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Browsing: warns
Samantha Irvin is once again using her platform to speak out—this time to protect her fans from falling for an impersonator.
The former WWE announcer took to Twitter to alert her followers about a fake Facebook account thatâ€s pretending to be her, and the numbers are shocking.
The phony page has racked up more than 237,000 followers, fooling thousands into believing itâ€s connected to Irvin. But the real Samantha wants fans to know it has nothing to do with her. She posted a clear message to her followers:
“this fake Facebook has HOW MANY followers?! Oh no… Please report! This is NOT ME! Thanks guys ðŸðŸ½ðŸðŸ½ðŸðŸ½â€
Irvin has stayed active since parting ways with WWE in October 2024, especially focusing on her rising music career. With that kind of momentum, itâ€s no surprise scammers are trying to ride her name for attention—and possibly money.
Fake social media profiles targeting public figures have become a growing issue, and Samanthaâ€s situation is a reminder that not every blue-check or big-following account is legit. Her warning to fans is simple: if it looks suspicious, donâ€t engage—and definitely donâ€t share your personal info.
Have you ever come across a fake celebrity profile online? How do you spot the difference? Drop your thoughts and share your tips in the comments.
Manchester City boss Pep Guardiola has warned it could take most of the season for Rodri to get back to his best as he backed understudy Nico González to keep improving.
Rodri played an hour of Wednesday’s 2-2 Champions League draw in Monaco after sitting out City’s two previous fixtures, with Guardiola having to carefully manage his star midfielder who missed almost all of last season with an anterior cruciate ligament injury.
Guardiola has indicated the 29-year-old will be fit for Sunday’s trip to Brentford but the process to get him back to the player that won the Ballon d’Or last year will take much longer.
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“Rodri has been and is an outstanding player,” Guardiola said. “Everybody knows it. But I said to Rodri, and maybe he struggled to understand: it’s not about six months or seven months [after the injury]. ‘Ah, [after] eight months I’ll play and be the Rodri of before.’ No.
“Rodri will be good at the World Cup with Spain [next summer]. In the World Cup it will be the best Rodri and next season will be the best Rodri. This season will be how we handle it, step by step.
“It’s normal, it was one year on the massage table. The body changes, the rhythm changes. It’s a question of time. If he’s healthy and works with what he has to do, he will be back.”
Rodri has returned from injury but is yet to hit top form. Alex Grimm/Getty Images
Rodri was replaced by González, a £50 million ($67.38m) signing from Porto in February, on Wednesday night, but the 23-year-old was then guilty of conceding the disputed late penalty which Eric Dier converted to deny City victory.
González has yet to fully establish himself in City’s midfield since arriving on the final day of the winter transfer window last season but Guardiola took issue with a suggestion that his introduction in place of Rodri might have contributed to City’s failure to win.
“Nico in those [last] 30 minutes [against Monaco], he was the player that won more balls recovered, and we concede less in the transition than when Rodri was playing in the first half,” Guardiola said.
“I’d love to tell you, yes, because Rodri wasn’t on the pitch we conceded the goal but I can’t prove that because if I felt it, Rodri would be on the pitch.”
González has started in four of his eight City appearances this term, three in the Premier League as well as the 2-0 Carabao Cup win at Huddersfield, after which Guardiola called him over for some post-match coaching on the pitch.
“He is so young,” Guardiola added of the Barcelona academy product. “Rodri has been with us seven years. He is not [here] even one year and in a tough period. There are many things that step by step he is going to take, because he is open-minded and incredibly coachable.
“Not all the players are. He is and he will get it…
“Even Rodri — in the first season — struggled. It’s normal. New environments and you need a process to understand it. Nico is Nico. He has to use his talent as Nico. He can improve a lot.”
Sep 23, 2025, 08:46 AM ET
MADRID — Rafael Nadal is warning about fake online videos of him offering financial advice, and the risks of artificial intelligence.
The retired tennis great said Tuesday he has never endorsed any of the online videos or their messages.
“I want to share this message of caution — something unusual for my social media, but necessary,” he wrote on LinkedIn. “In recent days, together with my team, we have detected fake videos circulating on some platforms. These were generated with artificial intelligence, showing a figure that imitates my image and my voice. In those videos, I am falsely attributed with investment advice or proposals that in no case come from me.”
Nadal said it was “misleading advertising, completely unrelated” to him.
He talked about society’s challenge of learning to distinguish between what is real and what is manipulated, and of “promoting an ethical and responsible use of technology.”
“Innovation is always positive when it serves people, but we must remain aware of its risks and act with critical thinking,” he said. “Artificial intelligence is a tool with enormous potential, capable of bringing extraordinary progress in education, medicine, sports, and communication. However, it can also be misused, creating false content that generates confusion and may deceive many people.”
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