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Saturday, February 14, 2026

Meghan Markle and Prince Harry Spend Early Valentine's Day Dinner at Their Go-to L.A. Hotspot

February 14, 2026
Prince Harry (left) and Meghan Markle (right) leaving Funke on Feb. 13. BACKGRID

NEED TO KNOW

  • Meghan Markle and Prince Harry spent a pre-Valentine's Day dinner at one of their go-to spots

  • The Duchess of Sussex and the Duke of Sussex ate a meal at Funke in Beverly Hills on Feb. 13

  • Meghan previously celebrated her 44th birthday at the restaurant back in August

Meghan MarkleandPrince Harryspent a pre-Valentine's Day dinner at one of their go-to spots.

On Friday, Feb. 13, the Duchess of Sussex, 44, and the Duke of Sussex, 41, ate a meal at Funke in Beverly Hills, photos obtained exclusively by PEOPLE show.

The couple opted for casual looks, with Meghan wearing a brown jacket and black pants, while Harry paired a black jacket with jeans.

Funke, an upscale restaurant belonging to chef Evan Funke, is where Meghandined to celebrate her 44th birthdayback in August.

At the time, she posted a photo from her celebrations onInstagram. In her caption, Meghan praised the restaurant, writing, "This dinner last night at @funke_la with the culinary mastery of @evanfunke and his team is in the top five meals of my life. Extraordinary 🍝 Thank you for a standout dining experience."

Prince Harry (left) and Meghan Markle (right) leaving Funke on Feb. 13. BACKGRID

Last year, Meghan honored Harry with a loving post onInstagramas they spent Valentine's Day apart.

At the time,Prince Harry was in Canadafor the Invictus Games Vancouver Whistler, where he kicked off the event with Meghan before she headed home to care for their children,Prince Archie, 6, andPrincess Lilibet, 4, several days later.

Meghanshared videos on social mediaof her children marking the holiday with a Valentine's Day-themed breakfast.

"Back home taking care of our babies, and missing my Valentine, as he continues on at the Invictus Games, changing lives and reminding all of us of the power of healing and resilience through these incredible veterans and their families. Beyond proud of my husband and what he's created," Meghan wrote below an undated black and white snap of her and Harry kissing.

"My love, I will eat burgers & fries and fish & chips with you forever. Thank you for you," she continued.

Prince Harry leaving Funke on Feb. 13. BACKGRID

Meghan added the hashtag "#LoveWins," a throwback to a quote in the speech she made at theirroyal wedding receptionin 2018.

She signed the post, "As ever, M" — an Easter egg before she announced herAs everlifestyle brand.

Prince Harry and Meghanconnected through a mutual friendin the summer of 2016 and immediately began dating after they met.

Their relationship was long-distance at first, as Harry lived in the U.K. while Meghan was based in Toronto, starring on the legal dramaSuits.She later relocated to be with him.

The coupleannounced their engagementin November 2017. Prince Harry popped the question with an engagement featuring two diamonds from the personal collection of his late mother,Princess Diana.

Prince Harry and Meghan later married in a classicroyal weddingat St. George's Chapel at Windsor Castle in May 2018.Queen Elizabethgave them the titles of Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

Meghan Markle leaving Funke on Feb. 13. BACKGRID

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The couple's first child, son Prince Archie, was born in London in May 2019. Less than a year later, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex announced that they werestepping back from their royal roles in the U.K.and they later settled in Meghan's home state of California. The family expanded when their daughter Princess Lilibet was born in June 2021.

Exclusively speaking to PEOPLE in 2025, Meghanreflected on being back in a "honeymoon period" with Harry.

"My husband met me when I hadThe Tig, and I see this spark in his eye when he sees me doing the thing that I was doing when he first met me," the Duchess of Sussex said, referring to her work launching As ever and appearing in her Netflix series,With Love, Meghan.

"It's almost like a honeymoon period again, because it's exactly how it was in the beginning when he'd watch me scribbling away, writing newsletters, fine-tuning edits and just really being in the details of it. I think he loves watching as much as I love doing that creative process. It's just been fun. This is who I've always been," she added.

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Cardi B falls out of chair and crashes on stage during Las Vegas show

February 14, 2026
Cardi B falls out of chair and crashes on stage during Las Vegas show

Taylor Hill/Getty

Entertainment Weekly Cardi B performs at the 2025 Global Citizen Festival in New York City on Sept. 27, 2025 Taylor Hill/Getty

Be careful!

Cardi Bfell off a chair mid-song during her concert in Las Vegas on Friday night.

The rapper was in the middle of performing her "Thotiana" remix when she took a provocative pose in a metal chair on stage at the T-Mobile Arena in Paradise, Nev. After she leaned back a little too far, thechair came crashing down on her and she toppled backwards.

The good news? She didn't miss a beat, continuing her signature flow while lying on her back.

After returning to her feet, Cardi joked about the tumble. "That was the government!" she yelled. "That was the government!"

Cardi B performs at the 2025 Global Citizen Festival at Central Park in New York City on Sept. 27, 2025 Kevin Mazur/Getty

Kevin Mazur/Getty

The musician continued to poke fun at her accident in a video posted to her Instagram Stories afterwards. "Y'all, the government was out to get me today," she said, laughing. "I'm telling you, it was the government! The government, bitch!"

Cardi alsojoked about the incidentin a post on X. Resharing video footage of it, she wrote, "Can someone put a community note on this? This video is clearly AI."

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The rapper also shared a video on her Instagram Stories showing several bruises on her legs, though they're likely unrelated to her toppling on Friday night — she fell on her backside then, but the marks appeared around her knees and shins.

"I'm out here working for y'all motherf---ers!" she said in the video. "That's a lump right there. I'm out here working for y'all motherf---ers!"

In another video, which was time-stamped 2:28 a.m. local time, Cardi said she planned to take a "concoction" of supplements and anticipated a fitful night of sleep on her tour bus.

"I'm gonna take some ashwagandha, magnesium, and melatonin," she said. "Baby, I cannot wait. I want to sleep so f---ing good, bitch. Woah. I am so tired. And I just cannot get the hang of the bus — the whole shaking and everything. I'm very sensitive."

Cardi B and Jessica Alba at the Super Bowl LX halftime show at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., on Feb. 8, 2026 Kevin Mazur/Getty 

Kevin Mazur/Getty

The musician just embarked on her Little Miss Drama Tour — her first headlining tour since 2019 — in support of her second studio album,Am I the Drama?

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

The tour kicked off on Wednesday with a show in Palm Desert, Calif., and Friday's show in Nevada was its second. Cardi will perform more than 30 shows across North America before the tour wraps on April 18 in Atlanta.

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Ex-Disney head Michael Eisner slams networks for paying Trump money in settlements over Kimmel: 'That was bad'

February 14, 2026
Ex-Disney head Michael Eisner slams networks for paying Trump money in settlements over Kimmel: 'That was bad'

Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; Jim Spellman/WireImage

Entertainment Weekly President Donald Trump; Michael Eisner Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; Jim Spellman/WireImage

Former Disney CEOMichael Eisnerbid the company farewell long beforeJimmy Kimmel Livewas abruptly and brieflyyanked off the airin September, but he's now explaining why he couldn't stay silent on the issue.

"I just was finally fed up with universities, law firms," Eisner, who was Disney's leader from 1985 to 2005, said on a new episode ofIn Depth With Graham Bensinger. "I left law firms that had made deals with the administration. I thought that was bad. I didn't think I had any voice anymore really, so it didn't matter what I did."

Still, he said, his wife and others urged him to skip commenting on the situation or to at least be cautious.

Kimmel's late-night show wassuspended indefinitelyby ABC, whose parent company is Disney, after he made remarks about the shooting death of conservative activist and Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk on Sept. 10.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Kimmel had said, "We had some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and with everything they can to score political points from it."

Brendan Carr, President Donald Trump's appointed FCC chair, suggestedaffiliate groups push backagainst ABC and Disney.

Jimmy Kimmel Livewas off the air for six days, before resuming in its usual place within ABC's schedule.

In the meantime, Eisner had weighed in on the matter.

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"Where has all the leadership gone?"Eisner postedon Sept. 19. "If not for university presidents, law firm managing partners, and corporate chief executives standing up against bullies, who then will step up for the first amendment? The 'suspending indefinitely' of Jimmy Kimmel immediately after the Chairman of the FCC's aggressive yet hollow threatening of the Disney Company is yet another example of out-of-control intimidation. Maybe the Constitution should have said, 'Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, except in one's political or financial self-interest.'"

He added, "By-the-way, for the record, this ex-CEO finds Jimmy Kimmel very talented and funny."

Jimmy Kimmel returns to 'Jimmy Kimmel Live' after his suspension in September 2025 Disney/Randy Holmes

Disney/Randy Holmes

Speaking with Bensinger, Eisner explained that he got quite a response to his message.

"Three million people contacted me the next day. They just thought it was the greatest thing in the world. And somebody finally stood up and all these celebrities," he said. "I don't know if I broke the dam. I don't know whether I began the snowball. I don't know whether it would have happened anyway."

Eisner noted that it wasn't necessarily Disney's involvement that motivated him to speak up. He was also very much against Paramount Global, the parent company of CBS News, having agreed topay $16 millionto the Trump administration in July over the way a60 Minutessegment had been edited.

He found it "ridiculous."

Eisner was also unhappy with ABC News having settled with Trump for $15 million the year before, in response to a defamation suit from the former star ofThe Apprentice, which was a response to comments onThis Week.

Eisner added that he likes to think he "wouldn't have settled."

The broadcast episode ofIn Depth With Graham Bensinger debuts in syndication across the U.S. this weekend.

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