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Putman family on TLC
TV & Streaming

3 Members of Meet the Putmans Family Killed in Car Accident

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The Putmans, the family made famous on the TLC reality show Meet the Putmans, asked for prayers in an Instagram post on Sunday as they announced that three members of the family had died in a car crash and several others were in the hospital.

“Our family was in a tragic car accident, and we lost Papa, Neenee, and Aunt Megan,” Isabelle, a member of the family, wrote in a letter shared on the @growingupputman Instagram account. “They have gone home to be with the Lord.”

TMZ reports Papa and Neenee were nicknames for Bill and Barb Putman, the heads of the family.

Five other members of the family were injured, Isabelle said. “Please keep Uncle Blake, Lulu, Alena, Noah, and Gia in your prayers as they remain in the hospital,” Isabelle wrote. “We are asking for complete healing and strength for each of them.”

The crash happened Friday in Ellington Township, Michigan, as the driver of a semi truck failed to stop at a stop sign and struck a Jeep with the eight Putmans inside, according to WNEM. As the five injured Putmans were taken to the hospital via ambulance — with some in critical condition — the driver of the semi was arrested, according to the Tuscola County Sheriff’s Office.

In their time of heartbreak, the surviving family members — including Billy, Jen, Brandon, Kacie, Jamie, Blair, Abby, Emma, Addison, Bella, Mercy, Gabby, Mya, Nova, Jonah, Eli, Solomon, Uriah, Samson, Luke, and Anna — are relying on their faith, Isabelle said.

“We ask for your continued prayers for Uncle Blake, Lulu, Alena, Noah, and Gia as they recover, and for our whole family as we walk through this deep loss,” Isabelle added.

TLC’s Meet the Putmans aired its only season in 2017. The show followed Bill and Barb, who’d been married for 32 years at the time, as they lived with their children and grandchildren.

“This 25-person family lives under one roof, shares one bathroom, pools all of their finances, and helps raise all of the kids as one family unit,” TLC said in a press release. “Each episode will not only detail the little things that test this large household, but also highlight those extreme ‘for better or worse’ moments they experience as both couples and a family.”

Following the TLC show, the Putmans returned in a 2021 web series titled Growing Up Putman, People reports.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Why One Battle After Another Is Leonardo DiCaprio's Best Performance
TV & Streaming

Why One Battle After Another Is Leonardo DiCaprio’s Best Performance

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The following essay was written for the new edition of “In Review by David Ehrlich,” a biweekly newsletter in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the site’s latest reviews and muses about current events in the movie world. Subscribe here to receive the newsletter in your inbox every other Friday.

A movie star in an age without movie stars, Leonardo DiCaprio has always felt like something of an anachronism. Strange as that might be to say about an actor whose angel-kissed image once felt as endemic to the late ’90s as mom jeans and the Macarena, his defining roles — even from the beginning — were predicated upon creating a palpable disconnect between the past and the present. In stark contrast to a (somewhat older) contemporary like George Clooney, whose “man out of time” appeal was rooted in smoothly transposing Clark Gable’s image onto a late 20th century landscape, DiCaprio’s celebrity hinged on stressing the distance between then and now. 

Jeremy Strong Mark Zuckerberg

“Romeo + Juliet” seized on the sheer modernity of DiCaprio’s affect — the fact that he unmistakably had the face of someone who had seen the inside of a mall — to relocate Shakespeare’s most romantic tragedy from Elizabethan Verona to “Baywatch”-era Venice Beach, while “Titanic” cast him as an undead memory whose “Teen Beat” appeal was anchored to his character’s turn-of-the-century pluck. Steven Spielberg seized on the actor’s dreamy atemporality with “Catch Me If You Can,” in which DiCaprio effectively played a boy and a man at the same time (a balancing act crucial to that movie’s timeless charm and exquisite tenderness), and Martin Scorsese eventually figured out how to retain the essence of DiCaprio’s screen persona as the heartthrob matured into his 30s and 40s.

The wayward span between 2004 and 2010 yielded the least memorable work of DiCaprio’s career, but everything began snapping back into place with “Shutter Island,” which saw him play a “duly appointed federal marshal” so psychically removed from his own past that the actor’s signature inscrutability — what his detractors might describe as a mannequin-like hollowness — was repurposed as an elaborate defense mechanism. After so many roles that required him to straddle between different temporalities, DiCaprio was cast in the role of someone whose entire reality hinges upon keeping them separate. 

In assigning him that seemingly perverse task, Scorsese tapped into the vague air of vacuity at the center of a star who’s always seemed present and absent all at once. An actor who’s simultaneously “here” and “elsewhere,” forever stuck in time even as he keeps getting older before our eyes (a condition that applies to his ability to stay relevant even though he takes years between projects, his ability to remain a huge box office draw without opening himself up to press, and of course his ability to keep dating 25-year-old models who weren’t even born when the “Pussy Posse” was first on the prowl). 

Whether you call him Edward Daniels or Andrew Laeddis, DiCaprio’s character isn’t balancing between past and present so much as he’s stuck in one and projecting himself forward into the other — the chasm between the two grows wider every day, and he’s doing whatever he can to fill it with anything he can to ease the pain of that empty space. Scorsese identified that space as the perfect cavity to hide all manner of sins (a cavity he would find even more rewarding use for in his subsequent collaborations with DiCaprio), and from that point on it’s been clear that no other leading man of his generation is capable of making their emptiness feel quite so full. He’s the man who’s almost there.

“Shutter Island” perfectly teed DiCaprio up for a string of indelible roles that made the most of his ability to be unmoored from his own image. In “Inception,” he was another lucid dreamer with a dead wife — as desperate to return to reality as he was eager to avoid it. In “The Great Gatsby,” he epitomized the desolation of the American Dream with a performance that embodied the notion of being “within and without” oneself at the same time (as Nick Carraway would describe his own experience at the periphery of Gatsby’s life), and in “The Wolf of Wall Street” — he swan-dove into the bottomless pit of Jordan Belfort’s soul as if it were Scrooge McDuck’s bank vault.

That last part found DiCaprio in more explicit conversation with the emptiness he projects on screen, and weaponized it to newly hilarious effect. DiCaprio had never been considered as much of a comic actor, but there he was at the center of Scorsese’s funniest movie, the humor of which stemmed from shining a light into the void-like cavern where his character’s soul should’ve been and marveling at just how deep it went. Even on the cusp of 40, DiCaprio was still able to play Belfort as a kind of perpetual boy-man who exists in between opposing polarities: between wide-eyed kid and veteran Ponzi schemer, between crime and consequence, between the “greed is good” heyday of the film’s setting and the “no it’s not” reality of the climate that greeted its release (which arrived on the heels of the Great Recession). 

‘Catch Me if You Can’

Once again, DiCaprio’s interstitial quality was more of a feature than a bug, and it’s no wonder that Quentin Tarantino looked to him when casting the role of a fading TV star who was stuck between the afterimage of his former glory and the torturous proximity of Hollywood stardom. It’s just as unsurprising that DiCaprio’s Oscar-winning turn as the beaten and bruised lead of “The Revenant” — a role that fought against his “unfilled” screen image as an actor by tearing his guts out rather than allowing him to appear unfilled — ranks among his least memorable performances. 

On some level, I have to imagine that DiCaprio recognizes his own strengths. His decision to play the oafish and vile Ernest Burkhart (rather than the more heroic BOI agent Thomas Bruce White Sr.) might have been motivated by a desire to steer “Killers of the Flower Moon” away from a white savior narrative, but it also provided the actor with an extraordinary chance to inhabit a self-disassociating man who no longer understands the full truth of his feelings, let alone his actions. At last, here was a chance not just to create an emptiness, but to get lost in it as well; to play someone so inculcated in the historical violence of white hegemony that he seems plausibly semi-oblivious to the fact that he’s poisoning his own Indigenous wife. “Can’t repeat the past?,” Jay Gatsby once exclaimed. “Why of course you can.” And DiCaprio has made a brilliant career of playing characters who try to do just that, and often wind up embodying the futility of that ethos. 

The genius of his casting in Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” and why his performance as revolutionary-turned-hermit-girldad Bob Ferguson feels like the natural culmination of his screen work so far, is that it finds DiCaprio playing a character whose past is constantly bringing itself to bear on the present — looping in his mind like “The Battle of Algiers” broadcast he watches on TV for comfort — whether he likes it or not. And he definitely does not like it. 

Indeed, Bob, aka the demolition expert formerly known as Ghetto Pat, has spent the last 16 years lying low/smoking himself into oblivion in the woodsy Californian enclave of Baktan Cross because he’s so petrified at the thought that the government might root him out one day, and separate him from the teenage daughter he took home from his revolutionary years like a bittersweet souvenir (Chase Infiniti plays Willa). Like most parents, he’s grown terrified of the world that he once lived to defy. Unlike most parents, Bob’s terror has grown so pronounced that it’s forced him to isolate from the world altogether. 

A typical DiCaprio movie would focus on the details of that dislocation; it would map the distance between Bob and Willa, articulate the generational divide that’s come between them, and otherwise exploit DiCaprio’s peerless aura of partial absence. “One Battle After Another” fights against that impulse. It gives Bob and Willa exactly one scene to establish their shared dynamic, and then just a few minutes later makes good on Bob’s worst nightmare twice over: Not only is Willa being pursued by the same Army freak who had a major hard-on for her mother (a hard-on that we get to witness firsthand), but the jackboots are coming after Bob as well, flushing him — bleary-eyed and bathrobed — out of his rabbit den and back into the light of day, where he Forrest Gumps his way through everything from a glorified ICE raid to a “Vanishing Point”-inspired car chase in pursuit of the daughter he’s powerless to save. 

‘One Battle After Another’

Suddenly, a DiCaprio character finds himself trying to catch up with the present rather than pull everything around him back into the past (as opposed to a guy like Rick Dalton, who sort of lucked his way into a Hollywood ending). From the moment Bob emerges from his warren and gets wrapped up in a local sweep of undocumented workers (a sweep that Col. Steven J. Lockjaw is using as a pretext to flush him out), DiCaprio begins chipping away at the same barrier he spent the last 16 years building around himself. It’s profoundly, consistently, and endearingly funny to watch him try to make sense of everything at 100mph, as Bob races to reconcile the reality at hand with the past that his actions have brought to bear on the people of Baktan Cross. As I wrote in my review: “Bob is both at the center of the action and incidental to it all at once, like a peeling strip of wallpaper that blends perfectly into the background whenever it isn’t coming unglued,” but even when he’s pushed to the periphery of the frame you can still feel every detail of DiCaprio’s being — brow furrowed, jaw clenched, angry at the world but alive within himself until he gradually begins to balance that equation — in an active negotiation between the explosive revolutionary who Bob used to be and the tetchy coward that fatherhood has left behind. 

The film’s abundant humor and humanity are both rooted in DiCaprio’s ability to contain both of those people at once — to span the distance between those opposite shores while flailing towards each of them with equal desperation. DiCaprio has never been afraid of being a total buffoon on camera (the lack of vanity he developed in the wake of his stardom has served him well and often), but he’s also never been more impotent or pathetic than he is during the battle of Baktan Cross, where he stumbles through the local karate sensei’s carefully laid extraction plan with a chaotic propulsion that feels closer to Chris Farley than Jack Dawson. 

Whether pleading at a fellow revolutionary over the phone, sniveling at a secretly allied government worker, or trying his best to absorb a last-minute pep talk about putting his fear to the side (“Tom fucking Cruise!”), Bob is at the absolute mercy of everyone he meets. In being so petrified by his past, Bob has rendered himself useless to the present, and because DiCaprio so thoroughly owns that uselessness, he’s able to confront the incomparable heartbreak of realizing that he can’t protect Willa from the same dangers that he barely managed to survive himself. 

The result is the most vulnerable and unguarded performance of DiCaprio’s career, as the empty space that DiCaprio’s characters have always lived inside — and the slightly hollow quality that he’s brought to so many of his roles since he was a teenager — is finally recast as something to be escaped rather than bridged, mapped, or gawked at. And by the time Bob finally reaches the border of that emptiness, the actor playing him no longer feels the least bit absent from himself. He’s not a vessel or a concept, not a dream or a memory, not a money monster or a movie star. He’s just a guy who’s fully there for the first time in decades. 

If Bob doesn’t accomplish a single fucking thing to help save his daughter from Lockjaw, that’s because his character’s journey is all about realizing that he doesn’t have to. He’s not a member of the French 75 anymore, and Willa is no longer the baby she was when they went into hiding. His trajectory over the last two acts of this movie isn’t from burnout to hero, it’s from the failure of abandoning one revolution to the success of raising another. It’s from then to now. DiCaprio himself is still as inscrutable as ever, and no amount of begrudging podcast appearances is going to change that (how can a guy so invested in the health of our planet also invest in a country that continues to bomb it with impunity?), but after 30 years of being modern cinema’s most effective anachronism, he’s finally become a man of his time.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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'One Battle After Another' Takes $8.8 Million Opening Day
TV & Streaming

‘One Battle After Another’ Takes $8.8 Million Opening Day

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Warner Bros.‘ “One Battle After Another” took $8.8 million across Friday and previews from 3,634 locations in North America. That haul includes grosses from advance fan-first screenings on Tuesday, which played premium large-format auditoriums.

The studio didn’t pinch on pennies for Paul Thomas Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio‘s hyper-contemporary action epic, spending more than $130 million before a global marketing campaign. To the director’s credit, Anderson delivered the goods. “One Battle After Another” already has the stature of a modern classic among critics, instantly positioning itself as an awards season heavyweight. On top of that, it’s playing like a crowdpleaser, with moviegoer survey firm Cinema Score polling a superb “A” grade. Compare that the “C” grade that Anderson’s now beloved “Boogie Nights” was dealt in 1997. It’s also DiCaprio’s highest score from the service since “Titanic” landed an “A+” in that same year.

All that prestige hype matches the film’s uniquely ornate theatrical rollout, which includes Imax and other premium large-formats. There are also showings on 70mm, Imax 70mm and even four venues projecting in the long-dormant format VistaVision, which Anderson shot the film on. Each of those options comes with luxury ticket prices, boosting grosses.

For now, “One Battle” is on pace to land within pre-weekend tracking for an opening between $20 million and $25 million. Best case is glowing reviews and great buzz buoy the film’s relevance among moviegoers for one week after another. But with a light debut, “One Battle” has to string together a word-of-mouth phenomenon, plus a significant overseas draw, to turn a profit in theaters.

At least it won’t take much for the film to finish as the biggest theatrical release ever for Anderson, who showed awareness with a crack about being “box-office challenged” in an August interview at Esquire. The writer-director’s top hit ever is his 2007 critical darling “There Will Be Blood,” which finished with $40 million domestic and $76 million worldwide. For Warner Bros., the studio is coming off seven consecutive films opening above $40 million domestic — a historic first in Hollywood. “One Battle” comes as a box office heat check, with significant costs.

In a true contrast of counter-programming, Universal is opening the G-rated “Gabby’s Dollhouse: The Movie” in 3,500 locations, eyeing a second place debut after earning $4.3 million across Friday and previews. Projections are now at a $13.6 million opening, landing between pre-weekend tracking for $12 million to $15 million. The DreamWorks Animation production is looking for a theatrical hit in adapting the popular animated pre-K Netflix series “Gabby’s Dollhouse,” which has wracked up 11 seasons since debuting in 2021. The big-screen version, which blends live-action and animation elements, cost $32 million to produce. It’ll want to stick around in theaters, though it’s playing great for its audience, with an “A+” grade from Cinema Score.

Also opening this weekend, Lionsgate is bowing “The Strangers: Chapter II,” the middle entry in what is supposed to be a contained, Renny Harlin-directed trilogy for the horror property. The home invasion continuation earned $2.4 million across Friday and previews from 2,690 locations, with projections for the three-day opening now around $5.6 million. That’d be less than half of the $11.8 million debut that “The Strangers: Chapter I” earned back in May 2024.

The first installment wasn’t a hit with critics and reviews are just as bad for the follow-up, even after a producer told ScreenRant that the sequel did significant “enhancement” reshoots after the release of “Chapter I.” Audiences aren’t impressed either, with Cinema Score turning in a rough “C-” grade. Still, the film cost a light $8.5 million to produce. Lionsgate has plans to release “Chapter III” sometime down the line.

After topping domestic charts for two weekends, Sony and Crunchyroll’s “Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba Infinity Castle” is sliding to third place after earning another $1.8 million on Friday. It’s looking at a $6.8 million third weekend, down 61%. These grosses are largely a cherry on top for “Infinity Castle” after its historic fan-driven opening weekend. The epic-length film is looking to hit a $117.8 million domestic total through Sunday, currently ranking as the 15th-highest grossing North American release of 2025 — a stature that seemed unthinkable for an anime film for decades.

Warner Bros. is also vying for bronze, with “The Conjuring: Last Rites,” which cast out another $2 million on Friday, down 46% from its daily total a week ago. The New Line horror sequel looks to hit $161 million through its fourth weekend of release — a terrific result against its $55 million price tag. While “Last Rites” marketed itself as the final chapter for paranormal investigators Ed and Lorraine Warren, it’s difficult to imagine the property is finished after delivering its biggest theatrical hit ever.

Also of note, Universal’s football horror film “Him” is losing a lot of ground in its sophomore outing, plummeting hard with a projected 71% drop after bad reviews. It looks to hit a $20.9 million domestic total through its second weekend — a less than desirable result against a $27 million production budget. Sony’s “A Big Bold Beautiful Journey” is fading fast too, eyeing a $1.2 million sophomore outing after cratering in its opening. The projected 10-day domestic haul is $5.9 million for the $45 million project.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Talent Agents Circle AI Actress Tilly Norwood
TV & Streaming

Talent Agents Circle AI Actress Tilly Norwood

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Actor, comedian technologist Eline Van der Velden has revealed that her recently launched AI talent studio Xicoia is in talks with a number of talent agents interested in signing its first creation, AI actress Tilly Norward.

Van der Velden talked about the development on a panel at the Zurich Summit on Saturday, where she gave a presentation on her AI production studio Particle6 and then joined a discussion on AI developments in the entertainment industry alongside Verena Puhm, head of Luma AI’s new Studio Dream Lab LA.

Both Van der Velden and Puhm suggested that studios and other media and entertainment companies were quietly embracing AI under the radar, and to expect public announcements about high-profile projects using the technology in the coming months.

“We were in a lot of boardrooms around February time, and everyone was like, ‘No, this is nothing. It’s not going to happen’. Then, by May, people were like, ‘We need to do something with you guys.’ When we first launched Tilly, people were like, ‘What’s that?’, and now we’re going to be announcing which agency is going to be representing her in the next few months,” said Van der Velden.

The revelation of a possible agent signing for Tilly Norward comes just days after Van der Velden officially announced the creation of Particle6 offshoot Xicoia, an AI talent studio designed to create, manage and monetize a new generation of hyperreal digital stars. 

If the talent agency signing comes to pass, Norwood will be one of the first AI generated actresses to get representation with a talent agency, traditionally working with real-life stars.

Former AI artist Puhm, whose appointment as head of startup Luma AI’s new Studio Dream Lab LA was announced in July, concurred with Van der Velden on the mood changing at the studios.

“I remember having meetings with the studios as an AI artist before joining Luma. Some said, ‘Oh, no, we’re not using AI.’ I knew some were lying, they were already secretly working on some stuff, but some were not open to it at all. Then definitely this year, kind of like March, April, people called me and wanted to talk to me,” she said.

“They were discussing me being a liaison between directors and the AI artists… at that time I was traveling around a lot and educating about workflows and pipelines and how it can be integrated, and then all a sudden that was becoming very interesting to them. It was a different language to them and they were like, ‘We really have to get people from the outside that have worked in the AI industry’.

“Historically, the studios have been very slow to adapt, at least publicly, they need that influx of new creatives, and new creative technologists to come in and actually show them how it’s done. You can assume that a lot of them are already working on it.”

Puhm said all the big companies and studios were working on AI assisted projects but being under NDA, she was not in a position to announce any of the details.

“We really want to make them feel comfortable through their testing, through their projects, and working on real projects… we want it to be their decision on when they want to say it out loud, but honestly, I think this year is going to be interesting. In the beginning of next year, there’s going to be a lot of announcements.”

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Project Runway Season 21 Winner on Making History, Twin Feud
TV & Streaming

Project Runway Season 21 Winner on Making History, Twin Feud

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

[The following story contains spoilers from the Project Runway season 21 finale.]

Veejay Floresca made Project Runway history Thursday night, becoming the first transgender person to win the long-running reality show. 

Her victory marked an undoubtedly historic moment for the franchise, though Floresca’s journey on the series will be remembered for numerous reasons. Aside from a history-making win, she was at the center of a season-long feud with twin contestants Jesus and Antonio Estrada; created a slew of compelling, winning designs; and approached each episode with an impeccable understanding of fashion with an undeniable entertainment factor that enticed the cameras. 

Floresca is a self-proclaimed Project Runway super fan, and after years of applying to compete on the show, she tells The Hollywood Reporter season 21 was the “perfect timing” for her appearance due to a number of factors. Instead of feeling defeated when she didn’t make past editions of the show, the Filipino designer used those experiences as fuel that would eventually feed into her season 21 win. 

“I always believe in destiny,” she says. “And because of those years [of not getting cast], I became more and more skilled, and you need skills to win Project Runway.”

Below, Floresca reflects on becoming the first trans woman to win the show, her feud with the Estrada twins, which of her Project Runway looks she hopes to be remembered for and why she wants to be “the next Christian Siriano.” 

***

Before this season, you were on Project Runway Philippines and Hulu’s Dress My Tour. What made you want to appear on the mainstay Project Runway?

Why not, right? Project Runway is the most iconic fashion design reality show in the world. It started it all. It’s the original fashion design reality competition, and I’m a super fan. That’s the reason why I competed on Project Runway Philippines season one, because I’m a super fan of Project Runway U.S. Every season since I moved to the U.S., which is 2012, I’ve been auditioning [for] Project Runway. They would always say that it’s not my time yet, “You should apply again next season.” And that’s what I’ve been doing: apply, apply, apply, apply, until they got tired of me (laughs) and they were like, “Oh my God, it’s Veejay again, let’s give her a chance.” Fast forward, I’m part of Project Runway 21.

What about season 21 made it the perfect moment for you to be on the show?

I always believe in destiny. I always believe in hard work, determination, and never, ever lose hope in something that you’re very passionate about. Every time I would receive an email saying that I am not part of that season, instead of being sorry about myself, I felt that it’s not the right time yet. And season 21 is actually the perfect timing because Heidi came back. Like, if I have the opportunity to actually choose which season to compete, it will definitely be the season where Heidi is the host, because Project Runway is never the same without Heidi, right? So when I found out that Heidi is back, I was so excited and happy, and it’s the perfect timing, because I know who I am as a designer. And because of those years [of not getting cast], I became more and more skilled, and you need skills to win Project Runway.

The cast of Project Runway season 21.

Disney/Spencer Pazer

You and the twins butted heads the entire competition, but your feud really reached a new level in the last two episodes. Did the tension amongst you three feel as heightened for you experiencing it as it appeared in those episodes?

Yeah, definitely. What they [show] on TV is actually real. And I keep telling people that Project Runway is a competition. Whether we like it or not, there’s always going to be one winner. Maybe in the near future, there [will be] a tie, we don’t know yet. Project Runway is a very crazy show, but you know there’s always going to be one winner. And I came into the competition telling myself and telling the people in the casting committee that if I’m going to be part of season 21, I promised myself that I’m going to be authentic. I’m going to be real and honest. And part of that authenticity, [is that] I am a very competitive person. And being in a competition, it’s like, as much as I want to hug everybody, I’m hugging you, but I’m stabbing you [in the back] at the same time, because it’s like, I gotta win. I’m doing this for myself. I’m doing this for my family, but I want to make sure that even though there’s tension between Jesus and Antonio, that tension is only there. It started there [on the show]; we’re gonna leave it there. But outside that, we’re all friends. We’re actually really good friends. 

Given both you and Jesus’ backgrounds in reality TV, do you think that made both of you more inclined to lean into the drama?

I think that is most likely one of the reasons too. Because, for example, Jesus was part of Project Runway season seven, I was part of Project Runway Philippines and also I competed in Dress My Tour, so we’ve lost. And I think that loss is something that made us want this even more. And I actually expected that it’s going to be like that, you know, two competitive people in one show — what do you expect us to do, right? So I think that’s normal, and I’m glad that it happened, because whether we like it or not, it made the show really fun to watch. And I’m glad that we did that, not intentionally, because it created that narrative that it’s a competition. For those people who are planning to join for the next season, they gotta be ready, because it’s a very cutthroat industry.

In the finale episode, when you were dead set on working with Jessica [Jesus’ self-proclaimed favorite model], did you choose her to get underneath his skin?

Yes. It’s one of the most controversial things on the finale. And to tell you honestly, I chose Jessica, again, as a competitive reason. Jessica is a good model; she’s really fierce, she has this attitude, her body, her height, her walk — these are the things that you are looking for [in] a model. And as part of the competition, I actually feel that, for some reason, judges love Jessica. Like, whatever she wears, the judges love it. So to me, I’m like, I need to get her. So I stole Jessica from Jesus. And I didn’t even steal Jessica from Jesus, because Jesus did not own her to begin with. She’s up for grabs, so it just happened that I grabbed her first, but then again, the chaos happened, so I’m like, “Whatever, Jesus. I don’t want to steer drama again. This is Jessica, I’m gonna give [her back] to you.” But still, honestly, I didn’t even need to do that, right? Because you don’t own her.

‘Project Runway’ season 21 finale

Disney/Spencer Pazer

You are the first transgender person to win Project Runway. How does that feel?

It’s a big celebration for my community. It’s a big celebration for people who feel different. It’s a big hope to people who feel that they can achieve something because they’re trans or because they’re gay. And I want people to be inspired of my story, that it is possible. I think that fashion is a safe space for everybody who wants to be authentic. It’s an industry where we embrace diversity and uniqueness and inclusivity. So being able to carry that major [title of being the] first trans woman to ever win Project Runway is an opportunity that I’m thankful [for]. I will never, ever take it for granted, and I will even use this opportunity to speak to people, to inspire people, to make them feel that they are valid and they are enough to do whatever they want in life.

This season had a fully queer top three. Aside from your historic win, what did it mean for you to be a part of this group of queer designers that were in the top of Project Runway season 21?

It feels amazing. It feels that it’s relevant to what is happening today. What’s happening in our country, our rights are being taken away from us. I think that three queer people, members of the LGBT community, standing there, representing fashion, representing our homeland. You know, Jesus from Mexico, I am from the Philippines, Ethan is from the United States. So technically, it’s Miss Universe on stage. You know, Miss Mexico, Miss Philippines and Miss USA, right? Aside from that, it feels so good to share that stage with everybody, because I think that we’re not even supposed to talk about this anymore. I think gender orientation and sexual identity is just part of who we are, but it doesn’t define us. It doesn’t define our limitations, our creativity, our hard work. So I’m just really happy that I have that opportunity to share it with them.

Looking back on your career as a designer from this moment, having just won Project Runway, what would you tell your younger self?

I think I’ll just really tell Veejay, never, ever give up. It’s not going to be an easy journey. There’s going to be a lot of hurdles, a lot of obstacles, a lot of heartbreak, a lot of pain. But keep going, because you can use all those obstacles and challenges, and it will just make you a stronger person. And it’s going to be worth it, because you will be given that opportunity where you can share your experience in your life that will change people’s lives. 

Veejay Floresca’s Project Runway season 21 collection

Disney/Spencer Pazer

If you could give any other fellow young queer kids who are aspiring designers and who may be nervous or unsettled given the political landscape any advice, what would you say to them?

Surround yourself with the people who love you. There’s gonna be someone out there who will love you, who will accept you for who you are. You just gotta find those people. That’s the first [piece of advice]. And then second is, know what you love to do. Because it sounds [like] just a cliche, but if you’re passionate about something, you’ll be successful. It takes a lot of hard work. It’s not going to be an easy road, for sure, but once you love [something], you want to do it more and more. And lastly, be kind. Kindness is free. I think that more people would want to work with kind people rather than talented people. I think when you’re kind, you attract good aura, good people. Because, you know what? Sometimes it’s better to be kind than to be right. So always choose kindness.

Looking back, which challenge was your favorite?

Oh, definitely the unconventional challenge, because I’m a super fan of the show. I think it’s the most iconic challenge of all time, and it’s one of the challenges I wish I won. But I really love it, because I think it really showed my innovation and my creativity.

Which look do you hope to be remembered for from your time on Project Runway?

It’s a toss between the shuttlecock [unconventional material look] and also the real client [look]. I think the real client challenge defines my work ethics. I’m really the type of person that I work with different people. And my goal when I work with people is I want to make you happy, I want to make you feel good. I want to make you love what you’re wearing, because the power of clothing and fashion is that it can transform you, [give you] self confidence and love yourself, bring out the best in you. I really love that challenge, and I’m glad that I did it, because I won’t forgive myself if I mess that up. I’m really happy that my client really loved that look.

Veejay Floresca’s unconventional and client challenge looks.

Disney/Spencer Pazer

Looking at your career post-Project Runway, do you have a dream client that you’d like to dress?

Yes, Zendaya is definitely one of my dream clients. I already actually have a design for her, I’m just waiting for Law [Roach] to call. And of course, I want to dress Nina Garcia and I want to dress Heidi Klum. My brand is inclusivity, I celebrate women of all ages, gender identity, size. So being able to work up with Nina, Heidi and Zendaya, and also, honestly, everybody. I hope they will trust me, because I love to work with everybody.

With your historic win and this life-changing opportunity, what is next for you in your career as a designer?

I will be the next Christian Siriano. I want to be remembered as Christian Siriano, who used the win to create a very strong brand. If there’s Kelly Clarkson and Carrie Underwood of American Idol, there’s Veejay Floresca and Christian Siriano of Project Runway. That’s the goal, and that’s the reason why I joined, because I really want to grow the business and to have a brand. So I hope — not I hope, I will make that happen.

***

Season 21 of Project Runway is available to stream on Hulu and Disney+.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Nottingham Forest v Sunderland Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Nottingham Forest v Sunderland Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Postecoglou must refocus his players after the emotion of the Reds’ first European game in 30 years as the visitors have been hugely impressive in their first season back in the top flight.

The Black Cats were the better side in a 1-1 draw with Aston Villa last weekend, when Reinildo’s red card proved costly, and are seventh in the Premier League – with eight points from their first five games.

Regis Le Bris and co will view a trip to face Forest, who are still finding their feet under Postecoglou, as an opportunity to claim their first away win of the season.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Nottingham Forest v Sunderland on TV and online.

Read more football features: Best players in the world | Best players of all time | Live football on TV today

When is Nottingham Forest v Sunderland?

Nottingham Forest v Sunderland will take place on Saturday 27th September 2025.

Check out our live football on TV guide for the latest times and information.

Nottingham Forest v Sunderland kick-off time

Nottingham Forest v Sunderland will kick off at 5:30pm.

What TV channel is Nottingham Forest v Sunderland on?

You can watch the game live on Sky Sports Premier League and Main Event from 5pm.

Sky Sports can be added to any Sky TV package for just £22 per month for all nine sports channels, or you can pick up the complete sports package plus Netflix for £43 per month.

Sky Sports + will feature more than 1,000 EFL games throughout the season and is included as part of Sky Sports packages.

How to live stream Nottingham Forest v Sunderland online

Sky Sports customers can live stream the game via the Sky Go app on a variety of devices including most smartphones and tablets as part of their subscription.

You can also watch the match via NOW with a day membership (£14.99) or month membership (£34.99).

NOW can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones and consoles. NOW is also available via TNT Sports.

Listen to Nottingham Forest v Sunderland on radio

You can listen to the match on BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra.

BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra is available on DAB radio, MW 693 kHz, 909 kHz and 990 kHz, or you can tune into the station via most TV packages. You can also listen to BBC Radio 5 Live Sports Extra online via the BBC website or BBC Sounds app.

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Nottingham Forest v Sunderland odds

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bet365 odds: Nottingham Forest (4/5) Draw (13/5) Sunderland (7/2)*

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Check out more of our coverage or visit our and to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to .

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Greg Wallace
TV & Streaming

Why Controversial Captain Greg Wallace Made Dramatic Return to Show

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains spoilers for Deadliest Catch Season 21]

It’s six weeks into the fishing season on Deadliest Catch, and a controversial figure has made a dramatic return to the show as the pressure is on to deliver. During the September 26 episode, Sig Hansen wasn’t having too much luck in the midst of a very competitive bairdi crab season. The Northwestern was among 33 boats chasing 700,000 pounds of quota. Sig noticed pots in the area belonged to Keith Colburn. Conflicted on his next move, he called on son-in-law Clark Pederson for input. 

Sig wanted to take a little peek at how Keith’s pots were doing, but did it go against his moral and ethical fibers? “If you want, I’ll haul it,” Clark offered. Sig responded, “I can’t tell you what to do.” Nice mental move by Sig as he didn’t have to be the one to get his hands dirty. The pot they picked up had 60 crabs, which confirmed the waters were teeming with product. Sig ordered to set off his own gear parallel to Keith’s pots. 

Keith Colburn/Discovery Channel

Keith’s brother Monte noticed The Northwestern in the vicinity. Keith called Sig, “a sneaky bastard.” The Wizard captain made the decision to go dark on the radar system. “You want a shoving match? Game on,” Keith said. He checked out Sig’s pot the same way. This evolved into a race as the two went head-to-head. That was until The Northwestern hit a snag. In a moment of generosity, Keith offered to help Sig as the vessel had a one-inch thick polyurethane line wrapped around the propeller shaft, Sig depended on Keith to connect the line from the tangle to The Wizard’s hydraulic powered hauler. The strategy worked t. “I owe you on this one,” Sig said to Keith. It then was back to business for crab. 

 Rick Shelford

 Rick Shelford/Discovery Channel

Elsewhere, Rick Shelford and Sophia “Bob” Nielsen were facing rough conditions aboard the Aleutian Lady. The waves came in strong with the two looking to offload, but they needed another 3,000 pounds. That meant a 55 average in their pots. Rick lost power on his controls after cables and monitors were messed up. Sophia’s strategy was to use the GPS on her phone to locate their pots. This meant all was riding on mobile navigation. The string of pots hit double-digits and was enough to make their delivery. The crew ultimately ended up with 90,081 pounds, which translated to more than $2.4 million in king crab. Rick summed it up with, “It don’t get better than that.” 

In the Dutch Harbor, Steve “Harley” Davidson was awaiting a new co-captain after he faced a mutinous crew aboard the Confidence. Harley brought Greg Wallace on to lend a hand for the rest of the season in the hope he can help deliver results. Wallace garnered some controversy last season aboard the Seabrooke with how he treated his daughter, deckhand Megan, who suffered a dislocated hip. He acclimated quickly, knowing he and Harley had to hustle to make up for lost time with more than a million dollar quota over their head. Harley noticed something was wrong with his throttle and controls. 

“I need eyes in the engine room right now,” Harley demanded. Greg had throttles on his end at least. The crew believed it’s the breaker. The plan was for Greg to operate controls while Harley handles steering. Their hope was their second string of pots would bring them some luck. They received encouraging results with a 57 per pot average. Greg and Harley look to be a good team. 

Deadliest Catch, Fridays, 8/7c, Discovery Channel

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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What to See at New York Film Festival — Screen Talk
TV & Streaming

What to See at New York Film Festival — Screen Talk

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

The New York Film Festival enters its 2025 edition this Friday, and IndieWire’s “Screen Talk” podcast clues you in on a few under-the-radar titles to see.

Co-host Ryan Lattanzio is a big fan of Bi Gan’s “Resurrection,” which stars Shu Qi as a woman who invades the dreams of the last person capable of having them. The Chinese director’s latest film is a Lynchian odyssey with a oner for the ages, in which a vampire rave is descended upon by a raincoat-clad mafia. Anne Thompson, meanwhile, advocates for Oscar-nominated “Mirai” director Mamoru Hosoda’s animated feature “Scarlet,” which Sony Pictures Classics will push for Academy Awards.

Jeremy Strong Mark Zuckerberg

Also, make sure you see Harry Lighton’s “Pillion,” a gay sub-dom romance between Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling, which A24 will release early next year. Ryan says it’s like Richard Curtis directing “The Piano Teacher,” and if that’s not enough to sell you, well, we can’t help you there.

Heads up, “Screen Talk” will also host a live edition with Anne and Ryan in person at the New York Film Festival on Monday, October 6. We’ll be joined by guest Daniel Battsek, who is now president of Film at Lincoln Center. Attendance is free and open to all at the Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center that afternoon at 4 p.m.

Elsewhere on this week’s episode, we also take a look at the box office prospects for Paul Thomas Anderson’s masterful “One Battle After Another,” which is projected to gross in the $20 million range. Low for a movie of this scale (and budget!) but typical of Anderson’s boundary-pushing work. Starring Leonardo DiCaprio as a retired and drugged-out revolutionary and with breakout performances from Teyana Taylor and Chase Infiniti — not to mention Sean Penn, who we love now? — this is a movie that has legs and will play well into the fall.

We also dive into the latest brouhaha surrounding Jimmy Kimmel, whose late-night show was pulled from the airwaves after he made comments about Charlie Kirk. He’s back on the air, and with a ratings surge to boot, but can it be sustained? And will his tearful monologue, filled with appreciation for those who backed him, be enough for audiences less keen on him already?

Listen to the podcast in the episode below.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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Director Ima Iduozee Talks Series 'Sneakermania,' Debuts Trailer
TV & Streaming

Director Ima Iduozee Talks Series ‘Sneakermania,’ Debuts Trailer

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

“Sneakermania” shows no signs of slowing down.

In the upcoming eight-episode Finnish series, produced by Helsinki-filmi and set to be broadcast on YLE in February 2026, teenage sneakerhead Ola is determined to become a fashion influencer. 

With his friend Bee, Ola – who lives for Air Jordan 1 Low OG Chicago – is trying to build a following and grow their TikTok channel. Until his former best friend Jay steals his thunder. 

“The story shifts from lighthearted, friendly banter to moments of envy and dishonesty. While the tone often stays comedic, the characters face real challenges: moments that test their morals, motives, and the limits of what they’re willing to sacrifice,” said director Ima Iduozee. 

One of the main themes is belonging, he stated. 

“The desire to be seen, heard and accepted. Social media plays a central role in ‘Sneakermania,’ offering a space to create your self-image and brand, giving you a sense of autonomy over how others perceive you. For Ola, it becomes a way of gaining motion and respect.”

While there’s “a lot of great stuff coming out of Finland right now,” many stories still wait to be told, stressed Iduozee, also a choreographer for the first Finnish Netflix Original series “Dance Brothers.”

“We have so much more to offer than Nordic noir and detective dramas. I wanted to show a version of Helsinki that felt authentic to me. A generation of young creatives who are bold, self-determined and unafraid to go after what they want.”

Sneaker culture, which has evolved into a global phenomenon, felt like a perfect way in.

The series debuts its trailer here:

“For a massive number of young adults, sneakers are much more than shoes. They are a cultural language representing identity, creativity and community,” said Mia Ylönen, head of drama at Helsinki-filmi. 

The company has also showcased anticipated thriller “Icebreaker” – awarded MipDrama’s Coup de Coeur – at the Helsinki industry event Finnish Film Affair. Set on a stranded boat in the middle of icy nowhere, it sees its crew members disappear, one by one. 

According to Ylönen, “Sneakermania” taps into fashion, music and social media through its “magnetic lead characters that represent Helsinki in 2025.” “It’s a series about ambition, self-expression, fashion and, above all, a story about friendship.”

Led by first-time headwriter Vilja Keskimäki, the story features tracks from Finnish artists Turisti, Averagekidluke and Bizi. 

“We brought fashion stylists, designers, dancers and influencers on board early during the production. It was important for us to collaborate with people who truly live the fashion, culture and music of the sneaker world.”

Ola might be “the beating heart and driving force” of the story, but he’s accompanied by a group of young adults. 

“They share his passion for sneakers, DIY culture and creative self-expression, and the thrills of finding their place in the world while navigating friendship and ambition,” said Iduozee.

Ylönen added: “I believe Ima is the next best thing to come out of Finland: a young, creatively unique director whose vibrant vision is something we haven’t seen on Finnish screens before.” 

“We were looking for the right project and when ‘Sneakermania’ landed on my table, I knew we had the perfect match.” 

“Sneakermania”

Courtesy of Helsinki-filmi

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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'After The Hunt' New York Film Festival Opening "Top 3" Moment
TV & Streaming

‘After The Hunt’ New York Film Festival Opening “Top 3” Moment

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

After the Hunt star Julia Roberts has won an Oscar and opened movies that have made billions at the box office.

Yet Friday night’s premiere of the film on opening night of the New York Film Festival, she said, was a top-shelf highlight of her life and career.

“I moved to New York when I was 17 years old, and I’m 57, and this is Top 3 great achievements of my New York life,” she told the crowd at Alice Tully Hall.

Director Luca Guadagnino raved about the filmgoers at NYFF, calling them “the best audience at festivals in the world.” He recalled being an up-and-comer and meeting filmmakers “that I shall not name” who were telling the younger Guadagnino that “cinema is dead. And I was like, ‘Why?’” The New York fest, he continued, “celebrates cinema in a way that makes us know that cinema is actually alive.”

While the 60-second ovation that followed the screening fell short of the 6-minute standing O it received at its world premiere in Venice, the Tully reception was warm and almost all of the audience lingered for a 15-minute Q&A. NYFF Artistic Director Dennis Lim moderated the discussion with Guadagnino, Roberts, cast members Andrew Garfield, Ayo Edebiri and Michael Stuhlbarg as well as screenwriter Nora Garrett. (Perhaps the most memorable moment was Garfield wincing at the memory of having to act in a sexually aggressive manner toward “National Treasure Julia Roberts” in one scene, which “thank God” was captured in a single take. “It was not, in any way shape or form, pleasant,” he dryly added.)

Amazon MGM Studios will release After the Hunt theatrically in select theaters on October 10, with a wide break the following week.

The 63rd edition of NYFF featured some new personalities delivering introductory remarks. Daniel H. Stern, Chair of the FLC Board of Directors, welcomed the audience. In recent years, the leadoff slot on opening night had been occupied by Lesli Klainberg, president of Lincoln Center, but she departed the organization after last year’s festival.

Stern brought Mariko Stern, who became CEO of Lincoln Center last fall, onstage. Addressing the film community, she thanked “all of you who enthrall us, all of you who lift us, all of you who teach us. It is such a true, deep joy to be here with you.”

In addition to “opening our eyes” to experience new films, she said she would “invite you to also open your ears” because Friday night’s screening was the first at Alice Tully Hall to use Dolby Atmos sound. The new system features 120 speakers spread all over the auditorium. (Guadagnino’s well-tuned ear for his soundtracks, plus a score by Trent Reznor and Atticus Ross helped influence the installation.)

Next, Stern introduced Daniel Battsek, who succeeded Klainberg last April, following executive stints at Miramax Films, Film4 and Buena Vista International. In a field of 100 candidates for the job, from all over the world, “what impressed us was his genuine enthusiasm for our mission and for the future of Film at Lincoln Center, so I think there are great things to come under his leadership,” Stern said.

Battsek kept his portion brief and straightforward, joking that when he has sat in the audience for NYFF premieres as audience member, producer and executive, he has often thought, “When are these damn speeches going to be finished?” Turning more serious, he said this year’s slate of 107 features and shorts from 41 countries “will offer the chance to step into a new world and, I hope, to walk out of the theater inspired, challenged and moved.”

Along with setting the stage for the fest, which runs through October 13, Battsek offered a salute to Robert Redford, who died earlier this month, remembering him as a “fearless champion of independent voices.” Lim also noted that the fest’s printed program features a back page saluting filmmaker David Lynch, who died last January.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
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