Connect with us

Entertainment

Whitney Port and Tim Rosenman’s Relationship Timeline on September 1, 2023 at 8:31 pm Us Weekly

Published

on

Whitney Port and Tim Rosenman are everyone’s couple goals.

The pair met in the mid 2000s at a birthday dinner for one of Port’s ex-boyfriend’s. “Tim was there. And I sat across from him,” she told She Knows in 2014. “I left the dinner saying to a mutual friend, ‘Oh my god. Who is that guy? I think I love him.’ Seriously! There was just something about him. He was super funny, really normal and just really laid-back.”

In 2008, Rosenman worked as a producer on Port’s reality show The City, which followed her journey as she moved from Los Angeles to New York to pursue a career in fashion. The series had a strong two seasons before concluding in 2010.

After the show wrapped, the duo started dating in 2012. Three years later, they tied the knot in Palm Springs, California. Despite suffering multiple miscarriages, they welcomed son Sonny in July 2017.

Advertisement

Related: ‘The Hills’ Original Cast: Where Are They Now?

When The Hills first debuted in May 2006, it looked a lot different than the revival, The Hills: New Beginnings. No matter what version they’re watching, fans are still hooked on the cast’s unwritten chapters. The MTV reality show, a spinoff of Laguna Beach, followed Lauren Conrad from Laguna to Los Angeles where she moved […]

Keep reading for the Port and Rosenman’s full relationship timeline:

Advertisement

December 2012

The couple shared their first Christmas together and showed off their decorated tree. “Merry Christmas from Us!,” Port captioned an Instagram photo at the time.

Courtesy of Whitney Port/Instagram

November 2013

Port revealed that the twosome were engaged. “He can’t take his hands off me so he put a ring on it!,” she wrote via Instagram alongside a photo of Rosenman’s hand in her lap.

September 2014

Port shared a sweet tribute for Rosenman’s 29th birthday. “Happy birthday to my partner 4 life! You’re my best friend and you always look good in pictures even though you don’t try,” she captioned a collage of Instagram photos. “Oh and thanks for flicking me off. I didn’t know you did that until I just saw this photo. I love you.”

Advertisement

January 2015

In a since-deleted blog post, Port shared that she actually ruined Roseman’s first surprise proposal.

While relaxing in bed, Port heard Rosenman’s boss tell him over the phone, “’Good luck with Whit with whatever you decide to do in Australia,’” per MTV. Port pressed him on the subject, writing, “He finally gave in. He got down on one knee and proposed [without a ring]! It was so beautiful.”

Shortly after, Rosenman bought a ring and asked for her hand in marriage again.

October 2015

Port exclusively gave Us Weekly details about her wedding planning. “I want everyone to just be surprised. It’s definitely a modern wedding. You’ll see, I promise, you’ll see!” she gushed.

Advertisement

November 2015

Port and Rosenman tied the knot on November 7, 2015, at a Palm Springs, California venue. That same month, the lovebirds opened up to Us about the ceremony.

“It’s such a great feeling! We finally get to stop saying fiancé and be husband and wife!” they told Usat the time. “We really always knew we would end up together and now we can start a new amazing chapter in our lives. The wedding was everything we hoped it would be and will cherish the memories for the rest of our lives.”

February 2017

Port announced she and Rosenman were expecting their first child. “Oh hey! Just standing by the window in my underwear, with a BABY in my belly!!!” she captioned an Instagram photo of her growing baby bump. “We are sooooo excited!!!!”

Courtesy of Whitney Port/Instagram

Advertisement

July 2017

The two welcomed their son, Sonny, on July 27. “No big deal,” she quipped via Instagram at the time. “I love him and feel protective over him, but more than anything, I’m just like obsessed. I can’t stop looking at him or thinking about him when I am in another room.

November 2021

Port announced she was expecting her second child after suffering two miscarriages.

“I’m currently seven weeks pregnant, which is supposed to be obviously really exciting, and it has been up until yesterday … I’ve had two miscarriages and a chemical pregnancy.” she shared via her YouTube channel “Everything was looking good up until yesterday.” Rosenman supported his wife in the video while she explained she’s worried “this is likely another unhealthy pregnancy.”

November 2021

Two weeks after announcing she was pregnant, she shared that she suffered a miscarriage. “I’m so sad to say this, and some of you may have watched on our latest YouTube episode, but we lost the baby,” she wrote via her Instagram Story. “We found out yesterday, I don’t even really know what to say here. I recorded a full verbal diary of all my thoughts and emotions last night that I’ll put out on my podcast next week.”

Advertisement

July 2023

Port told Us that she and Rosenman are “seriously considering” using a surrogate to have another baby.

“I’m still figuring things out and nothing is, like, 100 percent yet and so it’s one of those things where you’re scared to put it out into the universe until you know what’s happening,” she said. “I suffered from secondary infertility, and it has just been such a process both physically and mentally to get to that second baby. Right now, going through the motions of surrogacy, like, really thinking seriously about that and we have embryos [stored].”

She noted that although they are “not in the journey yet,” they hope it’ll happen “soon.”

Courtesy of Whitney Port/Instagram

Advertisement

August 2023

After Port shared with her fans via her Instagram Story that Rosenman was “worried” about her significant weight loss, followers began speculating that she had an eating disorder. The duo shut down the rumors and cleared the air  on an episode of Port’s her podcast, “With Whit. ”

Related: Stars Who Struggled to Conceive Children Share Their Fertility Issues

Advertisement
It has been a difficult road to parenthood for many celebrity parents, including Chrissy Teigen and John Legend. After in vitro fertilization didn’t work on the first try, Teigen wondered if she had done something wrong. “You just look for anything to blame, especially yourself,” Teigen explained to New York Magazine’s The Cut in April […]

“I was concerned that you could be hotter with 10 or 15 more pounds, and maybe that’s f—d up.” Rosenman said of first noticing his wife’s weight loss. “We should set the record straight. I guess that’s on me to say what I meant by my concern.”

Port replied, “No one should ever really say anything about someone’s weight, unless they really feel like they are unhealthy.”

Rosenman explained, “I was just concerned if you had some kind of strained relationship with food, with appearance, with being in the public eye. People took what I said and gave you an eating disorder and you’re ‘unhealthy’ and that is just not the case.”

Whitney Port and Tim Rosenman are everyone’s couple goals. The pair met in the mid 2000s at a birthday dinner for one of Port’s ex-boyfriend’s. “Tim was there. And I sat across from him,” she told She Knows in 2014. “I left the dinner saying to a mutual friend, ‘Oh my god. Who is that 

Advertisement

​   Us Weekly Read More 

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Entertainment

What Kanye’s ‘Father’ Says About Power, Faith, and Control

Published

on

Kanye West’s “Father” video looks like a fever dream in a church, but underneath the spectacle it’s a quiet argument about who really runs the world. The altar isn’t just about God; it’s about every “father” structure that decides what’s true, who belongs, and who gets cast out.

The church as power, not comfort

The church in “Father” doesn’t behave like a safe, sacred space. It feels like a headquarters. The aisle becomes a catwalk for power: brides, a knight, a nun, a Michael Jackson double, astronauts, Travis Scott, all moving through the frame while Kanye mostly sits and watches. The room doesn’t change for them—they’re the ones being processed.

That’s the first big tell: this isn’t just about religion. It’s about systems. The church stands in for any institution that claims moral authority—governments, platforms, labels, churches, media—places where identity, status, and “truth” are negotiated behind the scenes. Faith is the language; control is the product.

HCFF
HCFF

Kanye as the unmanageable outsider

In this universe, Kanye isn’t the leader of the service. He’s a problem in the pews. The wildest scene makes that explicit: astronauts move in, pull off his mask, expose him as an “alien,” and carry him out. It’s funny, surreal—and brutal.

That moment plays like a metaphor for what happens when someone stops being useful to the system. If you’re too unpredictable, too loud, too off‑script, the institution finds a way to unmask you, label you, and remove you. But here’s the twist: once he’s gone, the spectacle continues. Travis still shines, the ceremony rolls on, the church keeps doing what the church does. The message is cold: no one is bigger than the machine.

Advertisement

Faith vs obedience

The title “Father” is doing triple duty: God, parent, and patriarchal authority. The video leans into a hard question—are we following something we believe in, or something we’re afraid to disappoint?

Inside this church, people don’t react when things get strange. A nun is handled like a criminal, cards burn, an alien is dragged away, and the room barely flinches. That’s not devotion, that’s conditioning. The deeper critique is that many of our modern “faiths”—political, religious, even fandom—have slid from relationship into obedience. You’re not invited to wrestle with meaning; you’re expected to sit down, sing along, and accept the script.

Who gets meaning, who gets sacrificed

The casting in “Father” feels like a visual ranking chart. The knight represents sanctioned force: power that’s old, armored, and legitimated by history. The cross and church setting evoke sacrifice: whose pain gets honored, whose story gets canonized, whose doesn’t. The Michael Jackson lookalike signals how even fallen icons remain useful as symbols long after their humanity is gone.

In that context, Kanye’s removal reads as a sacrifice that keeps the system intact. Take the problematic prophet out of the frame, keep the music, keep the ritual, keep the brand. The father‑system doesn’t collapse; it adjusts. Control isn’t loud in this world—it’s quiet, procedural, dressed like order.

Advertisement

A mirror held up to us

The most uncomfortable part of “Father” is that the congregation keeps sitting there. No one storms out. No one screams. The church absorbs aliens, icons, arrests, and weddings like it’s a normal Sunday. That’s where the video stops being about Kanye and starts being about us.

We’ve learned to scroll past absurdity and injustice with the same blank face as those extras in the pews. Faith becomes content. Outrage becomes engagement. Power becomes invisible. “Father” takes all of that and crushes it into one continuous shot, asking a bigger question than “Is Kanye back?”

It’s asking: in a world where power wears holy clothes, faith is filmed, and control looks like normal life, who is your father really—and are you sure you chose him?

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Entertainment

The machine isn’t coming. It’s aleady the room.

Published

on

The machine isn’t coming. It’s already in the room.

Indie creators debate AI tools vs. authenticity. Built for your exact audience.

Picture this: you spend two years writing a script. You hustle funding, build a team, reach out to casting. Then somewhere inside a studio, a software platform analyzes your concept against fifteen years of box office data and decides—before a single human executive reads page one—that your film is too risky to greenlight.

This isn’t a Black Mirror episode. This is Hollywood in 2026.


The Numbers Don’t Lie

The generative AI market inside media and entertainment just crossed $2.24 billion and is projected to hit $21.2 billion by 2035—a 25% annual growth rate. Studios like Warner Bros. are running platforms like Cinelytic, a decision-intelligence tool that predicts box office performance with 94–96% accuracy before a single dollar of production money moves.

Netflix estimates its AI recommendation engine saves the company $1 billion per year just in subscriber retention. Meanwhile, over the past three years, more than 41,000 film and TV jobs have disappeared in Los Angeles County alone.

Advertisement

That’s not a trend. That’s a restructuring.


The Moment That Changed Everything

In February 2026, ByteDance’s AI generator Seedance 2.0 produced a hyper-realistic deepfake video featuring the likenesses of Tom Cruise, Brad Pitt, and Leonardo DiCaprio. It went viral instantly. SAG-AFTRA called it “blatant infringement.” The Human Artistry Campaign called it “an attack on every creator in the world.”

Then came Tilly Norwood—a fully AI-generated actress created by production company Particle 6—who was seriously considered for agency representation in Hollywood. The first synthetic human to knock on that door.

Matthew McConaughey didn’t mince words at a recent industry town hall. He looked at Timothée Chalamet and said:

“It’s already here. Own yourself. Voice, likeness, et cetera. Trademark it. Whatever you gotta do, so when it comes, no one can steal you.”

James Cameron told CBS the idea of generating actors with prompts is “horrifying.” Werner Herzog called AI films “fabrications with no soul.” Guillermo del Toro said he would “rather die” than use generative AI to make a film.

Advertisement

But here’s the thing—not everyone agrees.


The Indie Filmmaker’s Double-Edged Sword

At SXSW 2026, indie filmmakers made something clear in a packed panel: they don’t want AI to make their movies. They want AI to “do their dishes.”

That’s the real conversation happening at the ground level.

Independent filmmaker Brad Tangonan used Google’s AI suite to create Murmuray—a deeply personal short film he says he never could have made without the tools. Not because he lacked talent, but because he lacked budget. He wrote it. He directed it. The AI executed parts of his vision he couldn’t afford to shoot.

Advertisement

“I see all of these tools, whether it be a camera you can pick up or generative AI, as ways for an artist to express what they have in their mind,” he said.

In Austin, an independent filmmaker built a 7-minute short in three weeks using AI-generated video—a project that would have taken 3–4 months and cost ten times more the traditional way. That’s the version of this story studios don’t want you focused on.

At CES 2026, Arcana Labs announced the first fully AI-generated short film to receive a SAG-approved contract—a milestone that proves AI-assisted production can operate inside union protections when done right.


The Fight Coming This Summer

The WGA contract expires May 1, 2026. SAG-AFTRA’s expires June 30. AI is the headline issue at the bargaining table—and the last time these two unions went to war with studios over it, Hollywood shut down for 118 days.

SAG is expected to push the “Tilly Tax”—a fee studios pay every time they use a synthetic actor—directly inspired by Tilly Norwood’s emergence. The WGA already prohibits studios from handing writers AI-generated scripts for a rewrite fee. Now they want bigger walls.

Meanwhile, the Television Academy’s 2026 Emmy rules now include explicit AI language: human creative contribution must remain the “core” of any submission. AI assistance is allowed—but the Academy reserves the right to investigate how it was used.

Advertisement

The Oscars and Emmys are essentially saying: the robot didn’t get nominated. The human did.


What This Means for You

If you’re an indie filmmaker between 25 and 45, you’re operating in the most disruptive creative environment since the camera went digital. AI can cut your post-production time by up to 40%. It can help you pre-visualize shots, generate temp scores, clean up audio, and pitch your project with a sizzle reel you couldn’t afford six months ago.

But the machine that helps you make your film is the same machine that could make studios decide they don’t need you to make theirs.

Producer and director Taylor Nixon-Smith said it best: “Entertainment, once a sacred space, now feels like it’s in a state of purgatory.”

The question isn’t whether AI belongs in your workflow. It’s whether you’re the one holding the wheel—or whether the wheel is slowly being handed to an algorithm that has never once felt what it means to have a story only you can tell.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Entertainment

This scene almost broke him. And changed his career.

Published

on


As Sinners surges into the cultural conversation, it’s impossible to ignore the force of Christian Robinson’s performance. His “let me in” door scene has become one of the film’s defining moments—raw, desperate, and unforgettable. But the power of that scene makes the most sense when you understand the journey that brought him there.

From church play to breakout roles

Christian’s path didn’t begin on a Hollywood set. It started in a Brooklyn church, when a woman named Miss Val kept asking him to be in a play.

“I told her no countless times,” he remembers. “Every time she saw me, she asked me and she wouldn’t stop asking me.”

Advertisement

He finally said yes—and everything changed.

“I did it once and I fell in love,” he says. That one performance pushed him into deep research on the craft, a move to Atlanta, and years of unglamorous work: training, auditioning, stacking small wins until he booked his first roles and then Netflix’s Burning Sands, where many met him as Big Country.

By the time Sinners came along, he wasn’t a newcomer hoping to get lucky. He was an actor who had quietly built the muscles to carry something bigger.

The door scene: life or death

On The Roselyn Omaka Show, Christian shared the directing note Ryan Coogler gave him before filming the door scene:

“He explained to me, ‘I need you to bang on this door as if your life depended on it. Like it’s a matter of life and death.’”

Christian didn’t just turn up the volume; he reached deeper.

Advertisement

“This film speaks a lot about our ancestors,” he told Roselyn Omaka. “So I tried to give a glimpse of what our ancestors would’ve experienced if someone or something that could bring ultimate destruction was after them. How hard would they bang? How loud would they scream to try to get into a place safely? That’s what I intended to convey in that moment.”

That inner picture—life or death, ancestors, ultimate destruction—is why the scene hits like more than a plot beat. It feels like generational memory breaking through a single frame.

Living through a “history” moment in real time

When Roselyn asks what he’s processing as Sinners takes off, Christian admits he’s still inside the wave.

“I’ve never experienced a project with this level of reception and energy and momentum,” he says. “People having their theories and breaking it down and doing reenactments… it’s never been a time like this in my career.”

He’s careful not to over‑define something that’s still unfolding: “There’s no way to give an accurate description of what I’m experiencing while I’m still experiencing it.” He knows he’ll need distance to name it fully.

But he can name one thing: “If I could gather any adjective to describe it, it would be gratefulness. I’m grateful.”

Advertisement

He also feels the weight of what this film might mean long-term:

“To know that I was there for a large amount of the time it was being brought to life, and a part of what the internet is saying will be history… this is something that I’m inspired by—to shoot for the stars in whatever passion rooted in creativity that you possess.”

Music, joy, and the man behind the moment

Christian talks about the music of Sinners as another force that shaped him. The score wasn’t playing nonstop; it showed up in key moments.

HCFF
HCFF

“The music was played when it was necessary to be played. But when it was played, it resonated,” he says. Hearing Miles Caton’s songs early, before the world did, he remembers thinking, “This is going to be magical… This is one of the ones right here.”

For all the heaviness of the story, he also brought levity. He laughs about being the jokester on set—singing Juvenile and Lil Wayne in the New Orleans hair and makeup trailer, trying to make everyone smile during Essence Fest weekend. “I’m a fun guy,” he says. “I love to see people laugh and have a good time.”

PATHS for us and opening doors

What might be most revealing is how seriously Christian takes his responsibility off screen. In 2015, sitting in his apartment outside Atlanta, he felt God tell him to start a nonprofit called PATHS.

Advertisement

“I heard from God and he told me to start a nonprofit called PATHS,” he recalls. At first, he and his peers went into schools and inner‑city communities to teach young people “the many different paths to entering the entertainment industry”—not just the craft, but “the practical steps and establishing yourself, like the business of an actor… a stunt person, hair and makeup, etc.”

When the pandemic hit and school visits stopped, he pivoted to a podcast and digital platform: “Fine, I’ll do it,” he laughs. Now PATHS for us lets “anyone anywhere that desires to be in entertainment hear from credible entertainment industry professionals on how they got to where they are and how you can do the same.”

Working on Sinners confirmed that he should go all in: “It just gave me exactly what I needed to know that I should pour my all into it.”

Honoring a history-making moment

As Sinners takes off, Christian keeps coming back to one word: gratefulness—for the film, for the collaborators, for the chance to be part of something people are calling historic.

At Bolanle Media, we see more than a viral scene. We see an artist whose craft is rooted in faith, ancestors, and hard-earned discipline; whose joy lifts the rooms he works in; and whose platform is opening real paths for others.

Advertisement

This scene almost broke him. And changed his career.
Now, as the world catches up, Christian Robinson is using that breakthrough not just to walk through new doors—but to help the next generation find theirs.

Continue Reading

Trending

Subscribe for the updates!