One ofTom Felton's most iconic lines as the malicious Draco Malfoy in theHarry Potterfranchiseis actually a single word — the spiteful spewing of his nemesis' last name: "Potter."

Entertainment Weekly Credit: Peter Mountain/Warner Bros.

As Felton admitted on theHappy Sad Confusedpodcast, he was completely unaware his pronunciation had become a beloved meme within the Harry Potter fandom

"I don't know how that's become an iconic thing," the 38-year-old actor said. "I certainly had no idea."

Felton revealed that his snide way of saying the character's name came from his three older brothers. "They all would always call me something like 'maggot' or, what was I also called? 'Runt.' Runt of the pack."

Tom Felton and Daniel Radcliffe in 'Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.'Credit: Peter Mountain/Warner Bros

"I don't remember ever thinking about it for a second," Felton added. "It just got more and more venomous."

With theHarry Potterfranchise now spanning books, films, theme parks, and evenan upcoming television series on HBO, Felton shared amazement at how so many elements from the Wizarding World have become pop culture mainstays. "I never knew any of these things were gonna be iconic lines," Felton said.

TheFackham Hallactor iscurrently reprising his role as Draco Malfoyin the Broadway production ofHarry Potter and the Cursed Childat New York City's Lyric Theatre. While not originally written into the play, Felton says his infamous "Potter" line ended up in the production after he "spontaneously" said it during rehearsals and it caught the ear of director John Tiffany.

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"I could see his eyes twinkle and go, 'Yes. Put that back in,'" Felton said.

Felton also shared how impressed he is that Aiden Close, who plays his character's son Scorpius Malfoy in the play, can say the line better than he can.

Tom Felton at the 2025 EE Bafta Film Awards.Credit: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty

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Felton added how "amazing" it is that theHarry Potterfranchise continues to grow — like with HBO's upcoming television series based onJ.K. Rowling's fantasy saga. The first season, titledHarry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, premieres on December 25, 2026.

"I'm thrilled that the Wizarding World is thriving. I mean, it's amazing," Felton said. "None of us would have ever expected people to still be as interested as they were when we finished the films."

Watch the full podcast interview below.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Harry Potter” star Tom Felton had 'no idea' this memorable“ ”Draco“ ”line had become so 'iconic' among fans

One ofTom Felton's most iconic lines as the malicious Draco Malfoy in theHarry Potterfranchiseis actually a single wo...
Hundreds of revellers flee after fire breaks out at a dance club in Germany

BERLIN (AP) — Hundreds of partygoers had to flee a dance club in southwestern Germany when a fire broke out in the early hours of Sunday.

Associated Press

None of the 750 guests were injured in the incident in Kehl, a town near the French border, emergency services said.

Police said that three people were treated at the scene for shock.

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The club was identified in local media posts as the K Club Kehl, which is a popular venue for hip-hop music.

The cause of the fire is being investigated.

At least 80 personnel from the fire department, police, and emergency medical services attended the incident, German news agency dpa reported.

A fire ata nightclub in the Swissski resort of Crans-Montana on New Year's Eve, which killed dozens of people, was linked by investigators to sparklers on Champagne bottles.

Hundreds of revellers flee after fire breaks out at a dance club in Germany

BERLIN (AP) — Hundreds of partygoers had to flee a dance club in southwestern Germany when a fire broke out in the early ...
Soccer Fan Dies After Fall from VIP Section at Stadium Set to Host 2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony

A man fell to his death at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on Saturday, March 28

People Banrote Stadium in Mexico CityCredit: Yuri CORTEZ / AFP via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The incident took place moments before Mexico and Portugal's friendly soccer match

  • Banorte Stadium is set to host the 2026 World Cup opening ceremony in June, after undergoing a $105 million renovation

A man has died at the newly renovated stadium, which is scheduled to host the 2026 World Cup opening ceremony this summer.

Moments before Mexico and Portugal's friendly match was set to begin at Mexico City's Banorte Stadium on Saturday, March 28, a man fell to his death from the VIP box, the Mexico City Prosecutor's Office (MCPO) said in astatement.

He is believed to have climbed the exterior of the venue while intoxicated as he tried to jump from the second-level box seats to the first level, before falling to the ground,Reutersreported, citing local authorities.

"According to the first reports, the events were recorded in the building's staging area, from where the person fell to the parking area, causing the loss of his life," said the MCPO in a translated statement shared onFacebook. "The CDMX Prosecutor's Office will continue investigations in a thorough manner and will keep the public informed as relevant progress is obtained."

Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on March 28Credit: Agustin Cuevas/Getty

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"From the outset, ministerial, forensic, and investigative police personnel arrived at the scene to begin the corresponding procedures," the MCPO added on its website. "The area was secured, the crime scene was documented, and evidence was collected by experts specializing in criminalistics, photography, and forensic medicine."

Video surveillance and witness testimonies are being reviewed to determine how the incident unfolded.

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"The legal autopsy protocol is underway, in order to establish with certainty the cause of death, as well as the physical condition of the person at the time of the fall," said the MCPO. "[We] will continue its investigations thoroughly and will keep the public informed as relevant progress is made…"

The deceased soccer fan has not been publicly identified at this time.

Portugal plays against Mexico in a friendly match at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on March 28Credit: CARL DE SOUZA / AFP via Getty

The 2026 World Cup opening ceremony is scheduled to take place at Banorte Stadium on June 11. The upcoming tournament is being hosted by three countries for the first time in the U.S., Mexico and Canada.

The Banorte Stadium, previously known as Estadio Azteca Stadium, opened in May 1966 and is the fourth-largest soccer stadium in the world, seating 87,000 people, perTNT SportsandStadium DB.

The venue has been renovated ahead of the World Cup after receiving a $105 million loan from the bank Banorte, perESPN. In June, the stadium will become the first to host three World Cup finals, after hosting the 1970, 1986 and 2026 tournaments.

PEOPLE has reached out to the MCPO for further comment.

Read the original article onPeople

Soccer Fan Dies After Fall from VIP Section at Stadium Set to Host 2026 World Cup Opening Ceremony

A man fell to his death at Banorte Stadium in Mexico City on Saturday, March 28 NEED TO KNOW The incident took...
Europe seeks to increase deportations as some warn of Trump-like tactics

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union is expanding its powers to track, raid and deport migrants to "return hubs″ in third countries in Africa and elsewhere, quietly adopting tactics of the Trump administration that have drawn public criticism across the 27-nation bloc.

Associated Press

The EU continues to tighten migration policies after right-wing parties took power in some countries in 2024. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, from the center-right European People's Party coalition, has said that the new measures will prevent a repeat of the 2015 crisis caused by Syria's civil war, when about 1 million people arrived to seek asylum.

"We have learnt the lessons of the past. And today, we are better equipped," von der Leyen has said. Thenew policies, known as the Pact on Migration and Asylum, go into effect on June 12.

Far-right parties in Europe have praised thedeportation policiesof U.S. President Donald Trump and called for the EU to adopt a similar approach. Human rights groups warn that authorities are already illegally pushing back migrants at EU borders and hollowing out their legal protections.

Italy provides a model

The EU already spends millions of dollarsto deter migrants before they reach its shores, and has supportedtens of thousands of Africans returning home, voluntarily or by force.

What's envisioned now is an expansion of what Italy has created under Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and her "tough on migration" stance. It operates two migrant detention centers for rejected asylum-seekers in Albania. One currently holds at least 90 migrants, said lawmaker Rachele Scarpa, who said that she found people confused and scared during a recent visit.

In addition, Meloni's Cabinet has approved an anti-immigration package that would allow the navy to halt vessels in international waters for up to six months if they are deemed a threat to public order; return intercepted migrants to countries of origin or third countries; and speed up the deportation of foreign nationals convicted of crimes.

An "informal group" of EU nations including Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Greece are pursuing deportation center agreements, said Bernd Parusel, a researcher at the Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies.

Kenya is one country they are speaking with, said Tineke Strik, a Dutch member of the European Parliament. Whether consciously or not, the plan is similar toTrump's deals with nations like El Salvadorto take in deported migrants, she said.

Other countries are exploring similar ideas. Sweden's migration minister has said the conservative ruling coalition approvessetting up hubs outside Europe,especially for Afghan and Syrian asylum-seekers.

Some in Europe cheer Trump-style tactics

During the Winter Olympics in Italy,protests eruptedover the deployment of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to provide security to the U.S. delegation. But others in Europe have praised ICE's actions and called for setting up deportation-focused police units.

In 2024, Belgium passed a law allowing the EU border service Frontex operations inside the country, stoking fears among activists that Frontex could join in on raids.

But Frontex's mandate just covers borders, said spokesperson Chris Borowski, and the current role in voluntary or involuntary returns for the service includes "coordinating flights, helping with travel documents and making sure fundamental rights are respected throughout the process."

The European Commission has declined requests to take a position on U.S. federal immigration policies.

In Britain, which left the EU several years ago, the center-left Labour Party government has made curbing unauthorized immigration a key focus.

In February, the Home Office said that almost 60,000 people had been deported since the government was elected in July 2024. It said 9,000 arrests were made of people working without permission in 2025, up by more than half from the year before.

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Pushbacks, raids and surveillance increase

Under the principle of non-refoulement in EU and international law, a person can't be returned to a country where they would face persecution.

But European immigration enforcement tactics include so-called pushbacks, where people trying to cross into the EU are forced back across a border without access to asylum procedures.

Authorities in Europe carry out an average of 221 pushbacks a day, according to a February report by a group of humanitarian organizations. More than 80,000 pushbacks were recorded in 2025, the report said, mostly in Italy, Poland, Bulgaria and Latvia.

"Men, women and children — including individuals in critical medical condition — are routinely subjected to beatings, attacks by police dogs, forced stripping, forced river crossings and theft of personal belongings," according to the report.

European agents are brutalizing migrants just like in the U.S., said Flor Didden, migration policy expert at the Belgian human rights group 11.11.11. Some, like in Greece, even wear masks.

"The images are shocking and the outrage is justified," he said of the U.S. "But where is that same moral clarity when European border authorities abuse, rob and let people die?"

Europe still has more protections for migrants

The groups also have recorded an expansion of surveillance technology like drones, thermal cameras and satellites to monitor people on the move.

Other human rights groups warn of a weakening of legal protections.

The EU's new migration regulations allow for more police raids in private homes and public spaces and more use of surveillance and racial profiling, said a letter to EU institutions in February from 88 nonprofit groups including the Brussels-based Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants.

"We cannot be outraged by ICE in the United States while also supporting these practices in Europe," said the platform's director, Michele LeVoy.

Olivia Sundberg Diez, EU migration advocate for Amnesty International, said Europe retains more protections for vulnerable migrants than the United States but shares much of the political momentum toward harsher policies.

"There's a level of institutions' and courts' independence and human rights compliance in Europe that you can't disregard," she said. "But the fundamental political impulse is the same, and I worry that the human consequences will be the same."

Giada Zampano reported from Rome. Elena Becatoros in Athens, Greece, Jill Lawless in London, Paolo Santalucia in Rome, Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland, and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin, contributed to this report.

This story has been corrected to show that Frontex's mandate just covers borders, and that it didn't join raids with Belgian authorities.

Europe seeks to increase deportations as some warn of Trump-like tactics

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union is expanding its powers to track, raid and deport migrants to "return hubs″ in th...
Europe seeks to increase deportations as some warn of Trump-like tactics

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union is expanding its powers to track, raid and deport migrants to "return hubs″ in third countries in Africa and elsewhere, quietly adopting tactics of the Trump administration that have drawn public criticism across the 27-nation bloc.

Associated Press

The EU continues to tighten migration policies after right-wing parties took power in some countries in 2024. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, from the center-right European People's Party coalition, has said that the new measures will prevent a repeat of the 2015 crisis caused by Syria's civil war, when about 1 million people arrived to seek asylum.

"We have learnt the lessons of the past. And today, we are better equipped," von der Leyen has said. Thenew policies, known as the Pact on Migration and Asylum, go into effect on June 12.

Far-right parties in Europe have praised thedeportation policiesof U.S. President Donald Trump and called for the EU to adopt a similar approach. Human rights groups warn that authorities are already illegally pushing back migrants at EU borders and hollowing out their legal protections.

Italy provides a model

The EU already spends millions of dollarsto deter migrants before they reach its shores, and has supportedtens of thousands of Africans returning home, voluntarily or by force.

What's envisioned now is an expansion of what Italy has created under Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and her "tough on migration" stance. It operates two migrant detention centers for rejected asylum-seekers in Albania. One currently holds at least 90 migrants, said lawmaker Rachele Scarpa, who said that she found people confused and scared during a recent visit.

In addition, Meloni's Cabinet has approved an anti-immigration package that would allow the navy to halt vessels in international waters for up to six months if they are deemed a threat to public order; return intercepted migrants to countries of origin or third countries; and speed up the deportation of foreign nationals convicted of crimes.

An "informal group" of EU nations including Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark and Greece are pursuing deportation center agreements, said Bernd Parusel, a researcher at the Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies.

Kenya is one country they are speaking with, said Tineke Strik, a Dutch member of the European Parliament. Whether consciously or not, the plan is similar toTrump's deals with nations like El Salvadorto take in deported migrants, she said.

Other countries are exploring similar ideas. Sweden's migration minister has said the conservative ruling coalition approvessetting up hubs outside Europe,especially for Afghan and Syrian asylum-seekers.

Some in Europe cheer Trump-style tactics

During the Winter Olympics in Italy,protests eruptedover the deployment of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents to provide security to the U.S. delegation. But others in Europe have praised ICE's actions and called for setting up deportation-focused police units.

In 2024, Belgium passed a law allowing the EU border service Frontex operations inside the country, stoking fears among activists that Frontex could join in on raids.

But Frontex's mandate just covers borders, said spokesperson Chris Borowski, and the current role in voluntary or involuntary returns for the service includes "coordinating flights, helping with travel documents and making sure fundamental rights are respected throughout the process."

The European Commission has declined requests to take a position on U.S. federal immigration policies.

In Britain, which left the EU several years ago, the center-left Labour Party government has made curbing unauthorized immigration a key focus.

In February, the Home Office said that almost 60,000 people had been deported since the government was elected in July 2024. It said 9,000 arrests were made of people working without permission in 2025, up by more than half from the year before.

Advertisement

Pushbacks, raids and surveillance increase

Under the principle of non-refoulement in EU and international law, a person can't be returned to a country where they would face persecution.

But European immigration enforcement tactics include so-called pushbacks, where people trying to cross into the EU are forced back across a border without access to asylum procedures.

Authorities in Europe carry out an average of 221 pushbacks a day, according to a February report by a group of humanitarian organizations. More than 80,000 pushbacks were recorded in 2025, the report said, mostly in Italy, Poland, Bulgaria and Latvia.

"Men, women and children — including individuals in critical medical condition — are routinely subjected to beatings, attacks by police dogs, forced stripping, forced river crossings and theft of personal belongings," according to the report.

European agents are brutalizing migrants just like in the U.S., said Flor Didden, migration policy expert at the Belgian human rights group 11.11.11. Some, like in Greece, even wear masks.

"The images are shocking and the outrage is justified," he said of the U.S. "But where is that same moral clarity when European border authorities abuse, rob and let people die?"

Europe still has more protections for migrants

The groups also have recorded an expansion of surveillance technology like drones, thermal cameras and satellites to monitor people on the move.

Other human rights groups warn of a weakening of legal protections.

The EU's new migration regulations allow for more police raids in private homes and public spaces and more use of surveillance and racial profiling, said a letter to EU institutions in February from 88 nonprofit groups including the Brussels-based Platform for International Cooperation on Undocumented Migrants.

"We cannot be outraged by ICE in the United States while also supporting these practices in Europe," said the platform's director, Michele LeVoy.

Olivia Sundberg Diez, EU migration advocate for Amnesty International, said Europe retains more protections for vulnerable migrants than the United States but shares much of the political momentum toward harsher policies.

"There's a level of institutions' and courts' independence and human rights compliance in Europe that you can't disregard," she said. "But the fundamental political impulse is the same, and I worry that the human consequences will be the same."

Giada Zampano reported from Rome. Elena Becatoros in Athens, Greece, Jill Lawless in London, Paolo Santalucia in Rome, Claudia Ciobanu in Warsaw, Poland, and Kirsten Grieshaber in Berlin, contributed to this report.

This story has been corrected to show that Frontex's mandate just covers borders, and that it didn't join raids with Belgian authorities.

Europe seeks to increase deportations as some warn of Trump-like tactics

BRUSSELS (AP) — The European Union is expanding its powers to track, raid and deport migrants to "return hubs″ in th...

 

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