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Shawn Johnson and Andrew East
TV & Streaming

Shawn Johnson and Andrew East on Season 4, Preparing for the Show, and More (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Shawn Johnson and Andrew East may be former professional athletes, but Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test was far from a cake walk for the couple.

“We’re very used to, I don’t want to say physical pain, but coming from elite athletics, we know how to deal with that,” Johnson tells TV Insider. “It’s an expectation. The mental side was way different than anything I think Andrew or I had ever dealt with before, so that was new.”

They both agree that the mental portion of the show was much harder than the physical portion for them, even though they attempted to train for the grueling physical challenges before filming.

“I thought it was going to be all physical challenges, so I was like, ‘Let’s make sure we’re in good shape and our cardio’s good and our strength’s good,’ but there was so many different types of challenges beyond just the physical challenges that you can’t prepare for,” East explains. “It’s like, how do you face your biggest fear? You have to just face it and see how you do in that situation. … It takes a really unique skillset to do well on that course. It’s way more than just physical prowess.”

Johnson says she tried to work on “holding [her] breath underwater” and “rucking because [she] knew the [backpacks] were heavy,” adding, “I think the only thing we really did was work out to make sure we were feeling good.”

Scroll down for more from our chat with the Season 4 cast members, including how they supported each other through the course, despite competing individually, and more.

Tell me a little about getting cast for the show – was one of you approached first or was it always a two-for-one deal?

Shawn Johnson: I had been asked in previous seasons and, unfortunately, always had to say no because I was either pregnant or postpartum. This time when they came back, they offered both of us, and I was like, “Oh heck yes.” I’d rather do it with my husband, anyways.

Andrew East: I think what made us want to do it is we are kind of adrenaline junkies. We knew there’d be a lot of exciting, once-in-a-lifetime opportunities. I think we walked away wanting to keep those experiences once-in-a-lifetime and not do them again because it was a really grueling experience but definitely worth it.

PETE DADDS / FOX

Was there any hesitation knowing you were going to be away from the kids for a few weeks and everything?

East: There was for sure hesitation about leaving our kids, but we talked to all the doctors and psychologists and they were like, “We think your kids will be OK for this duration of time.”

Johnson: We brought in, like, a full army for our kids. They didn’t even notice we were gone.

East: They were with their cousins and nana and papa and the whole thing. It was great. I think they probably preferred us leaving. But it was so fun to do together, and I’m glad we did that.

Were you able to work together on the show at all, or was it totally an individual thing?

Johnson: Totally individual, which was fine. We were separated pretty quickly and we would still see each other throughout the day, but we were rarely on the same team. The teams change multiple times a day. You go from singles to doubles to big teams to small teams. But it was almost better that way. We were both independently there for our own challenging to see how far we could go. We were just big cheerleaders for each other.

East: The whole vibe of the show, too, is that everyone is kind of competing against each other, but you’re also not in certain ways. Everyone’s rooting for each other and it feels like if one wins, the whole team wins. I feel like that was the case for Shawn and I and all the cast members. It was really fun to know Shawn and know where she had more she could do and maybe where I could push her in certain ways and if she’s in a really uncomfortable spot, maybe I can show her some good old love in that moment. It was great and I feel like we all got closer together.

Were there ever moments when you saw one another struggling and weren’t able to help the other one?

Johnson: I mean, yeah. We both saw each other go through moments of struggle. It definitely hurts as a spouse to see that. Andrew saw me get concussed and be given a broken nose, and I saw him crack ribs. It was wild that way. But it also challenged both of us to have faith in each other’s strengths and just be like, “I’m here for you if you need me, but you got it.”

East: That was really cool where I know what Shawn’s capable of in a really unique way, I think, so in some ways it was like, you don’t need my help and I’d just remove myself from the picture. Honestly, I would put my money on Shawn in any type of competition or if she’s facing any other competitor. So I knew that she was going to crush it the whole way.

Had you watched past seasons of the show, and were you able to talk to any former cast members about their experiences?

Johnson: We had. So we had watched all the seasons and we have a lot of friends who have been on the first three seasons. A lot of advice – it’s only so transferable because every season’s very different and you don’t know what the challenges are going to be. But I think everyone said the same thing, which is just focus on getting to the next meal. Basically don’t look at the bigger picture, just do little steps day by day.

East: Everyone said it was way harder in person than what the show shows. It’s the little things. Like they really intentionally build the whole experience to make you uncomfortable. They did a good job with that.

What would you say surprised you the most about the experience?

Johnson: I think my favorite thing about the experience was the relationships with the DS and the recruits. I think it’s such an eclectic cast. We’re all from different walks and industries and styles of life, but we all became so close, so fast, and really trusted each other with our lives. The DS imparted their wisdom and their stories and learning they’re truly just trying to make you better was really special.

Was there anyone on the cast that you got close with that you didn’t expect?

Johnson: I didn’t know Brianna [LaPaglia] before at all, and we got to be really close on the show.

East: It was fun because it was such an eclectic crew. Some of the crew was on other reality shows. This was my first reality TV experience, and I think it was very shocking at how stressful the entire experience was. You’re not filming and going back to some fancy hotel room and eating a fancy meal. It’s 24/7 stress and you don’t know what’s going to happen and when. It was constant surprises, is what I felt like.

What are you excited for people to see this season?

Johnson: I am itching to see it. I cannot wait. Because the only thing I remember is myself. I feel like, when we’re doing the show, it’s so intense, you’re so focused on doing your job and helping your team, we actually don’t get to watch a lot of each other go through these moments. Everybody’s on a very specific journey that the DS are helping them with. So I think it will, I don’t know, finish the story for me, to see everyone’s journey and everyone’s struggles and see how they handled it all. I’m so excited to watch it.

East: I’m excited because I think there’s a little bit of everything in it. We laugh, we cry ,we had near-death experiences, we had deep talks. I think it will just be a good TV show to watch. So I’m really excited to watch it.

Special Forces: World’s Toughest Test, Season 4 Premiere, Thursday, September 25, 9/8c, Fox

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel Returns with the Perfect Monologue — Is That Enough?
TV & Streaming

Jimmy Kimmel Returns with the Perfect Monologue — Is That Enough?

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

“I Think We’ll See You Tomorrow”

In his emotional return to “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” the late-night host delivered a strong show and an even stronger monologue, clearly illustrating he’s not the enemy in this fight. But is that enough for this administration to back down?

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Saoirse Ronan in a Very Dark Classroom Comedy
TV & Streaming

Saoirse Ronan in a Very Dark Classroom Comedy

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Children learn some things at school, sure, but others they just collectively know from the moment they set foot in class — and one of them is how to immediately size up a teacher as friend or foe, authority or pushover. Sweetly earnest young Maria Spencer (Saoirse Ronan) is one of those unfortunate educators who, through no real fault of her own, has been placed in the latter column by her perceptive pre-teen students: She’s kind, dedicated and full of ideas, but can barely speak over the room, much less command it. A daringly discomfiting black comedy from Swedish director Jonatan Etzler, “Bad Apples” initially appears to be that rare classroom movie that courts more sympathy for adult than child — at least until Maria discovers her unlikely inner disciplinarian, and our allegiances ricochet all over the shop.

A Toronto premiere that has since opened San Sebastian’s New Directors competition (and will also compete at next month’s London Film Festival), “Bad Apples” has been picked up for release by Paramount’s indie-oriented Republic Pictures label, though it’s a trickier commercial proposition than outward appearances might suggest. Films that visit harm upon underage characters are never the surest of sells with general audiences; that goes double for films that invite us to wonder, at least fleetingly, if the kids had it coming. Still, at least one scene of malicious child endangerment in “Bad Apples” was met with raucous audience applause at its San Sebastian premiere — as good a sign as any that Etzler’s warped, needling and sometimes bitterly funny second feature (following his Swedish-language, Netflix-distributed 2023 debut “One More Time”) will find its own cult.

No one’s reservations about the film are likely to include Ronan, an actor still less than a decade away from her own days of playing thorny, complicated children — and who, on the heels of her gutsy turn in last year’s “The Outrun,” keeps demonstrating an impressive aversion to easy adult material. “Bad Apples” depends heavily on her naturally sympathetic sincerity as a performer: Any more resistible a screen presence wouldn’t carry us far through the list of eminently questionable decisions made by Maria in the course of a brazenly credibility-testing script by first-time feature writer Jess O’Kane, adapting a novel by Swedish writer Rasmus Lindgren.

Between that source and Etzler’s cool, jaundiced directorial eye, you can detect a certain deadpan Scandi sangfroid in proceedings, even if they’ve been relocated to a drab rural village in English cider country. There, surrounding apple orchards and clumps of fallen, rotting fruit furnish the film with a rather literal visual metaphor, to which Etzler returns a bit too often. Yet the real bad apple, or so it initially seems, is Danny (riveting newcomer Eddie Waller), a violent, near-feral 10-year-old whose loud, foul language and physical attacks on adults and children alike have made Maria’s class just about unmanageable. The school’s harried principal (Rakie Ayola) offers little support, while Danny’s single father Josh (Robert Emms) has more or less given up on him.

That leaves Maria to take matters into her own hands when the boy’s latest outburst lands meek would-be teacher’s pet Pauline (Nia Brown, another gifted first-timer) with a broken arm. Yet just as “Bad Apples” seems to shaping up as a tart satire of dysfunctional public education, Maria’s next move pulls focus away from the systemic and toward her own individual pathology — no one else is to blame, after all, for her first abducting Danny, then chaining him in her cellar, then saying nothing as the ensuing missing-person case drags on for months.

For those who don’t part ways with “Bad Apples” at this crucial point, the film has a good deal of acrid comic juice left, as Danny’s sudden victimization leaves room for other villains to emerge: Maria, for one, but also a fiercely self-interested PTA, and perhaps even Pauline, quite brilliantly played by Brown as equal parts Little Miss Sunshine and very bad seed.

When “Bad Apples” is centered on Maria and her increasingly panicked negotiations with these two small but complex antagonists — one perhaps less vicious than he appears, the other far more so — it’s queasily tense and unpredictable, with a whiff of real danger as to what they might do to each other, minus any real authority figure in the room. Ronan’s young co-stars meet her gradually emerging guile with artful about-faces of their own: It’s a testament to Waller’s genuinely unnerving presence that his later moments of calm always feel tautly conditional.

When in the realm of the grownups, however, “Bad Apples” plays broader, safer and altogether less believably, albeit not without stabs of cynical truth. Less honest and more suggestible than their children, adults tend to plump not for the fairest solution to a dilemma but the one that inconveniences the fewest among them — so the film ultimately says, though it requires an almighty number of procedural blind spots to reach that conclusion. Ultimately, this odd, wicked little amorality tale winds up siding with no one: The children are indeed the future, we’re left to conclude, but will they make it any better than the present?

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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'The Undercovers' Sets Micah Parsons & Justin Jefferson As New Episode Subjects
TV & Streaming

‘The Undercovers’ Sets Micah Parsons & Justin Jefferson As New Episode Subjects

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Prime Video has announced new installments of its athlete prank franchise Eli Manning Presents: The Undercovers, centered on Green Bay Packers defensive end Micah Parsons and Minnesota Vikings wide receiver Justin Jefferson.

The first episode, featuring pass rusher Parsons undercover as a waiter at a Dallas Cowboys fan event, premieres September 25th, just ahead of the anticipated showdown between Parsons’ former team and his current Green Bay Packers. Then, on October 16 — a week ahead of the Vikings’ showdown with the Los Angeles Rams on Thursday Night Football — star wide receiver Jefferson goes undercover as a nature photographer to get the inside scoop on the fast-growing sport of flag football.

Presented by Prime Video Sports, Eli Manning Presents: The Undercovers is produced by Range Studios and Ten Till Productions. The show is executive produced by Mark Herwick and Simon Andreae of Range Studios; Eli Manning, Peyton Manning, Tim Brown, and Jamie Horowitz of Ten Till Productions; and showrunner J.D. Amato.

“I’m so excited for the next two installments of The Undercovers franchise,” said Range Studios’ Co-President of Non-Scripted Television, Mark Herwick. “There’s nothing more rewarding than seeing the fans’ faces light up when they realize they’ve just spent the day with their favorite athlete. It never gets old!”

Said EP-showrunner Amato, “Our outstanding team has so much fun making this show with such wonderful sports communities. We can’t wait for fans to see a different side of these superstar athletes.”

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel during his Sept. 23 show.
TV & Streaming

Jimmy Kimmel Returns: Thanks Supporters, Slams Trump

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Jimmy Kimmel’s return from an ABC suspension did not dull his edge

In his first show back after the network took Jimmy Kimmel Live! off the air on Sept. 17 following remarks he made about the alleged killer of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, Kimmel walked out to an ovation and chants of “Jimmy! Jimmy!” that lasted for a couple minutes. He then spent considerable time in his monologue thanking the people who supported him and excoriating those who called for his show to be canceled.

He also choked up a couple of times in addressing Kirk’s murder and showed contrition for how his remarks in the aftermath were taken.

“I’ve been hearing a lot about what I need to say and do tonight. I don’t think it’s going to make much difference — you like me or you don’t. I’m not gonna change anyone’s mind,” Kimmel said. “But I do want to make something clear because it’s important to me as a human that you understand it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man. I don’t think there’s anything funny about it. … Nor was my intent to blame any specific group for the actions of what was obviously a deeply disturbed individual. That was really the opposite of the point I was tyring to make, but i understand that to some it felt ill-timed or unclear or maybe both. For those who think I did point a finger, I get why you’re upset — if the situation was reversed, theres a good chance I’d feel the same way.”

Tuesday’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! was available on ABC stations covering about 75 percent of the country. Two large station owners, Nexstar and Sinclair, pre-empted the show on their more than 60 ABC affiliates that reach about a quarter of the nation’s TV homes, including the top 20 markets of Washington, D.C., and Seattle. Viewers in the affected markets will be able to see the show via Hulu and clips on YouTube on Wednesday.

Prior to ABC suspending the show, Nexstar and Sinclair said they would pre-empt Jimmy Kimmel Live! over the host’s Sept. 15 remarks, in which he said “We hit some new lows over the weekend with the MAGA gang desperately trying to characterize this kid who murdered Charlie Kirk as anything other than one of them and doing everything they can to score political points from it.”

The station groups took action a few hours after Federal Communications Commission head Brendan Carr threatened to investigate and potentially revoke the licenses ABC affiliates if they continued to air Jimmy Kimmel Live!. Nexstar is hoping to merge with another station owner, Tegna, which will require FCC approval and a change to the commission’s cap on station ownership. Sinclair has also signaled it’s interested in M&A activity.

Kimmel’s suspension and the FCC threats drew ire from the creative community, with some 400 actors, filmmakers, writers and musicians signing an open letter from the American Civil Liberties Union condemning the moves as anti-free speech. Kimmel’s fellow late night hosts, a number of industry unions and former Disney CEO Michael Eisner also took up the cause, and social media lit up with users saying they were canceling subscriptions to Disney’s streaming properties. Republican Sens. Rand Paul and Ted Cruz — whom Kimmel name-checked and thanked Tuesday — also said the FCC shouldn’t meddle with policing political speech.

Kimmel also had plenty to say about Carr and President Donald Trump in his monologue. He said his right to free speech was “something I took for granted till they pulled my friend Stephen [Colbert] off the air and tried to coerce the affiliates who run our show in the cities you live in to take my show off the air. That’s not legal, That’s not American. That is un-American.”

Kimmel also excoriated Trump for the administration’s threats against the show, potentially costing the 200 or so people who work on Jimmy Kimmel Live! their jobs.

“The president made it very clear he wants to see me and the hundreds of people who work here get fired. Our leader celebrates Americans losing their livelihoods because he can’t take a joke,” Kimmel said. “He was somehow able to squeeze Colbert out of CBS, then he turned his sights on me, and now he’s openly rooting for NBC to fire Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers and the hundreds of Americans who work for their shows who don’t make millions of dollars. I hope that if that happens, or if there’s even a hint of it happening, you’ll be 10 times as loud as you were this week. We have to speak out.”

He continued, “I never imagined I’d be in situation like this, but one thing I learned form Lenny Bruce and George Carlin and Howard Stern is that a government threat to silence a comedian the president doesn’t like is anti-American. I’m so glad we have some solidarity on that on the right and left and those in the middle like Joe Rogan. Maybe the sliver lining is we found one thing we can agree on, and maybe we’ll find another one.”

Kimmel held back tears a second time in noting that Erika Kirk, Charlie Kirk’s widow, offered forgiveness for her husband’s killer over the weekend. “That’s an example we should follow,” he said. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus as I do, there it was. That’s it — a selfless act of grace, forgiveness from a grieving widow. It touched me deeply. If there’s anything to take from this tragedy, I hope it’s that and not more of this.”

After the show’s first break, Kimmel did a sketch with Robert De Niro playing the new head of the FCC, who made several mobster-like threats and said the commission was now “charging by the word” unless it was complimentary of Trump.

Glen Powell and Sarah MacLachlan were the guests on Tuesday’s show. At a premiere for an ABC News-produced documentary about Lilith Fair Sunday, MacLachlan announced that scheduled musical performances by her and other artists had been canceled “in support of free speech.”

One person who didn’t appreciate Kimmel’s return: Trump, who on his Truth Social account ranted that “I can’t believe ABC Fake News gave Jimmy Kimmel his job back. The White House was told by ABC that his Show was canceled! … He is yet another arm of the DNC and, to the best of my knowledge, that would be a major Illegal Campaign Contribution. I think we’re going to test ABC out on this. Let’s see how we do. Last time I went after them, they gave me $16 Million Dollars. This one sounds even more lucrative. A true bunch of losers! Let Jimmy Kimmel rot in his bad Ratings.”

ABC News doesn’t produce Jimmy Kimmel Live!; the show is part of the network’s entertainment division. The $16 million Trump refers to in his post is the amount Disney paid to settle a defamation lawsuit Trump brought against ABC and anchor George Stephanopoulos over the latter’s incorrect statement in March 2024 that Trump had been found “liable for rape by a jury.” In writer E. Jean Carroll’s civil suit against Trump, the jury found him liable for sexual abusing and defaming Carroll.

Trump’s Truth Social post came well after Kimmel taped his show Tuesday. Kimmel noted that as of the taping, Trump hadn’t said anything: “Maybe he’s saving it for his late night toilet time?”

ABC also posted the first segments of Tuesday’s show to YouTube soon after they aired, allowing viewers in the Nexstar and Sinclair markets to see the first half of the show, which reached 1 million views (YouTube counts viewing for 30 seconds or more as view) in a little over an hour. Watch it below.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Mackenzie Crook makes long-awaited TV return in first look at new series
TV & Streaming

Mackenzie Crook makes long-awaited TV return in first look at new series

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The images have been released alongside the news that the series will launch on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer in 2026, with Sophie Willan, Jon Pointing and Paul Kaye also set to star.

The series, which was filmed and is set in and around Manchester, also incorporates animation elements throughout, although we have yet to see what these will look like.

Lauren Patel as Kacey, Pearce Quigley as Michael Sleep and Mackenzie Crook as Gordon in Small Prophets. Vishal Sharma/BBC

The synopsis for the series says: “We meet eccentric Michael Sleep (Quigley) whose darling partner Clea disappeared seven years ago.

“Since then, Sleep has lived a very ordinary life. He eats Shreddies, works in a DIY store, visits his dad Brian (Palin), and hopes for Clea to return.

Sir Michael Palin as Brian in Small Prophets.

Sir Michael Palin as Brian in Small Prophets. Matt Squire/BBC

“One day Brian shares an old recipe involving rainwater, horse manure and more than a little alchemy. With recipe in hand, Sleep sets out (albeit with some scepticism) to create Homunculi – magical prophesying spirits that can predict the future.

“Sleep gets help from young work mate Kacey (Patel), an unlikely friendship that blossoms partly, but not wholly, through their mutual dislike of store manager Gordon (Crook).

“Their friendship adds to the frustration and intrigue of his nosy neighbours (Willan and Pointing) who are obsessed with trying to find out what the hell is going on in the garden shed.

“Meanwhile, Roy (Kaye), Clea’s brother has fallen on hard times. In desperation he has come back into Michael’s life to claim back the family home, convinced that his sister will never return.”

Pearce Quigley as Michael Sleep and Lauren Patel as Kacey in Small Prophets.

Pearce Quigley as Michael Sleep and Lauren Patel as Kacey in Small Prophets. Matt Squire/BBC

Crook is known for his roles in series including The Office and Detectorists, the latter of which he also wrote and directed, while co-starring alongside Toby Jones.

Small Prophets will air on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer in early 2026.

Check out more of our Comedy 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 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel on ABC
TV & Streaming

His Monologue and More Live Updates

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Jimmy Kimmel Live! is back on ABC following a six-day suspension. The talk show returned on Tuesday, September 23, after it was indefinitely suspended by the network over comments host Jimmy Kimmel made about Charlie Kirk.

Cities with ABC affiliate stations owned by Nexstar and Sinclair will continue to see the late-night show preempted for now, but everyone else across the country was seated as Kimmel returned with his first monologue in nearly a week.

Scroll down for live updates from Kimmel’s return to late-night television, and keep refreshing since we’ll be updating throughout the episode.

The show began with clips from various other media outlets discussing how highly-anticipated this show is, then cut to Kimmel and Guillermo dressed in silly costumes in their green room (they eventually decided they needed to change). Kimmel entered the stage to a massive round of applause and the crowd chanting his name before he began his monologue.

“I’m happy to be here tonight with you,” he said, after making a joke about preempting Celebrity Family Feud to be on the air. “I’m not sure who had a weirder 48 hours, me or the CEO of Tylenol. It’s been overwhelming. I’ve heard from a lot of people over the last six days. I’ve heard from all the people in the world over the last six days. Everyone I’ve ever met have reached out 10 or 11 times. The guy who fired me from my first radio job in Seattle, where we are not airing tonight, by the way, his name is Larry. In 1989 Larry tried to force me to do a bit called Jokes for Donuts, where people would call in and tell jokes for donuts, and I refused to do it and eventually Larry fired me and I had to move back in with my parents. Even he checked in. Thank you, Larry.”

He gave a special shout-out to his fellow talksshow hosts, including Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Jon Stewart, Jay Leno, and many others, such as Howard Stern and Jay Leno. He noted that even late-night hosts from other countries reached out. “This country has become so authoritarian that even the Germans are like, ‘Come here!’”

Of course, he also gave a special message to his viewers who made sure their “voices were heard so mine could be heard.” Especially, though, he mentioned those who don’t share his beliefs, but stood up for his right to still be on the air, including Candace Owens and Ted Cruz. “I don’t think I’ve ever said this before, but Ted Cruz is right,” Kimmel noted. “If Ted Cruz can’t speak freely, then he can’t cast spells on the Smurfs. Even though I don’t agree with many of those people on most subjects, some of the things they say make me want to throw up, it takes courage for them to speak out against this administration, and they did and they deserve credit for it. Telling your followers that your government cannot be allowed to control what we do.”

Kimmel then got emotional as he said, “You understand it was never my intention to make light of the murder of a young man. I don’t think there’s anything funny about it. I posted a message on Instagram on the day he was killed asking compassion for his family, and I meant it. I still do. Nor did I mean to blame any specific group for the actions of a specific individual. That was actually the opposite of the point I was trying to make. For those who think I did point a finger, I get why you’re upset. If the situation were reversed, there’s a good chance I would’ve felt the same way.”

He continued, “I don’t think the murderer who shot Charlie Kirk represents anyone. This is a sick person who thinks violence is a solution, and it isn’t ever. Also, selfishly, I am a person who get a lot of threats. I get many ugly and scary threats against my life, my wife, my kids, my coworkers, because of what I choose to say. And I know those threats don’t come from the people on the right who I know and love. And I don’t want to make this about me. This show is not important. What is important is that we get to live in a country that allows us to have a show like this.”

Kimmel then spoke candidly about how it’s “not legal” and it’s “un-American” to force affiliates to take his show off the air. He specifically referenced FCC chair Brendan Carr’s comments about wanting to pull his show. “Brendan Carr is the most embarrassing car Republicans have embraced since this one,” he said, as a photo of a Tesla Cybertruck spray painted with Trump’s name showed on the screen.

Kimmel also pointed to past comments Carr made about free speech and shared an old clip of Donald Trump talking about how important it is for there to be free speech in this country. “That was also in 2022. How did that guy turn into this guy?” he continued, before showing a recent clip of Trump calling him a “wack job” and claiming he got “no ratings” for his show. Kimmel then smirked and added, “Well, I do tonight!”

“He did his best to cancel me. Instead, he forced millions of people to watch the show,” Kimmel joked. “That backfired bigly. He might have to release the Epstein files to distract us from this now.”

He then joked, “Disney has asked me to read the following statement and I have agreed to do it. Here we go: To reactivate your Disney+ and Hulu account, open the Disney+ app on your smart TV or connected device.” The audience cracked up.

Kimmel made sure to thank Disney for bringing him back on the air, even though they “didn’t have to,” he noted. “I was not happy when they pulled me off the air,” he said. “I did not agree with that decision and I told them that. We talked it through and in the end, even though they didn’t have to, they really didn’t have to, this is a giant company, we have short attention spans, and I am a tiny part of the Disney corporation, but they welcomed me back on the air, and I thank them for that.”

He also told his viewers that they should support Seth Meyers, Fallon, and any other late-night hosts who Trump has threatened to pull off the air if they’re put in similar situations in the future.

Kimmel went on to list a lot of things that “most Americans support,” regardless of where they stand politically, and urged viewers to “stop letting politicians tell us what they want and tell them what we want.”

To conclude his monologue, Kimmel referenced Kirk’s widow Erika’s remarks at his funeral. “Erika Kirk forgave the man who shot her husband. That is an example we should follow,” Kimmel insisted. “If you believe in the teachings of Jesus as I do, there it was. That’s it. A selfless act of grace, forgiveness from a grieving widow, it touched me deeply. If there’s anything we should take from this tragedy to carry forward, I hope it can be that, and not this.”

Kimmel joked that Guillermo offered to sell his Labubus to raise money for him when they were out of a job. Guillermo then took the floor to praise Kimmel as a “great man and a great father.” He also told his boss, “I love you and I stand with you all the way, brother.”

In the second segment of the show, Kimmel said he had the chairman of the FCC on the phone, and it ended up being Robert DeNiro on a video call. “It seems like the FCC is using mob tactics to suppress free speech,” Kimmel wondered. “What the f**k did you say to me?” DeNiro, pretending to be the new chair of the FCC, retaliated. “Speech, it ain’t free no more. We’re charging by the word now.”

The two went back and forth in a hilarious bit, which ended with DeNiro pretending to take a call from the president and joking, “I gotta go. A couple of cases of Tylenol fell off a truck and I gotta figure out how to put autism in them.”

Kimmel was back to his regular self at this point, poking fun at Trump for having to walk up an escalator that broke during his visit to the United Nations. “When you think about uniting nations, no one does it better than Don,” Kimmel joked, cutting to a clip of Trump saying, “I’m really good at this stuff. These countries are going to hell.” He also cracked jokes about Melania Trump.

He once again referenced Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.‘s claims that pregnant women taking Tylenol causes autism in children. “Follow the advice of Donald Trump and you too can look liked a glazed ham with thrombosis,” he said. The audience cracked up as a montage of Trump saying, “Don’t take Tylenol,” dozens of times played.

The first guest of the night was Glen Powell. Kimmel apologized for dragging him “into the middle” of his mess. “I’m honored,” Powell confirmed. “I’m just so happy you’re back.”

More to come … 

Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Weeknights, 11:35 p.m. ET, ABC

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jessica Chastain Series 'The Savant' Delayed After Charlie Kirk Death
TV & Streaming

Jessica Chastain Series ‘The Savant’ Delayed After Charlie Kirk Death

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The anxiety around the political and cultural reaction to the killing of Charlie Kirk is so high that we could see more media companies on edge about how audiences react to their content. “The Savant,” a limited series starring Jessica Chastain originally set to premiere this Friday on Apple TV+, will be postponed, a rep for Apple TV+ told IndieWire.

While no specific reason was given, nor was any new release date announced, it’s believed that current events contributed to the delay.

“After careful consideration, we have made the decision to postpone ‘The Savant.’ We appreciate your understanding and look forward to releasing the series at a future date,” Apple TV+ said in a statement.

Protestors outside 'Jimmy Kimmel Live!' following ABC's indefinite suspension of the program at Hollywood Blvd on September 18, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.

“The Savant” stars Chastain as a woman who infiltrates online extremist groups in an attempt to discover mass shootings and extremist acts of terrorism before they happen. The series was created by Melissa James Gibson and was inspired by a 2019 article in Cosmopolitan, “Is It Possible to Stop a Mass Shooting Before It Happens?”

The first trailer for the series, which you can watch below, shows her engaging online with extremists, attempting to think like them and expose their actions before reporting them to the authorities. It shows a series of “snipers, bombings, ambushes” — with Chastain specifically trying to bring down someone who wants to make an imprint on history with the type of event people refer to “with a month and a date.” It’s also a show that grapples with Chastain’s moral dilemma of wondering if it’s right to be engaging with such people, even if it’s in the name of a greater good.

“The Savant” would not be the first time a show or an episode was delayed in order to provide some breathing room from real-life tragedies. But the fervor over “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” being pre-empted last week (it comes back on air tonight) is likely just the first example of media companies in this very moment looking closely at what’s being said and represented on their screens as showrunners reach for the headlines with politically relevant commentary and entertainment.

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman Star in New 'Fifth Step' Trailer
TV & Streaming

Jack Lowden and Martin Freeman Star in New ‘Fifth Step’ Trailer

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The U.K.’s National Theatre Live has released a new trailer for “The Fifth Step,” featuring Olivier Award-winner Jack Lowden (“Slow Horses,” “Dunkirk”) and Emmy and BAFTA-winner Martin Freeman (“The Hobbit,” “The Responder”) in David Ireland’s critically acclaimed drama.

The trailer offers wider audiences their first glimpse of the intense two-hander. The production is set to reach cinemas worldwide from Nov. 27, presented by Neal Street Productions, Playful Productions and National Theatre of Scotland in association with Nica Burns.

Ireland’s play, from the writer behind “Ulster American,” follows the twelve-step journey of Alcoholics Anonymous, and centers on two men: James (Freeman), a long-time member of the program who agrees to mentor newcomer Luka (Lowden). Over cups of black coffee, the pair forge a fragile bond through shared experiences. But as Luka approaches the critical fifth step of the program, which demands complete honesty, both men must confront dangerous secrets from their past – revelations that could either strengthen their recovery or send them spiraling back toward addiction.

The production was filmed live during its sold-out London West End run at the intimate, in-the-round @sohoplace theatre. Directed by Finn den Hertog, the play originally premiered in Dundee, Edinburgh and Glasgow in 2024 through National Theatre of Scotland before its successful London transfer.

Lowden originated the role of Luka at the 2024 Edinburgh International Festival under the National Theatre of Scotland banner.

The project marks another high-profile addition to National Theatre Live’s roster of theatrical broadcasts, including “Inter Alia,” starring Rosamund Pike.

Watch the trailer for “The Fifth Step” here:

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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ABC Host Met The Moment
TV & Streaming

ABC Host Met The Moment

by jummy84 September 24, 2025
written by jummy84

From Oscar-envelope SNAFUs, to L.A. wildfire evacuations, to real-time tweet attacks from Donald Trump and advocating for children’s healthcare, Jimmy Kimmel has more than met the moment many times over the years.

Still, with the ABC late-night host’s return tonight after a weeklong benching … Well, as longtime nemesis Trump said on a May 2016 visit to Jimmy Kimmel Live!: “You never know what’s going to happen.”

With renewed threats against the Disney-owned network from Trump tonight after the show was taped, and affiliate owners Sinclair and Nexstar still not showing Live! even though ABC brought it back, an initially cosplaying Kimmel (Google it) more than met the moment Tuesday — like we kinda knew he would.

Then presumptive Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump on ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!’ in May 2026

Randy Holmes/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images

Greeted by a standing ovation and chants of “Jimmy, Jimmy, Jimmy!” from his studio audience, and revealing news of a German job offer, Kimmel started off with a nod to the great Jack Parr’s return to the air after a corporate run-in of his own in 1960. Warming up, he thanked his fellow late-night hosts past and present, his fans and fans of free speech like “even my old pal Ted Cruz.”

Yet, for all the anger and backlash around Kimmel’s suspension, the longtime host’s deft decision Tuesday was to speak to the conservative activist’s grieving family and the big picture in America right now.

Oh, and never forgetting Live! is late-night comedy, Kimmel turned the spotlight of free speech on Trump and his real-life FCC chair Brendon Carr by showing their own contradictory words and actions vis a vis free speech. In addition, Kimmel got some hilarious help and cultural Kevlar from Robert De Niro played the new sycophantic head of the FCC to seal the deal — cause that’s how the pros do it.

De Niro went straight into regulatory character to hit all the right notes.

“It’s just me Jimmy the chairman of the FCC, gently suggesting that you gently shut the f*ck up,” De Niro declared in the pre-taped bit. “But you can’t say that, that’s a violation of free speech,” Kimmel protested. “Oh, yeah, about that speech? It ain’t free no more,” De Niro replied, making it perfectly clear what was on the table.

Was it the greatest late-night show ever? No. Was it the greatest TV comeback ever? No. Was Kimmel weak for not coming out screaming that he was leaving ABC for the greener and likely less restrained pastures of Netflix or YouTube? Not at all. Kimmel has been doing late-night a long long time, decades in fact, and he knows that the way you win is playing the long long game — which is what we saw, as we have from him numerous times before.

If you were expecting an apology, this wasn’t the comeback where you were going to get it. Kimmel’s knee did not hit the studio floor Tuesday. Also, if you couldn’t watch because you lived in one of those markets ruled by Sinclair and Nexstar, Kimmel had some advice: streaming.

In a sweet extra to the whole thing, Trump’s outdated shivs of Kimmel having low ratings are going to look even more tin-eared in the next day or so when the numbers come in. Even with nearly 20% of ABC’s linear reach off limits thanks to Nexstar and Sinclair’s continued preemptions, they should be big.

(L-R) Guillermo Rodriguez and Jimmy Kimmel on Tuesday night

Randy Holmes/Disney via Getty Images

One-liners, a hug from Guillermo and defending the First Amendment aside, there was, as one would expect after a week in which a late-night host going dark put where America is now in stark perspective, some tears Tuesday. In that vein, Kimmel’s voice broke a few times, especially when speaking of widow and now Turning Point USA CEO Erika Kirk for the undeniable grace and forgiveness she displayed this past weekend towards the man who killed her husband. Kimmel’s own grace under pressure was on display with his dedication to his craft and POV.

There was also a talk show to put on and the Live! team did just that tonight too.

Glen Powell was on to talk to Kimmel at the desk and charmingly promote his new September 30-debuting Hulu football series Chad Powers. Hot off pulling the plug on performances at the September 21 premiere of ABC News and Hulu’s Lilith Fair documentary in solidarity with Kimmel and his show, Sarah McLachlan provided the tunes tonight with something from her new album Broken Better. There was anticipation that the often outspoken songwriter would say something, as she did just a few days ago at they Lilith Fair: Building A Mystery screening, but, like the pro she is, McLachlan stuck to the task at hand and saw the bigger picture.

Sarah McLachlan on ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!”

Randy Holmes/Disney via Getty Images

That ethos, after the necessary points were made, was at the heart of tonight’s Live! to everyone credit — and probably to ABC, Disney, Iger and Walden’s relief. That became all the more stark after Trump went online Tuesday after the slightly late-running show was taped and before it aired on the East Coast, huffing and puffing as usual.

“I think we’re going to test ABC out on this,” Trump wrote, handing Iger and Walden a redemption in so many ways. “Let’s see how we do. Last time I went after them, they gave me $16 Million Dollars. This one sounds even more lucrative. A true bunch of losers!”

“I think we’ll see you tomorrow, good night,” the clearly winning Kimmel said at the end of tonight’s show. To that, Ethan Hawke and Abbott Elementary’s Lisa Ann Walters are the scheduled Live! tomorrow, with Yungblud as the musical guest — cause that’s how the pros do it. 

September 24, 2025 0 comments
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