Miranda Kerr Reveals Son Flynn, 15, Finds the 'Incredible Tool' of Meditation 'Really Grounding and Helpful' (Exclusive)

Miranda Kerr shares how her meditation practice has influenced her 15-year-old son Flynn’s daily routine

People Miranda KerrCredit: Tiffany Rose/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • She explains that her children’s interest in meditation grew from watching her prioritize it in her own life

  • The boy mom of four says she hopes meditation becomes a lifelong tool for her kids to use when needed

Miranda Kerr's healthy lifestyle habits are rubbing off on her kids.

While chatting exclusively with PEOPLE at the Living Beauty Cancer Foundation's 2026 Annual Spring Luncheon on Wednesday, April 29, the model and entrepreneur, 43, revealed that meditation practices play a big role in her overall healthy lifestyle. Kerr, who's amom of four boys, shares that her love for the "incredible tool" has rubbed off on her 15-year-old son, Flynn.

"Meditation for me has been such an incredible tool, and I learned when I was 17 how to meditate, and I've been more religious about it probably in the last year than ever," she tells PEOPLE. "I don't have the luxury of having 20 minutes twice a day, but I do have the luxury right now of fitting it in the morning before the kids wake up."

"I've taught the kids, [and] they have their own mantra that they were given by my Vedic meditation teacher, and she sat with them. We did a little meditation. She did her little ceremony when we did a meditation together for my 6, 7, and 15-year-old," she explains. "And my 15-year-old is pretty consistent with it. He finds it really grounding and helpful."

Miranda KerrCredit: Tiffany Rose/Getty

Kerr welcomed her son Flynn with ex-husbandOrlando Bloomin January 2011. The former couple was together from 2010 to 2013 before Kerrtied the knotwith husbandEvan Spiegelin 2017. Kerr and Spiegel have since welcomed three kids together — son Hart, who was born in May 2018, and son Myles, who was born in October 2019, followed by Pierre in February 2024.

The proud mom shared that meditation is something she wants all of her kids to have in their toolkit, explaining that their connection to it comes from watching her prioritize it in her life.

"The thing about kids is that they watch what you do. They don't really necessarily listen to what you say, but they see your actions. When [Flynn] sees me daily doing my meditation and the benefits that that gives me, he's like, 'Oh, that's interesting. I'd like to try that,' " she says. "And he actually had a little friend group who, after he learned, another six of his friends learned as well, and he went together with them when they got their mantra, and they learned, and then they all did a meditation session together."

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"I'm sure it'll be something that he will lean on more in certain times of his life, but it's just a good thing to have in their toolkit," she adds.

Later in the conversation, the doting mom shared the one thing she plans to do to celebrate herself on Mother's Day.

"Honestly, I just want to be having a cup of tea in bed. That's a real luxury to me," she says. "I do have this thing about having a cup of tea in bed and watching the sunrise. I love it with my kids in the bed. So that's a real treat."

Evan Spiegel and Miranda KerrCredit: Michael Kovac/Getty

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Speaking more about her oldest, Kerr shares that she's sure he'll want to begin learning how to drive next year.

"I'm sure he will," she says, sharing that she learned how to drive on a farm when she was younger. "He's had a little bit of experience, but not as much as I'd like him to."

She adds, "I grew up learning stick, and I wanted him to learn stick as well."

Read the original article onPeople

Miranda Kerr Reveals Son Flynn, 15, Finds the 'Incredible Tool' of Meditation 'Really Grounding and Helpful' (Exclusive)

Miranda Kerr shares how her meditation practice has influenced her 15-year-old son Flynn’s daily routine NEED TO KNOW ...
Building trades unions emerge as a key ally of tech giants in push for AI data centers

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Building trades unions — long fashioned as the voice of the American worker — are now intertwined with the richest companies in the world as they create America's artificial intelligence economy.

Associated Press

Unionized workers are employed on a huge number of massive data center projects and scrambling to recruit new apprentices to feed the explosive demand.

They've also become an ally of tech giants and tech-friendly government officials, echoing the talking point that the United States is in a critical national security race with China for AI superiority.

Unions are a visible force in helping counter fierceopposition in communitiesand hostile legislation in Congress and legislatures, often aligning with traditional Republican pro-business constituencies and forcing Democrats to choose between them and progressives who want to take a harder line.

Unions have aggressively answered complaints about data centers in ways that executives at tech giants and the development firms rarely do, unafraid to bluntly confront concerns about energy and water shortages, rising electric and water bills, or noise and quality-of-life objections.

“When people say, you know, ‘data centers are the root of all evil,’ we’re just saying, ‘look, they do create a hell of a lot of construction jobs, which we live and work in your communities,'” said Rob Bair, president of the Pennsylvania Building and Construction Trades Council.

Instead of “being just a blunt ‘no,'” Bair said, communities should figure out what they need and ask the tech companies for it — such as improvements to the project's plans or millions of dollars for local schools. “If you don’t ask, you’re never gonna get,” he said.

Data centers a boon for unions

With data center construction accelerating, unions are expanding training centers and seeing their ranks grow faster than many union leaders have ever seen.

Unions in a number of states are reporting skyrocketing man hours, apprentice classes doubling in size and training centers undergoing expansions in anticipation of more work coming.

Data centers consume at least 40% of work hours done by members of the Columbus-Central Ohio Building and Construction Trades Council, a top official, Dorsey Hager, estimated. It's at least 50% for the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 26 in metropolitan Washington, D.C., spokesperson Don Slaiman said.

The umbrella North America’s Building Trades Unions said it hit a record number of members and apprentices in 2025.

The organization's president, Sean McGarvey, compared it to the build trades' expansion in the 1950s. He attributes today's growth to data centers, power plants and legislation under former President Joe Biden that subsidized the construction of semiconductor and electric vehicle battery factories, energy efficiency projects and grid transmission improvements.

Data centers' voracious energy needs are setting off a power plant construction boom and delivering a one-two punch of new life to unions whose members also build and maintain boilers, ductwork, pipelines and other power infrastructure.

The Boilermakers Local 154, whose members have watched power plants shut down in southwestern Pennsylvania, went from recruiting zero apprentices for four years to now assembling a class of over 200 — and they need more, union official Shawn Steffee said.

For their part, tech giants say they need to train hundreds of thousands more workers in skilled trades. They are spending tens of millions of dollars on training programs, including partnerships with unions that they hire to build their multibillion-dollar projects.

“Across the country, highly skilled union construction workers are laying the foundation for the AI economy,” Sam Altman, co-founder and CEO ofOpenAI, said in a joint statement in March with McGarvey's organization.

Google said the majority of labor used to build its data centers is unionized, and pointed to a $10 million grant to a union-backed electricians training program that it said would help expand the electrician workforce pipeline by 70%.

'The data centers would still be getting built'

Mark McManus, the general president of the United Association of Union Plumbers and Pipefitters, whose members work on pipelines, data centers and power plants, acknowledged criticism that organized labor is getting in bed with the richest, most powerful companies in the world.

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But he rejected it as unrealistic.

“If we chose as a union to have a moratorium on building the data centers because we didn’t believe it was right for America, the data centers would still be getting built,” McManus said. “They’re not stopping because of organized labor.”

His union has a strong relationship with tech companies, is hitting all-time highs in membership and, based on an internal survey, has members working on over 90% of the data center projects in the United States.

“That’s a market share that we don’t have in a lot of other industries,” McManus said. “So it’s pretty near and dear to us.”

It's difficult to pin down exactly how many data center projects involve union labor. An Associated General Contractors of America survey late last year suggested that the labor composition of data center construction likely mirrors the makeup of commercial construction, which is roughly one-third union, an AGC spokesperson said.

Showing up in towns and statehouses

National unions have negotiated labor agreements on major projects, including an Oracle and OpenAIStargate campusin Michigan and the “Project Blue” data center campus in Arizona, with more in the works.

When Gov. Josh Shapiro stood with Amazon executives to announce that the tech giant would spend $20 billion on two data center projects in eastern Pennsylvania, Bair stood with them.

“This is really unique, what we’re building here in this commonwealth. People coming together with common purpose to get stuff done,” Shapiro said.

In statehouses, unions have worked against Maine's since-vetoed proposal for astatewide data center moratorium; standards proposed in Illinois, including requiring data centers to supply their own energy; and an end toVirginia's sales tax exemptionthat helped make it the world's biggest data center destination.

Pennsylvania state Sen. Katie Muth said it has been difficult to collect support from fellow Democrats for her legislation to regulate data centers when it is competing with union-backed legislation that she views as weaker.

“The unions don’t want to promote anything that would impede data center development,” Muth said.

Union representatives have made their presence felt at packed council meetings in municipal buildings from St. Louis to Spring City, Pennsylvania.

Sometimes it's not in a good way.

Speaking to the City Council in Joliet, Illinois, Alicia Morales complained that union members — who sat in the front row holding “vote yes for union jobs” signs — had been disrespectful and “bullied a lot of people” entering the meeting.

Sometimes, union representatives are the only people in a packed municipal meeting room to speak in favor of a project.

“I just want to commend you guys, thanks for being the adults in the room,” Chuck Curry, the president of Ironworkers Local 395, told City Council members in Hobart, Indiana, at a January meeting on an Amazon data center. “Knowing the tax structure, knowing business, that most of the people here don’t know.”

Follow Marc Levy athttp://twitter.com/timelywriter

Building trades unions emerge as a key ally of tech giants in push for AI data centers

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Building trades unions — long fashioned as the voice of the American worker — are now intertwined with the riche...
David Allan Coe, Country Music Outlaw and 'Take This Job and Shove It' Songwriter, Dies at 86

David Allan Coe has died at the age of 86

People David Allen Coe in 1976.Credit: Kino International/Everett/Shutterstock

NEED TO KNOW

  • Coe died at about 5:08 p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, his representative said in a statement to PEOPLE

  • Coe was part of country's outlaw movement in the '70s and was widely criticized for his use of slurs and racial stereotypes in his songs, as well as frequently using the Confederate flag

David Allan Coe has died at the age of 86.

Coe died at about 5:08 p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, his representative said in a statement to PEOPLE.

"David was a Country Music treasure and loved his fans," his rep said. "Most importantly, he was a true outlaw and A great singer, songwriter, and performer."

The country singer-songwriter found fame in the ‘70s as part of the outlaw country music scene, with songs like "You Never Even Called Me by My Name" and "Longhaired Redneck." In the '80s, he scored country hits with "The Ride" and "Mona Lisa Lost Her Smile.” Coe was widely criticized for his use of slurs and racial stereotypes in his songs; he claimed he was not racist. He was also criticized for frequently using the Confederate flag.

Coe was born in Akron, Ohio, in 1939. At age 9, he was sent to reform school and then spent much of the next two decades of his life in correctional facilities. His interest in music began while he was incarcerated. After he was released in 1967, he headed to Nashville to pursue a music career, busking on the street for money.

David Allan Coe in 1975.Credit: Al Clayton/Getty

Coe released his debut album,Penitentiary Blues, in 1970. Though he struggled to find success as a singer, others had hits performing songs he wrote. In 1973,Tanya Tuckercovered his composition, “Would You Lay with Me (In a Field of Stone),” which was a No. 1 country single. Johnny Paycheck also hit No. 1 on the chart in 1977 with Coe’s “Take This Job and Shove It.” The song also garnered Coe his only Grammy nomination.

Coe’s 1974 albumThe Mysterious Rhinestone Cowboywas his first country record. The name was taken from his attire at the time: he would wear a mask and bedazzled jacket and hat for performances.Once Upon a Rhyme, released the following year, had his first successful single, a cover of Steve Goodman's “You Never Even Called Me by My Name" that hit the country Top 10.

David Allan Coe.Credit: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty

In 1976, he releasedLonghaired Redneck, with the title track directly referencing the outlaw country genre. A year later, he releasedRides Again. However, he never found the same sustained mainstream success as others in the sub-genre, likeWillie Nelson. “I did it," he told thePhoenix New Timesin 1993 of his outlaw credentials. "I was singing that stuff for years. I was living it for years. Willie,Waylon [Jennings]— they just got more famous. I was the original outlaw.”

Consistent commercial success continued to elude him in the late '70s and into the early '80s. Then he had a major comeback in 1983 withCastles in the Sand; its single “The Ride" was a Top 10 country hit. "I like good music, I don't care what it's about, as long as it's good music," he toldThe Oklahomanin 1985 about selecting songs. "I'm not limiting myself to singing protest songs. I just know when I hear it if it's a good song or not, or whether I want to sing it or not."

In 1984, he releasedDivorced, which produced the No. 2 country hit “Mona Lisa Lost Her Smile,” his highest-charting single as a performer. “She Used to Love Me a Lot” from 1985'sDarlin', Darlinreached No. 11.

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David Allan Coe.Credit: David Redfern/Redferns

Coe used slurs and racist stereotypes in his songs throughout his career. Most notably, he released two underground albums in the late '70s and early '80s that made liberal use of hate speech.The New York Timeswrote in 2000, “In the early '80's the outlaw country singer David Allan Coe released very small quantities of two underground albums of songs that are among the most racist, misogynist, homophobic and obscene songs recorded by a popular songwriter.” After the songs were bootlegged for years, Coe began selling them on his website in 2000, though without his name on them.

Coe claimed in a 2000 interview withCountry Standard TimethatThe New York Timesmischaracterized the songs and did not give him a chance to respond. He said that off the record, he had told the outlet “they couldn't call me a racist or White supremacist because that wasn't true."

David Allan Coe in 1994.Credit: Paul Natkin/WireImage

"I've got a Black drummer who's married to a White chick," Coe toldCountry Standard Time. "I've got [Black former heavyweight boxing champion] Leon Spinks pictures all over my bus, pictures he took with my family. My hair's in dreadlocks. I'm the farthest thing from a White supremacist that anybody could ever be. I'm really [ticked] off, ya know." He claimed that he had previously sold the rights to all his songs in bankruptcy proceedings and that he was no longer making money off of them.

The Austin Chroniclereported at the time that Coe wrote a letter on his website explaining why the albums existed. “I was a young man living with a motorcycle club. . . . I had given up on any commercial success and country radio wouldn't play my songs anyway. . . . I made these albums for bikers to play at parties . . . . Not everyone appreciates biker humor, even in music,” he wrote, adding, “I don't apologize for these albums, because they are very funny, but don't expect me to sing these songs at my shows!"

David Allan Coe in 2008.Credit: Gary Miller/FilmMagic

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Coe released over 40 studio albums in total.

Coe was married six times. For a time in the ‘80s, he claimed to be a Mormon polygamist. In 2010, he married sixth wife Kimberly Hastings, perThe Boot. He had four children, Tyler, Tanya, Shyanne and Carson, with ex-wife Jody Lynn Coe. He also had a daughter Shelli. Tanya also became a musician. Coe’s son Tyler hosted the country music podcastCocaine & Rhinestonesand was Coe’s band leader until his father dismissed him in 2013. Tyler toldGQin 2021 that they had not spoken since.

In 2015,he pleaded guiltyto obstructing the IRS from collecting taxes. In 2016, he was ordered to pay nearly $1 million, per theAssociated Press.

Coe is survived by his wife and children.

Read the original article onPeople

David Allan Coe, Country Music Outlaw and 'Take This Job and Shove It' Songwriter, Dies at 86

David Allan Coe has died at the age of 86 NEED TO KNOW Coe died at about 5:08 p.m. on Wednesday, April 29, his rep...
Sinbad announces return to comedy stage 5 years after stroke: ‘I'm gonna be talking more trash than I ever talked’

Sinbad announced his return to comedy, five years after suffering a stroke in October 2020.

Entertainment Weekly Sinbad on Instagram on April 29Credit: Sinbad/Instagram

Key Points

  • Within hours, both shows at the Comedy Ice House in Pasadena, Calif., sold out.

  • The comedian, who remains in a wheelchair, says this is "just the beginning of me coming back."

Sinbadis making his return to stand-up comedy — and both shows sold out immediately.

Five years after surviving astroke, the 69-year-old announced on Wednesday he’s headed back to the comedy stage, with two shows planned at theComedy Ice Housein Pasadena, Calif., on April 29 and May 10.

“It’s just the beginning of me coming back,” Sinbad said in anInstagram video. “I'm so looking forward to these shows.”

The comedian, whose real name is David Adkins, joked that despite still being in a wheelchair, because “I can’t walk,” his mouth works just fine.

“I got so much stuff to talk about,” he said. “I’m gonna be talking more trash than I ever talked.”

Within hours of his announcement, both dates sold out.

Sinbad’s return to the stage will be a family affair: His opening act is his daughterPaige Bryan, a successful stand-up comedian in her own right — and a chip off the old block.

"She talks more trash than I talk,” joked Sinbad.

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Sinbad headlined the ABC special 'Sinbad and Friends' in 1991Credit: Walt Disney Television Photo Archives/Walt Disney Television via Getty

“This is bigger than I can fully comprehend,” Bryan gushed about sharing the stage with her legendary father, who starred onThe Cosby Showspin-off,A Different World, and his own Fox sitcom,The Sinbad Show, in the 1990s.

As Bryan explained, he’s only been able to watch her do stand-up twice because most clubs she performs at “are not ADA accessible so he literally can’t get in there. It’s been heartbreaking to be on this journey without my biggest cheerleader so when I say tonight is special — it’s a moment I will NEVER forget and ALWAYS cherish.”

In October 2020, Sinbad's family announced he wasrecoveringfrom a stroke, which was triggered after a blood clot traveled from his heart to his brain. “We are faithful and optimistic that he will bring laughter into our hearts soon," the family said.

Sinbad in 2018Credit: Steve Granitz/WireImage

Two years ago, Sinbad made his first public appearance since the stroke, albeit virtually, at theA Different WorldHBCU College Tour in Atlanta in February 2024.

“Man, that was so cool… getting a chance to be on Zoom and say something to the kids,” he shared in an Instagram video. “It’s wild that the kids even know who I am. That’s beautiful.”

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Last year, Sinbad made his return to acting with a supporting role inTyler Perry’s Netflix film,Straw, starringTaraji P. Henson,Sherri Shepherd,Teyana Taylor, Glynn Turman, and Rockmond Dunbar.

“I know it’s been really difficult for him,” Perry toldEntertainment Tonight, “so to give him this opportunity made me feel amazing. I’m really excited for him. And he delivered.”

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Sinbad announces return to comedy stage 5 years after stroke: ‘I'm gonna be talking more trash than I ever talked’

Sinbad announced his return to comedy, five years after suffering a stroke in October 2020. Key Points Within hour...
The UK is a malaria science ‘superpower’ – and the world needs that

The fight to endmalariais facing aperfect storm of challenges.

The Independent US

A wave of cuts to global health budgets in 2025 has impacted both our ability to ensurelifesaving tools reach those who need them– and our ability to develop new ones. Mosquitos and the malaria parasite have continued to build resistance to certain malaria interventions which we’ve relied on for years.

Climate change is shifting the habitats for some malaria transmitting mosquitoes, making them harder to track, made worse by extreme weather events. And conflict, rising across the globe, is creating enormous upheaval to public health measures designed to protect against malaria.

All this comes off the back of six years of rising malaria cases since the Covid-19 pandemic to an all-time high of 282 million in 2024, as well as rising case "incidence" [the number of cases per 1,000 people at risk]. Similarly, we’ve seen the number of people dying from malaria rise to 610,000 in 2024 – the highest since 2020. The vast majority of people dying from the disease (95 per cent) are in sub-SaharanAfricaand – utterly heartbreakingly – over 75 per cent are children under five.

While this paints a vivid picture of the scale of the challenge we face, we can and we must remain hopeful. Indeed, while progress has stalled in recent years, the decades preceding this saw historic progress in efforts to reduce and eliminate the disease. Between the years 2000 and 2019, for example, annual deaths from malaria dropped by more than 34 per cent. A healthy pipeline of tools distributed by well-funded global health bodies, working in close partnership with malaria-endemic countries, proved progress is possible.

What may surprise readers is the pivotal role theUKhas played in fighting Malaria. Indeed, new research by Impact Global Health in partnership with Malaria No More UK, shows that, as of 2025, UK science institutions were behind one in every five malaria tools in the research and development (R&D) pipeline. That ranks the country as being the third biggest contributor in the world to malaria R&D tools such as vaccines, drugs and vector control products like bed-nets. Particularly high, is the UK’s contribution to malaria vaccines and drugs with involvement in nearly a third (31 per cent) of all vaccines in the pipeline (the second highest in the world) and nearly a quarter (23.2 per cent) of all drugs. What’s more, we’ve consistently been one of the biggest financial backers of malaria R&D for nearly two decades.

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A number of factors make this possible. Essential, is working hand-in-hand with scientists in malaria-endemic countries, given the invaluable expertise of those on the frontline. The UK’s world-class universities, research institutes, and pharmaceutical and biotech companies also provide a vibrant network of expertise allowing innovation to flourish.

Years of bold commitments from consecutive British governments have helped foster stability and confidence in the malaria science ecosystem. What’s more, scientists are closer than ever to creating the "end game" tools which wouldn’t just reduce the spread or treat people who got infected with malaria – they would pave the way to wiping it out completely.

Today, we stand at a crossroads. With malaria cases rising around the world and countries stepping back on aid commitments, we hope the UK government protects investment in malaria R&D. Specifically, we need the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office to maintain spending on malaria R&D within its "global research and technology development’ portfolio.

Without question, this would save the lives of children around the world and resist the looming threat of malaria. What’s more, it would contribute to positive ripple effects around the world including in the UK. For example, previous research from Malaria No More UK shows reducing malaria could see a boost of more than $80 billion (£66bn) in international trade including in the UK. We may also see health benefits too: Impact Global Health have shown how previous research into a malaria vaccine, for example, helped produce a vaccine for shingles, which is now widely used across high-income countries including the UK and is projected to prevent nearly 32 million cases globally by 2050.

Continuing to back British scientists and maintaining our reputation as a malaria science superpower is one of the best things this government can do to save lives around the world whilst bolstering the UK’s health security and economic stability. In the face of the perfect storm of malaria threats, we can and we must remain optimistic about our ability as a global health community to fight back.

Gareth Jenkins is managing director of Malaria No More UK

This article has been produced as part of The Independent’sRethinking Global Aidproject

The UK is a malaria science ‘superpower’ – and the world needs that

The fight to endmalariais facing aperfect storm of challenges. A wave of cuts to global health budgets in 2025 has impacted both ...

 

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