celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 112
Category:

TV & Streaming

Access Hollywood Key Art
TV & Streaming

Layoffs Hit ‘Access Hollywood’

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Layoffs have hit Access Hollywood as a result of the E! News linear TV show ending, The Hollywood Reporter is told. It’s a bit complicated, but we’ll explain.

As THR previously reported, E! News was canceled in July after 34 years; the show’s final episode aired on Thursday. Going forward, Terrace Studios will be home to two TV shows, Access Hollywood and Access Daily.

Today’s layoffs come as a result of the E! News cancellation. As a result of three shows now being two, several members of the stage and technical crew who worked across all three programs have been let go. A source tells THR that there “may” have been a few Access-only staffers who fell victim to the efficiencies.

But with E! News over, it just makes logical (and business) sense to attribute Friday’s layoffs to the remaining programs, Access Hollywood and Access Daily.

The daily E! News series launched in 1991. The show had a two-year hiatus during COVID.

E! News is still ongoing as a digital brand.

Some (now-former) E! News TV correspondents will go to NBCUniversal spin-off company Versant, THR was told over the summer.

NBCU has split itself in two. The NBC broadcast network, the studios, Peacock and Bravo will stay as key pieces of NBCU; all of the rest (USA Network, Syfy, E!, CNBC, MSNBC, Oxygen and Golf Channel, plus digital businesses Fandango, Rotten Tomatoes and Golf Now) will make up new company Versant, led by CEO Mark Lazarus

Cable channel E! still airs (some) original programming, like Botched Presents: Plastic Surgery Rewind and Honestly Cavallari: The Headline Tour, as well as acquired content. The network recently announced upcoming series Kimora: Back in the Fab Lane and E!’s Dirty Rotten Scandals. The network remains a destination for red carpet coverage as well as January’s Critics Choice Awards.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Win a Radio Times curated wine case and 100,000 Avios!
TV & Streaming

Win a Radio Times curated wine case and 100,000 Avios!

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Win a Radio Times curated wine case and 100,000 Avios!

Radio Times is pleased to partner with The Wine Flyer, and we have curated our very own case of 12 wines for you to enjoy – and one of you will be in with the chance to win it, along with 100,000 Avios! Comprised of twelve bottles hand-picked by the Radio Times team, there’s a wine for all tastes — whether you’re after red, white, rosé or bubbles. The Wine Flyer offers its customers a broad range of wines, from classic styles to current trends, lesser-known grapes, modern producers and up-and-coming wine regions.

Your wine case includes*
Rosé and sparkling: Whispering Angel Côtes de Provence Rosé 2023; Domaine Du Mas Ensoleille Rosé 2024; Kew Gardens Blanc De Cabernet Brut
Reds: Cabalié x2; Rex Mundi Shiraz x2; Black Stump Durif Shiraz
Whites: W/O Organic Lucido White x2; Cabalié Blanc x2
*In case of a product being out of stock we reserve the right to substitute for an item of the same or higher value

And don’t forget about the 100,000 Avios that come with the wine! To put into perspective how far 100,000 Avios can get you: travel to Europe, UK & Ireland from £1 and 18,500 Avios, or from just £100 and 50,000 Avios for destinations further afield! And you could have plenty left over to stock up your wine cellar, part pay for hotel stays, treat yourself to a seat upgrade… the choices are many and varied!

THE AVIOS BONUS
At The Wine Flyer, you collect Avios on every pound you spend. Avios is the currency of the British Airways Club, so you can also collect them when you fly and shop with your favourite brands, on hotels, car hire and more. You can choose to spend your Avios to reduce the cost of wines, beers and spirits at The Wine Flyer, or enjoy reward flights, cabin upgrades and more. Once you’ve saved enough Avios, you can save up to 95 per cent of your Wine Flyer purchase! For more information on Avios and how to use them visit thewineflyer.co.uk/spend-and-collect-avios

COMPETITION

If you want to secure a case for yourself in addition to entering, the RT Curated Case is available to purchase here for £149.99.

Terms and conditions

  1. The Promoter is Immediate Media Company London Limited (company number 06189487).
  2. The promotion is open to all residents of the UK, including the Channel Islands, and excluding Northern Ireland, aged 18 years or older, except the Promoter’s employees or contractors and anyone connected with the promotion or their direct family members.
  3. The closing date for entries is 23:59 on 22nd October 2025
  4. By entering the promotion, the participants agree:
  5. to be bound by these terms and conditions; and
  6. that should they win the promotion, their name and likeness may be used by the Promoter for pre-arranged promotional purposes.
  7. Entrants should enter by entering the Riddle hosted competition on the radiotimes.com webpage. Entries received after the closing date of the promotion will not be considered.
  8. Entrants must supply to Immediate their name and email address, The Promoter will use entrants’ personal details in accordance with the Immediate Privacy Policy (https://www.immediate.co.uk/privacy/).
  9. Only one entry will be permitted per person, regardless of method of entry. Bulk entries made by third parties will not be permitted.
  10. The prize is 1x curated Radio Times Wine Case worth £149.99. The winner will also receive 100,000 Avios points. All entrants must be 18 years and over. The wine case will be delivered by the prize supplier to the winner. Terms of use for Avios can be found here: https://www.avios.com/en-GB/terms-and-conditions.
  11. The winning entrant will be the first correct entry drawn at random from all the correct entries after the closing date. The Promoter’s decision as to the winner is final and no correspondence relating to the promotion will be entered into. The Promoter may share the details of the winner with the prize provider for the purposes of fulfilling/delivering the prize.
  12. The winner will be notified within 5 working days of the close of the promotion by direct message via email. If the winner cannot be contacted or fails to respond within 28 days of such notification being sent, the Promoter reserves the right to offer the prize to a runner up, or to re-offer the prize in any future promotion.
  13. There is no cash alternative and the prize will not be transferable. Prizes must be taken as stated and cannot be deferred. The Promoter reserves the right to substitute the prize with one of the same or greater value.
  14. The surname and county of residence of the winner will be available upon request by sending an SAE to Rhiannon Thomas, Radio Times, Immediate Media, 44 Brook Green, London, W6 7BT] within two months of the closing date of the promotion. The Promoter will contact the winner before releasing this information and provide the winner the opportunity to object or limit the amount of information shared.
  15. The Promoter reserves the right to amend these terms and conditions or to cancel, alter or amend the promotion at any stage, if deemed necessary in its opinion, or if circumstances arise outside of its control.
  16. The Promoter does not accept any responsibility for lost, delayed or fraudulent entries.
  17. The Promoter excludes liability to the full extent permitted by law for any loss, damage or injury occurring to the participant arising from his or her entry into the promotion or occurring to the winner arising from his or her acceptance of a prize.
  18. Your details are being collected and used by the Promoter. This promotion is in no way sponsored, endorsed, administered by, or associated with any social media platform.
  19. The promotion is subject to the laws of England.
September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
THE RAINMAKER -- Episode 107 -- Pictured: (l-r) Robyn Cara as Kelly Riker, Milo Callaghan as Rudy Baylor -- (Photo by: Chistopher Barr/USA Network)
TV & Streaming

Milo Callaghan and Robyn Cara on Rudy and Kelly’s Relationship

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for The Rainmaker Episode 7.]

Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan) had to go to court for a different reason than usual in Friday’s (September 26) new episode of The Rainmaker. Rather than heading in for another hearing to prosecute the Donny Ray Black civil case, Rudy came in as a defendant … in a criminal proceeding.

Cliff (Fionn Ó Loingsigh), the abusive husband of Kelly Riker (Robyn Cara), tracked her down to Dot’s (Karen Bryson) house and attacked her in the bathroom. After she ran out into the living room, Cliff was shot and killed, and Rudy took the blame for it to protect Kelly. Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) rushed to Rudy’s bond defense and even put up his bail money and, after discovering the truth of the encounter by visiting the scene, negotiated an end to the case, leaving Rudy free of charges and Kelly bound for a new life all her own.

The culmination of Rudy’s relationship with Kelly hits quite differently in this version, since, unlike the book and movie iterations, there’s not a romantic element for the two — a decision that came at the very last minute.

Series creator Michael Seitzman remembered, “It was a big discussion on set and on the page about what that moment was going to be like when they lay down in bed together… I had a thought overnight, the night before we shot, that it felt wrong to me, that it felt like the reward for all of this shouldn’t be sexual, and it shouldn’t be. It shouldn’t be.”

“It was originally going to be a love scene, that scene when she says, ‘Can you hold me?’ and then they lay down in bed together,” Seitzman continued. “Then I killed it the night before we were shooting, and thought it just didn’t feel right. It didn’t feel like the right emotion coming out of this episode… I didn’t want the audience to be turned on by the moment or to be confused by the moment.” Another reason it was changed? “I really wanted Rudy to be somebody who really meant it when he said, ‘Of course, I’ll hold you.’ … Anything more would have felt it just would have felt wrong to me.”

The stars involved in the scene completely agreed. For Milo Callaghan, it was also a character issue for Rudy. “It was a conversation we had with Robyn Cara, who plays Kelly, is fantastic and so beautifully vulnerable and sweet in the show. And I think in our version of this, in our take on this story, there’s a curiosity that he feels — that you see in the book and in the film — but something curbs the follow-through on that because this is, again, somebody who’s really vulnerable in an abusive relationship, and he has a value system that doesn’t allow him to take advantage of that, which I think is one of the things that drives the plot, in lots of ways, is that Rudy Baylor refuses to take advantage of the vulnerable.”

Robyn Cara also thought it was the right move for her character’s mindset, explaining, “I like the way it kind of played out in this version because she’s just been through such a horrible thing… She killed her husband, so her brain must just be everywhere. She’s just gone through a huge amount of trauma. So I think going through for a more platonic ending with the characters with them, it feels like the right way to go for us in this version.”

Christopher Barr / USA Network

As for the changes to the criminal proceeding itself — in the book and film, it’s Kelly who’s arrested after Rudy killed Cliff in self-defense — Seitzman said those tweaks were meant to keep fans on their toes.

“I really liked the storyline a lot because it lives outside of the spine of the story, but it’s still a part of Rudy’s growth arc, his maturation and matriculation throughout the season,” he explained. “I wanted to upend the audience’s expectations a little bit about what was going to happen. If they were familiar with the book or they were familiar with the movie, they kind of knew how this played out in those original versions. I wanted a different version, and I wanted one that allowed Bruiser to be a very smart investigator and a smart litigator and to figure it out. I also felt that we should play on Rudy’s sometimes view of the truth as something that might be malleable… This is another example of Rudy being dishonest because he thinks he’s doing the right thing.”

The Rainmaker, Fridays, 10/9c, USA Network

If you or someone you know is the victim of domestic abuse, contact the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1−800−799−7233. 

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Social Network Follow-Up to Star Jeremy Strong As Mark Zuckerberg
TV & Streaming

The Social Network Follow-Up to Star Jeremy Strong As Mark Zuckerberg

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Facebook doesn’t look anything like it did in 2010 when “The Social Network” came out, and now neither does Mark Zuckerberg. Though some names had been floating around in the trades, Sony Pictures confirmed that “Succession” star Jeremy Strong, not Jesse Eisenberg, will portray Mark Zuckerberg in Aaron Sorkin’s follow-up to “The Social Network.”

Also announced on Friday: a title for the new film, a release date, and the cast announcement. The film is called “The Social Reckoning,” which is being written and directed this time by Sorkin. It will open in theaters on October 9, 2026. And alongside Strong, who is actually billed third among the cast list, Mikey Madison, Jeremy Allen White, and Bill Burr will all star.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER, Chase Infiniti, 2025. © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection

It’s a helluva cast, with Madison still riding high off “Anora” and White and Strong about to share the screen in “Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere,” the Bruce Springsteen biopic.

Sorkin’s original screenplay for “The Social Reckoning” tells the true story of how Frances Haugen (Madison), a young Facebook engineer, enlists the help of Jeff Horwitz (White), a Wall Street Journal reporter, to go on a dangerous journey that ends up blowing the whistle on the social network’s most guarded secrets.

Todd Black, Peter Rice, Sorkin and Stuart Besser are producing the film.

“The Social Reckoning” is opening the same day as a Jessica Chastain horror film called “Other Mommy” and one of the “Avatar: The Last Airbender” animated films.

Sorkin has been teasing a follow-up to “The Social Network” since 2024 and has publicly said that he blames Facebook for the January 6 insurrection on Capitol Hill. And while this screenplay is considered original, the last time we wrote about the film, he was said to be inspired by some Wall Street Journal articles called The Facebook Files that showed some of the special rules Facebook execs had and that it was aware of its toxic effect on teens and on the emotional toll it had on friends and families with differing views — and algorithms.

“The Social Network” was directed by David Fincher and written by Sorkin, and it earned a Best Picture nomination and a Best Actor nomination for Eisenberg’s calculated performance as the Facebook founder. Sorkin though won Best Adapted Screenplay at the Oscars among the film’s three statues. It made $224.9 million worldwide.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Chase Infiniti on Working with Leonardo DiCaprio. Regina Hall and More
TV & Streaming

Chase Infiniti on Working with Leonardo DiCaprio. Regina Hall and More

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Chase Infiniti is living the dream she never fully believed would come true.

The 24-year-old Indianapolis native makes her feature debut in Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” stepping into the role of Willa Ferguson, a teenager caught between family legacy and personal identity when a group of ex-revolutionaries reunite to rescue her after an enemy resurfaces 16 years later.

“It’s half Paul and half me,” Infiniti says of Willa’s character. “Half of her comes from his writing, and the other half I brought from my own life and experiences.”

Infiniti’s path to Anderson’s sprawling militia epic wasn’t straightforward. Raised in Indianapolis, she studied musical theater at Columbia College in Chicago. Despite her passion, she didn’t land many roles in college productions, instead finding opportunities in summer stock and community theaters. “I never thought this would happen. I would’ve been happy with even one line in a movie,” she says, recalling her early dreams.

Infiniti introduces herself to Hollywood, and the rest of the cinema loving world on the season 12 premiere of the Variety Awards Circuit Podcast. Listen below.

Her name, a mash-up of Nicole Kidman’s Chase Meridian from “Batman Forever” and Pixar’s “Toy Story,” feels oddly prophetic for an actor now stepping into Hollywood’s spotlight.

Chase Infiniti in “One Battle After Another”

©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

In “One Battle After Another,” Willa is no stock teenager. With a purple belt in martial arts and a razor-sharp sense of agency, she emerges as one of Anderson’s most compelling young protagonists. “She’s assertive, but not pretentious. She’s hopeful. I think she represents the possibility of a better future,” Infiniti explains.

Infiniti prepared for the role by traveling with Anderson and Leonardo DiCaprio (who plays her father) to Eureka, Calif. “Meeting people in that town helped me lock Willa in. I noticed how communities interacted, and that grounded her for me.”

Infiniti shares the screen with DiCaprio, Regina Hall, Teyana Taylor and two-time Oscar winner Sean Penn. A key sequence with Penn, in which Willa undergoes a tense DNA test, became a lesson in restraint and reactive acting. “It felt like sparring,” she describes. “He’s intimidating, but Paul [Thomas Anderson] encouraged us to lean into that raw, natural reaction. It was exhilarating.”

Infiniti is particularly effusive in her admiration for both Hall and Taylor during our sitdown. Speaking about Taylor’s performance, she said she was “so amazing” in bringing the character of Perfidia to life, making her “even more colorful” than what appeared on the page.

When it came to Hall, Infiniti emphasized how much strength and subtlety she brought to the role of Deandra. “Deandra is a quiet character in a sense, but she’s not quiet,” she asserts. “She really is the most central force of strength that’s in the film, and she does a fantastic job of almost honing in every character and being a mother to Willa — a mother that she never got to have.”

Despite the starry company, Infiniti admits she’s still adjusting. “Half of me thought I could be here, half of me thought I couldn’t. I had no industry connections, no on-camera work before this. Paul literally hired me without seeing my first job,” she says. “Now I’m on this press tour and it’s surreal.”

Infiniti’s real-life parents, meanwhile, are taking it all in. “My mom cries every time she sees the trailer. There’s a shot of Lockjaw holding Willa’s baby picture and she always says, ‘That’s my baby.’”

Though she’s only just arrived, Infiniti is already dreaming of future roles. She’d love to work with Greta Gerwig or Steven Spielberg — and she’s vocal about her passion for movie musicals. “If they ever adapt ‘Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812’ into a film, I don’t even need to book it. I just want to be seen for Natasha,” she declares.

As for advice to her younger self, Infiniti borrows wisdom passed down to her: “You have nothing to prove, but everything to show.”

©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

Rapid Fire Questions with Chase Infiniti

Favorite Paul Thomas Anderson film (other than “One Battle After Another”)?
“Boogie Nights.”

Favorite Leonardo DiCaprio performance?
“Catch Me If You Can.”

Favorite Benicio del Toro movie?
“The Usual Suspects.”

Favorite horror film?
“Get Out.” (though she admits she’s a self-described “scaredy cat.”)

Movie that makes you cry every time?
“Toy Story 3.”

Funniest movie of all time?
“One Battle After Another.” (“It’s an action comedy!” she laughs.)

Director you’d most like to work with next?
“Steven Spielberg, Greta Gerwig, or the Daniels. Honestly, anyone who wants to see me.”

Also featured on this episode is Dwayne Johnson, star and producer of Benny Safdie’s dramatic biopic “The Smashing Machine.”

Variety’s “Awards Circuit” podcast, hosted by Clayton Davis, Jazz Tangcay, Emily Longeretta, Jenelle Riley and Michael Schneider, who also produces, is your one-stop source for lively conversations about the best in film and television. Each episode, “Awards Circuit” features interviews with top film and TV talent and creatives, discussions and debates about awards races and industry headlines, and much more. Subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify or anywhere you download podcasts.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Yogurt Shop Murders Solved After 34 Years Thanks To DNA Testing
TV & Streaming

Yogurt Shop Murders Solved After 34 Years Thanks To DNA Testing

by jummy84 September 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Investigators believe they have finally solved the infamous and gruesome 1991 killings of four teenage girls an Austin frozen yogurt shop, known as “The Yogurt Shop Murders,” after 34 years.

On Friday, the Austin Police Department announced that it has identified suspect Robert Eugene Brashers through “a wide range of DNA testing.” Brashers, who has previously been linked to three other murders throughout the 1990s as well as the rape of a 14-year-old girl in 1997, died by suicide after a standoff with police over a separate alleged crime in 1999.

“Our team never gave up working this case. For almost 34 years they have worked tirelessly and remained committed to solving this case for the families of Jennifer Harbison, Sarah Harbison, Eliza Thomas, and Amy Ayers, all innocent lives taken senselessly and far too soon,” the police department wrote in its statement Friday, adding: “This remains an open and ongoing investigation.”

This is quite a breakthrough in the case, which gripped the nation and traumatized the city of Austin. The news comes just about a month after HBO rolled out a four-part docuseries shining a renewed light on the murders.

Over the course of four episodes, director Margaret Brown simultaneously unwound all the twists and turns of the 34-year-old cold case while also primarily focusing on the lasting trauma felt by the surviving family members who have tried to make peace with such an unimaginable loss. 

RELATED: 2025 Premiere Dates For New & Returning Series On Broadcast, Cable & Streaming

In the documentary, and in an interview with Deadline in August, Austin detective Dan Jackson indicated that the police department may be on the path to a breakthrough thanks to advancements in DNA technology.

The lead involved a very small sample of DNA from a vaginal swab of one of the victims, which had remained unidentified until now. Y-STR tests performed on that small amount of DNA were instrumental in overturning the convictions against the prior suspects and did not match anyone known to have been at the crime scene, including investigators.

DNA testing technology has rapidly advanced since 1991, and Jackson alluded that he believed it could soon be possible to build a much more vivid DNA profile with the amount that they have left from that swab. At the time of the murders, that would not have even been fathomable.

 “We’re cautiously optimistic about what we can do,” Jackson told Deadline at the time.

September 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Luke Wilson Joins Will Ferrell Netflix Golf Comedy
TV & Streaming

Luke Wilson Joins Will Ferrell Netflix Golf Comedy

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The Wilsons are halfway to a regular foursome.

Luke Wilson is joining Will Ferrell’s untitled Netflix golf comedy series, the streamer revealed on Friday. Wilson will play a pro golfer who has beaten Ferrell’s character for the tour championship twice.

Why does (most of) that sentence sound so familiar? Oh, right: Owen Wilson currently stars in a streaming comedy series, Apple TV+ show Stick, as a former pro golfer. Owen Wilson is Luke Wilson’s (three-years-older) big brother.

The Netflix series stars Ferrell as a fictional golf legend. Molly Shannon, Jimmy Tatro and Fortune Feimster have been previously announced as co-stars — not much more is known than that.

Perhaps surprisingly, the 10-episode Netflix golf comedy marks Ferrell’s first TV comedy series — you know, other than one very famous and long-running TV sketch-comedy series. The coming series marks the latest collaboration between former Saturday Night Live cast mates Shannon and Ferrell.

Ferrell, Jessica Elbaum and Alix Taylor executive produce the Netflix series for Ferrell’s Gloria Sanchez Productions. Rian Johnson (the Knives Out movies), Ram Bergman and Nena Rodrigue are executive producers for T-Street. Chris Henchy, Harper Steele, David Gordon Green and Andrew Guest also executive produce.

Ramy Youssef and Josh Rabinowitz, who were credited as co-creators and executive producers when Netflix picked up the series in May 2024, have since departed over creative differences. Andy Campagna of Youssef’s Cairo Cowboy production company also departed.

Owen Wilson’s Stick has been renewed for a second season; the news was likely received to just mild golf claps among the online golfing community. Though Stick has received a generally warm welcome from critics, including The Hollywood Reporter’s Angie Han, it is less popular among those who actually play the game. Stick season one featured some basic errors that jumped off the screen to golfers.

The Apple TV+ show also features a character, Zero (Lilli Kay), who seems to grate on viewers — that almost certainly rings truer with older viewers.

“Zero, with their fluid pronouns and haughtily declared stances against meat and capitalism, never totally stops feeling like a Gen Z caricature,” Han wrote in her review.

Luke Wilson has a lot more game than Owen, who learned how to play just for Stick.

Luke Wilson is repped by WME.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Wayward is unlike any other thriller – for one unexpected reason
TV & Streaming

Wayward is unlike any other thriller – for one unexpected reason

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

Everyone is a bit too friendly, the local school a little too efficient… And the chatty principal of the school? Far too nice, with an eerie smile endlessly plastered across her face. It all feels a bit uneasy, deliberately so, which is why it’s so surprising that the one aspect of this story which does fit in perfectly is queerness, despite the sinister, small-town setting and genre at hand.

OK, it shouldn’t be that surprising if you’re even slightly familiar with the work of series creator Mae Martin, who also stars as Alex Dempsey, a police officer investigating some troubling disappearances at the local school.

Fans of Taskmaster or the Canadian comedian’s semi-biographical dramedy Feel Good might already be aware of how Martin explores their non-binary identity in their work. But even so, a genre-blending psychological thriller like this might be the last place you’d expect to see Martin navigate such themes. And what’s even more surprising is exactly how Martin goes about this.

It would have been easy to play off the horrors that so often come when queer people are forced to return to their hometown, or any small town for that matter. There’s a reason so many of us migrate to cities, after all, often as an escape from the bigotry that – not always – but often comes in the rural parts of pretty much any country.

But after Mae’s character Alex joins their wife in Tall Pines, no one bats an eyelid at his identity as a trans man. When a fellow cop instantly accepts Alex into the “brotherhood”, it’s hard not to wonder if this so-called acceptance might be part of the wider facade that’s hiding something dark and rotten at the heart of this town.

However, as the series progresses, it becomes clear that this isn’t actually the case at all.

Sarah Gadon as Laura Redman and Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey. Netflix

Yes, it turns out that Tall Pines is all kinds of messed up, but the problems at hand have nothing to do with intolerance or hate (at least when it comes to queer and trans identity).

Alex never hides who he is, and he never feels the need to talk about it lots either. This isn’t a queer drama about the struggles or even joy of being trans. Instead, this is an occasionally funny nightmarish thriller where the main character just so happens to be a trans man.

Non-conforming gender identities are rarely seen on screen as it is – and much less than some would have you believe – but what’s even rarer is to see these themes incorporated so organically in a wider genre story that has nothing to do with queerness at all.

When Alex pretends to be taking his testosterone shots as an excuse to escape and further his investigation, it’s a small detail that normalises trans identity without making it the focus. Not that there would be any issue in doing so – these stories are hugely important and valid too – but there’s something to be said for normalising such experiences in this current climate especially.

There’s an exchange around the midway mark between two teenagers called Abbie and Leila where the former jokes that, “Cops just swing their dicks around,” while the latter suggests “I don’t think [Alex] has a dick.”

In another show, this could have come across as distasteful or even disrespectful, but Wayward is queer through and through, so jokes like this hit differently here (especially given Martin’s key involvement in the writing itself). Leila is bisexual even, as many of the characters are suggested to be.

Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila and Sydney Topliffe as Abbie talking to Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey in a corridor, who is wearing a police uniform. They look panicked, dressed in blue jumpsuits

Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey, Alyvia Alyn Lind as Leila and Sydney Topliffe as Abbie. Michael Gibson/Netflix

It’s not just through language or visibility where Wayward champions this, though. From the very first episode, Martin regularly appears shirtless and even naked in one particularly memorable sex scene between Alex and his wife. At a time when trans bodies are regularly othered, framing Martin’s sexuality so viscerally with so much nudity is groundbreaking in and of itself. Plus, it’s hot, and what would a thriller be without at least one moment as steamy as this?

But what’s perhaps most impressive about Wayward is how it neither demonises nor idolises queer characters like Alex. While some people in the show are more monstrous than others, they all exist in the murky greys of good or bad, right or wrong. And I’m not just talking about that icky tadpole water either.

Looking at the series as a whole, that’s what makes the ending in particular so special.

Because just when you think Alex has escaped Tall Pines with Abbie and his baby in tow, it turns out that this happy ending the show tricks us into seeing wasn’t actually real at all. The truth is that Alex lets Abbie down, choosing his new family over doing the right thing.

It’s never framed in a way to make you think Alex is selfish because he’s queer. If anything, it’s quite remarkable to see a queer family foregrounded in a show of this nature, made up of a trans man, his queer wife and their newborn child. In fact, the family is actively celebrated by the entire community, and sure, it’s mostly made up of cult weirdos now led by Alex’s wife, but it’s a celebration nonetheless.

Nothing is what it seems in Wayward, twisting and bending our expectations throughout. And that might be the queerest thing of all about this show, which redefines mainstream notions of family and genre with a delightfully queer outsider perspective. More than the thrills or the scares or the Mufasa one-liners, it’s this that helps set Wayward apart in the best way possible.

Read more:

Wayward is streaming now on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
THE BRADY BUNCH, Robert Reed, 1969-1974, ca. 1974
TV & Streaming

Robert Reed Hated ‘The Brady Bunch’ — Why Did He Return for the Sequels?

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

It was no secret that Robert Reed often clashed with the writers and producers of The Brady Bunch; in 1972, in the middle of the show’s run, he gave an interview with the Courier-Post where he commented, “The ineptitude of the scripts can be overpowering … It could be a good show, but we’re operating at 30 percent capacity, I think.” He even famously skipped participating in the show’s final episode, simply because he thought the plot was too stupid. Because of this, many fans have wondered why Reed showed up for the show’s many sequels: he performed in The Brady Bunch Hour variety show, as well as the specials The Brady Girls Get Married and  A Very Brady Christmas, and the 1990 sequel series The Bradys. According to creator Sherwood Schwartz, Reed didn’t come back because he needed money; rather, it turns out that he didn’t want to miss out on key family moments that the show was built around.

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'Gavagai' Director on Rewriting Euripides for the Film Industry Set
TV & Streaming

‘Gavagai’ Director on Rewriting Euripides for the Film Industry Set

by jummy84 September 26, 2025
written by jummy84

In Ulrich Köhler’s New York Film Festival world premiere “Gavagai,” a filmmaker and her star are taken to task for making a reverse-engineered “Medea” in Senegal.

The Euripides play, about a woman who murders her own children as a tribute to the man she loves and is obsessed with, is here recast as a story of a white woman (Maren Eggert, playing the actress in the film within the film) ostracized by a Black African community — and in a movie-within-the-movie directed by a filmmaker (Nathalie Richard) who looks curiously like Claire Denis. (The director said, in a conversation with IndieWire, that this is pure coincidence.) Meanwhile, at that film’s Berlin Film Festival premiere, its star Nourou (Jean-Christophe Folly) is in freefall after a racially troubling run-in with a Polish hotel security heavy.

ONE BATTLE AFTER ANOTHER, Chase Infiniti, 2025. © Warner Bros. / Courtesy Everett Collection

Köhler is a filmmaker whose partner, in real life, is Maren Ade, the writer/director of films including the Oscar-nominated screwball classic “Toni Erdmann” and the breakup drama “Everyone Else.” As Köhler explained to IndieWire, the two collaborate and give feedback on each other’s films. “Gavagai” is not quite a comedy, not quite a drama, not quite an industry satire, with a tone that is ever-shifting from the comedic to the privilege-interrogating serious. It’s one of a handful of world premieres at the New York Film Festival, and a movie that will delight insiders and festival-goers for its sharp critique of how movies are delivered into the world: Köhler shot the film during the actual Berlin Film Festival, and uses its headquarters as grounds for an inquiry into the charged landscape of who-gets-to-direct-what filmmaking questions in 2025.

“It’s about something very serious at the base, but its protagonists are all privileged people, so the fallout from what happens is psychologically tough, but they will not end up in the street,” Köhler said. “In this setting, with actors and a director as the main protagonists, I felt I could do what I did.”

Köhler previously directed the film “Sleeping Sickness,” which he shot in Cameroon, and experiences from that movie shooting in Africa led to this one. “The central scene in Berlin, the racial-profiling scene, is something that really happened during the premiere of ‘Sleeping Sickness,’” Köhler said of “Gavagai,” referring to an incident that happened with that film’s star (and this one’s), Jean-Christophe Folly. “The white savior who went over the top out of guilt was me,” the director said, whereas in “Gavagai,” Maren Eggert’s character, the film-within-the-film’s lead, rushes to Nourou’s aid once a Polish security detail asks him for his ID but no one else’s.

“The security guy who started the whole thing was a Polish guy who didn’t speak German very well, and with whom Jean-Christophe and later me got into a fight,” Köhler said. “The one who suffered most by this was obviously Jean-Christophe because his festival experience, and the fact that this was his first feature film with a major role that was playing in an a festival in competition, he didn’t really get to enjoy that because that guy and the hotel politics destroyed his experience. But then, also, I added to that, thinking I would help him.”

Gavagai
‘Gavagai’NYFF

As for the director Caroline Lescot’s (Nathalie Richard) likeness to Claire Denis — herself a filmmaker who has interrogated colonialism throughout her career, from “White Material” to “35 Shots of Rum” — Köhler said it was “not intentional. I found it more interesting to have a female director than a male. For me, she’s an alter-ego. But I found it more interesting than just having the usual old white man behaving badly. It seemed like a more complex [situation]. Especially with ‘Medea’ as the film within the film. For me, you could say that Caroline is really taking it on from a feminist perspective, and kind of not really thinking through the racial issues involved in turning around history, and having a white Medea rejected by African people.”

There’s a scene in the film in which Caroline is grilled at a press conference about her implications in rewriting the Euripides text, and she quotes James Baldwin, which isn’t helpful for the demanding press corps. “She references Baldwin’s text about being the first Black person in a Swiss village, and he explains pretty well why it’s not the same as when a white person, from a position of power and privilege, arrives in an African village that hasn’t seen any white person before, it’s a very different situation from a Black man arriving in a village in Europe,” Köhler said.

“I hope I haven’t behaved all that badly, but I think the pressure situation that filmmakers, authors are under is quite tough with the economic restraints and also with always having to justify yourself because maybe you’re not making movies that make a lot of money, but you’re still asking for a lot,” Köhler said. “I don’t think you will find many directors who would say they are not capable of that kind of behavior.”

As for Köhler’s collaboration with Ade, who is the first person to see a rough cut of his films, he said, “When we didn’t have children, it was much more intense. Now it’s about really finding time to do it.”

September 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

  • Nick Offerman Announces 2026 “Big Woodchuck” Book Tour Dates

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

Subscribe my Newsletter for new blog posts, tips & new photos. Let's stay updated!

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

  • Watch Ariana Grande and Jimmy Fallon Perform a History of Duets

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

  • ‘Steal This Story, Please’ Review: Amy Goodman Documentary

  • Hulu Passes on La LA Anthony, Kim Kardashian Pilot ‘Group Chat’

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


Back To Top
celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming