Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Deaf 'CODA' Star Has Fans Cracking Up With Story About Unknowingly Jamming Out To NPR Talk Radio

Deaf 'CODA' Star Has Fans Cracking Up With Story About Unknowingly Jamming Out To NPR Talk Radio
@kellyclarksonshow/TikTok

Deaf actor Daniel Durant had fans in stitches with a story he told on The Kelly Clarkson Show about one of his unique experiences with music.

The actor is one of the stars of Best Picture Academy Award nominated film CODA, which features an ensemble cast of several deaf actors. Like one of the film's main characters, Durant—who is completely deaf—loves to feel the vibrations of music in his body.


But as he told Clarkson during his recent appearance on her show, those vibrations can sometimes be deceiving—like the time in his teens when Durant cranked up the car radio and was rocking out to the bass, only to find out he was listening to NPR talk radio.

See him tell the tale in the TikTok below.

@kellyclarksonshow

ready to get the club pumping…with NPR 😆 #coda #codafilm #npr #danieldurant #music #bass #asl

As Durant explained to Clarkson, music has been a lifelong love of his—via the vibrations he can feel in his body—ever since he was a kid traveling to soccer games in his mom's car.

As he told Clarkson:

"Sometimes I'd ask my mom, 'Can you turn it up so I can feel the bass?' And my mom was like, 'Yeah,' but we struggled to hear it.
"So my mom went ahead and bought a new sound system, and I loved it. You could feel the bass. It was so strong. The windows were shaking. It felt so good."

Then one day Durant's mom went into a store, and he decided to stay behind and crank up the bass.

And like most of us, it wasn't long before he was rocking out in his seat—so much so that he was shaking the whole car and attracting looks from a passersby in the parking lot.

"I was just imagining he must be like, 'Wow, you have such a nice system, playing a great song.' And I was like, 'Yeah.' And I started dancing to him and another person pulled up. It was a woman, same thing. I pointed at her and kept dancing."

So he asked his mom what the song was when she got back to the car and she gave him quite the surprise.

"She started laughing. 'You're listening to NPR talk radio.'"

Clarkson wasn't the only one who enjoyed Durant's story.

@blondie8014/TikTok

@smooshio0/TikTok

@demiandtom/TikTok

@eeerrriiinnn7/TikTok

@muffymarracco/TikTok

@a_simpledreamer/TikTok

@jonathanjohnston87/TikTok

@marry261195/TikTok

@heatherdoodle563/TikTok

@rubberducky76/TikTok

Honestly, who can blame him?

Those NPR hosts do kinda slap.

More from Entertainment/celebrities

Ben Stiller; Barack Obama
Leon Bennett/WireImage; Getty Images/Getty Images for EIF & XQ

Ben Stiller Reveals Barack Obama Turned Down Offer To Make A Key Cameo In 'Severance'

Actor and Severance executive producer Ben Stiller revealed in an interview on Jimmy Kimmel Live! that he once approached former President Barack Obama to narrate a pivotal video for the hit Apple TV+ show only for Obama to decline the offer in an email.

Stiller hoped to cast former President Barack Obama as the voice of the anthropomorphic Lumon office building in the “Lumon is Listening” propaganda video featured in the season 2 premiere. Though Obama declined the offer, he reportedly responded by email, expressing that he’s a “big fan” of the show.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshots of Jennifer Hudson and Common at a Knicks game
@BleacherReport/X

Common's Quick Reflexes Save Jennifer Hudson From Taking A Basketball To The Face

EGOT-winning singer/actor Jennifer Hudson narrowly missed being hit square in the face by a basketball while watching Tuesday's New York Knicks playoff game against the Golden State Warriors from courtside seats.

Fortunately, her beau sitting beside her, rapper Common, diverted the ball's trajectory away from Hudson's face in the nick of time, her glasses taking most of the hit after Knicks’ point guard Miles McBride lost control of the ball.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Ben Stein as the teacher in "Ferris Beuller's Day Off"; Donald Trump
Paramount Pictures; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

'Ferris Bueller' Clip Explaining Tariff Disaster In 1930 Goes Viral Amid Trump's Tariff War

People are nodding their heads after a clip from the movie Ferris Bueller's Day Off in which Ben Stein's teacher character explains the disastrous results of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in 1930 went viral after President Donald Trump's announced tariffs on goods imported from Canada and Mexico.

The scene features a high school economics teacher, played by Ben Stein, lecturing his uninterested students about the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act—a real-life 1930 bill signed by President Herbert Hoover that raised tariffs on imported goods. The law, often blamed for exacerbating the Great Depression, has drawn comparisons to Trump’s recent trade policies.

Keep ReadingShow less
Billy McFarland
Theo Wargo/Getty Images

Mexico Officials Say Fyre Fest 2 'Does Not Exist' Despite Founder's Insistence That It's Happening

Things aren't boding well for a sequel to the failed Fyre Festival, allegedly set to take place on a Mexican island as previously announced by the music festival's founder, Billy McFarland.

The disgraced event organizer was sentenced to six years in prison for financial crimes tied to the 2017 Fyre Festival on the Bahamian island of Great Exuma, in which he defrauded investors of $27.4 million.

Keep ReadingShow less
Robert Pattinson
Warner Bros. Pictures

Robert Pattinson Offers Hilariously Blunt Reason For Wanting To Start Filming 'The Batman 2' Soon

Sometimes it feels like a million years have passed between installments in a series. This is true in books, in comics, and definitely in movies.

For actor Robert Pattinson, the years are extra long, because he is specifically waiting to be called up to act as the titular role in The Batman 2, which will follow on the heels of the two part The Batman, already filmed and half-released.

Keep ReadingShow less