— as well as doing skincare ads, scoring acting roles and focusing on social media content creation.

Other contestants whose careers skyrocketed after the show include cycle 22 winnerNyle DiMarco, cycle 8 winner Jaslene Gonzalez, cycle 7 contestant Toccara Jones, cycle 11 contestantLio Tiptonand cycle 11 contestant Isis King.

What have pastAmerica's Next Top Modelwinners said about the prize package?

Adrianne Curry in 2003; Yoanna House Jean-Paul Aussenard/WireImage; John P. Filo/CBS Photo Archive/Getty

Jean-Paul Aussenard/WireImage; John P. Filo/CBS Photo Archive/Getty

Past winners and contestants have expressed differing opinions on the show in the years since they appeared.

In June 2025, cycle 1 winner Curry alleged that she "was the only winner thatwon no money. Zero dollars."

"There was no money in my win," she claimed onJust B With Bethenny Frankel. "I got a title." Curry claimed that she was told she'd receive a Revlon campaign as part of her prize, but that she never heard about it after winning.

"Banks was telling us we're gonna be this huge Revlon-like superstar, because I don't think any of us would have fought as hard as we did for what the prize really was, which is the title," Curry alleged. "So I always joke because people are like, 'You still call yourselfAmerica's Next Top Model?' I'm like, 'It's the only f---ing thing I won.' I'm gonna put it on my tombstone."

In a 2023 story forEntertainment Weekly, she did say she earned $15,000 from the brand. Curry did also win a contract with Wilhelmina models, but claimed ina 2017 blog postthat Wilhelmina was angry the show switched to IMG for season 2 and no longer worked with her.

In a statement toEWin 2023, Wilhelmina VP Ray Lata said, "Twenty years ago, Wilhelmina had different owners and staff. Wilhelmina is now a public company. It seems unlikely there would be sufficient motivation to harm Tyra and not try to maximize a model's earning potential."

Meanwhile, Banks has mostly stayed quiet about the controversy surrounding her show but admitted in a 2020 since-deleted message on X, perVariety, "Been seeing the posts about the insensitivity of some past 'ANTM' moments and I agree with you. Looking back, those were some really off choices. Appreciate your honest feedback and am sending so much love and virtual hugs."

Banks and several other memorable characters from the show are speaking out about the groundbreaking series in the Netflix docuseriesReality Check: Inside America's Next Top Model, which hit the streamer on Feb. 16.

Read the original article onPeople

What Did “America’s Next Top Model” Winners Get? All About the Six-Figure Prize

Michael Yarish/CBS Photo Archive/Getty NEED TO KNOW America's Next Top Model rewarded its winners with various brand campaigns and ...
Will Arnett had tense audition with Kevin Costner day after being hospitalized: 'This could go really bad right now'

Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty; JC Olivera/Getty

Entertainment Weekly Will Arnett; Kevin Costner Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty; JC Olivera/Getty

There are bad audition stories, and then there are truly painful ones.

Will Arnetthas a not-so-fond memory of the latter.During a stop byHot Ones, theArrestedDevelopmentactor was asked if he had a "most painful memory of auditioning in L.A. during pilot season" to share, because he "once swore off pilots after being cast in a series of shows that failed to launch."

Though it wasn't for pilot season — or a television series at all — Arnett did have a pretty good recollection of the time he auditioned withKevin Costnerfor the 1997 movieThe Postman.

"The night before, I'd eaten something bad, and I ended up going to the hospital because I was so dehydrated from being ill," Arnett toldHotOneshost Sean Evans. "And at that point that afternoon going to meet him, that was the furthest I'd been away from the bathroom in like, you know, 14 hours."

He continued, "And I remember getting up there and just meeting him and being a fan of his and like this was like a big deal, and just sweating, and just thinking, 'This can go really bad right now.' Yeah, I was meeting Kevin Costner and I legitimately was worried about crapping my pants, you know."

Ultimately, Arnett didn't clarify which role he was up for inThe Postman, but it's clear he didn't get the part in the film, which was also produced and directed by Costner. In addition to Costner, Olivia Williams, Will Patton, Tom Petty, Peggy Lipton, and Larenz Tate also starred.

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TheIs This Thing On?actor had made his big screen debut the previous year, in 1996 filmsEd's Next MoveandClose Up. A few more movie roles would follow, but it wasn't until 2003'sArrestedDevelopmentthat Arnett had his big breakthrough.

As alluded to onHot Ones, Arnett has not been shy over the years about his struggles booking roles early in his career, includingtellingVarietyin 2004that he had made a personal vow not to audition for television pilots anymore right before he got the role onArrested Development.

Kevin Costner in 'The Postman' Warner Bros.

"When it went to series, my character got cut or I got fired," he said of his experience with pilot season, noting in particular the CBS seriesStill Standing, which he was cut from when the network ordered more episodes without him. "I'm not entirely sure. I know that both things happened."

Elsewhere onHotOnes, above, Arnett discusses the art of a great talk-show appearance, his obsession with Golden Tee, and how he cracked the code on his Batman voice.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Will Arnett had tense audition with Kevin Costner day after being hospitalized: 'This could go really bad right now'

Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty; JC Olivera/Getty There are bad audition stories, and then there are tr...
sydney sweeney

Sydney Sweeneyhas reportedly taken a big step with her ex, Jonathan Davino, amid news of her new romantic relationship with Scooter Braun. The "Euphoria" star and the film producer allegedly purchased a house, worth millions, at an auction back in 2023, before parting ways. The Hollywood mansion is located in Bel Air, Los Angeles. New reports claim that the actor and the film producer have decided to move on with the renovation of the house.

Sydney Sweeney and ex Jonathan Davino reportedly overseeing renovation of home purchased before split

Sydney Sweeneyand her ex, Jonathan Davino, have reportedly been overseeing the renovation process of the house in Bel Air, Los Angeles, which they bought in 2023, before breaking up.

The news came in the middle of the reports about the "Anyone But You" actor's romance withScooter Braun. As reported byThe U.S. Sun, property filings indicate that the Hollywood star and her ex, the film producer, purchased the LA mansion under a trust. They allegedly paid $250,000 over the primary asking price.

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In the meantime, Sydney Sweeney and her ex, Jonathan Davino, reportedly broke up in early 2025. According to the news outlet, despite parting ways, the actor and the film producer have decided to proceed with the renovation of their house.

Delmer Daves, a well-known Hollywood screenwriter, reportedly once owned the historic property. The news outlet further reported that the film producer Jonathan was spotted at the LA property after his split from the actor. He was allegedly there with his ex's dog, Tank, while he oversaw the cleanup.

Meanwhile, per the news outlet, renovation work has been moving forward, with new plans to remodel the mansion's pool. Records also allegedly show an initial building permit application for a new spa and pool. According to the news outlet, the file displayed that the contractor is Ventura Pools Masonry.

The postSydney Sweeney Makes Big Move With Ex Amid New Romance — Reportappeared first onReality Tea.

Sydney Sweeney Makes Big Move With Ex Amid New Romance — Report

Sydney Sweeneyhas reportedly taken a big step with her ex, Jonathan Davino, amid news of her new romantic relationship with Scooter Braun....

 

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