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Adam Levine Is Leaving 'The Voice' After 16 Seasons, Gwen Stefani Is Returning


Adam Levine The Voice
Trae Patton/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
The banter between Adam Levine and Blake Shelton is coming to an end on The Voice.
On Friday's Today show, Voice host Carson Daly announced that Levine would be exiting NBC's singing competition show after 16 seasons. "Adam is one of the original coaches that launched the show, winning the competition three times and inspiring many of the artists that he worked so closely with," Daly told morning show viewers. "Many viewers will miss his frenemy relationship with Blake Shelton. He will always be a cherished member of the Voice family and of course we wish him nothing but the best."
As for who will be replacing the Maroon 5 frontman, Daly revealed that Shelton's girlfriend, Gwen Stefani, will be returning to the show. "I am happy to share that Gwen Stefani will be returning for season 17," he announced. "She met her current boyfriend, Blake Shelton, through the show. Excited to have her back."
Levine won the first season of The Voice in 2011 with Javier Colon, and again in 2013 with Tessanne Chin as well as in 2015 with Jordan Smith.
Stefani was a coach on season 9 and 12 of the show but has yet to win. 
News of Levine's exit comes days after the season 16 finale of The Voice, where John Legend's contestant, Maelyn Jarmon, won. This week, Levine appeared sentimental on Twitter, sharing a photo of him, Shelton and Daly on The Voice set.
"A rare moment of tenderness. ❤️," he wrote.
Earlier this month, the 40-year-old singer opened up to ET about how much longer he planned to do The Voice. Here's what he had to say: 
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RELATED GALLERY

YSRCP claims all seats in Kurnool

Party candidates win 14 Assembly, 2 LS seats

With all the 14 Assembly constituencies and the two Lok Sabha segments showing a lead for the YSR Congress Party, it is looking at a completely sweep in the district.
Though the TDP did not put up much of a fight in the rest of the constituencies, the Kurnool Assembly segment was a neck and neck battle. However, the YSRCP candidate Hafeez Khan has gained an upper hand over his opponent, and has won with a margin of 4,300. While the TDP led in the first few rounds, the YSRCP soon caught up, and at the end of the 18th round, Mr. Khan was leading with about 2,849 votes. The counting of votes in the old town, which has a substantial minority vote, was taken up later.
On the other hand, the losses of Tourism Minister Bhuma Akhila Priya in Allagadda and Deputy Chief Minister K.E. Krishnamurthy’s son K.E Shyam Kumar in Pattikonda were decisive. While Ms. Priya lost with a margin of 32,933 votes, Mr. Kumar lost with a margin of 34,804 votes.

'Booksmart' Is A Wise And Warm Summer Comedy

 A Wise And Warm Summer Comedy



Booksmart is the directorial debut of Olivia Wilde, starring Beanie Feldstein and Kaitlyn Dever.
Francois Duhamel/Annapurna Pictures
The opening moments of Booksmart, the directorial debut of actress Olivia Wilde, present a question, just by force of viewing habit: What kind of cinematic high-school girl type is this?
Played by Beanie Feldstein, Molly begins her day listening to affirmations about achieving greatness. She goes off to school, where she's class president. She suffers no fools, gladly or otherwise. From these hints, you might guess that in the world of high school movies, she is an Election Tracy Flick type: driven, insufferable, unpopular. But you also see her dance like a goofball with her best friend Amy (Kaitlyn Dever), and then you think ... maybe not. Maybe she is a warm and likable nerd, the underdog type. And at some point, it comes into focus: Neither she nor Amy is any cinematic type at all.
Molly and Amy are best friends who love each other more than anything, who are about to graduate from high school and head off to college. They have both — Molly especially — focused on school, believing (or perhaps telling themselves?) that they were not partying much, not getting too wild, not having the wrong kind of fun, because they were academically driven. But then, Molly learns that some of the kids she's always thought she wouldn't want as friends because they don't care about school are about to go to colleges as good as hers. This shakes her. Perhaps high school, she realizes, is not a choice between academic success and social immersion. Perhaps she has abstained from much of party life for no real reason.

Giannis, Harden lead All-NBA; LeBron 3rd team

Giannis, Harden lead All-NBA



The three finalists for the NBA MVP award -- Giannis AntetokounmpoJames Harden and Paul George -- led the balloting for the All-NBA teams, announced by the league Thursday afternoon.
Milwaukee's Antetokounmpo and Oklahoma City's George were named to the two forward spots on the first team; Stephen Curry of Golden State joined Houston's Harden as the guards; and Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokicrounded out the first team. Antetokounmpo and Harden were unanimous selections.
By making a second consecutive All-NBA team, Antetokounmpo put himself in line to receive the largest contract in NBA history next summer: a five-year deal from the Bucks worth $247.3 million, according to ESPN's Bobby Marks. Antetokounmpo will be one year away from free agency next July.
LeBron James was not a first-team All-NBA selection for the first time since 2007, when he was named to the second team.
James did, however, extend his streak of consecutive All-NBA selections to 15 -- tying him with Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the most in history -- by earning a third-team nod in his first year with the Los Angeles Lakers.
The second team consists of Damian Lillard and Kyrie Irving at guard, Kevin Durant and Kawhi Leonard at forward and Joel Embiid at center.
Joining James on the third team are Russell Westbrook and Kemba Walker at guard, Blake Griffin at forward and Rudy Gobert at center.
Gobert's selection makes him eligible for the same deal as Antetokounmpo, as the NBA's criteria for a supermax contract includes a combination of Defensive Player of the Year (2018) and All-NBA (2019) honors.
Thursday was important for several players, as it determined whether they would be eligible for a designated veteran extension -- better known as a supermax -- this summer by making one of the three All-NBA teams. Lillard and Walker qualified, but Bradley Beal and Klay Thompson did not.
The Portland Trail Blazers and Charlotte Hornets now have decisions to make. Portland can offer a four-year extension to Lillard worth $191 million this summer and Charlotte can extend a five-year, $221 million contract to Walker as a free agent on July 1, according to Marks.
Lillard is expected to sign the extension in July, sources said. It is unclear, after the Hornets missed the playoffs, what Walker will decide to do as an unrestricted free agent.