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How to watch UCLA Bruins online, livestream
TV & Streaming

How To Watch NCAA Football Online

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.

The battle for the Big Ten runs through Columbus. This weekend, UCLA has a big test on the gridiron against the undefeated Buckeyes. Although the Bruins are in the middle of the pack in the conference, the team can still play a role as spoiler to Ohio State’s perfect season.

For Week 12, the UCLA Bruins (3-6) take on the No. 1-ranked Ohio State Buckeyes (9-0) at Ohio Stadium in Columbus, Ohio on Saturday, Nov. 15, with kickoff at 4:30 p.m. PT/7:30 p.m. ET on NBC.

At a Glance: How to Watch UCLA Bruins Online

Keep reading below for more details on how to watch the UCLA-Ohio State game, including with and without cable, and how to buy tickets online.

How to Watch UCLA Bruins College Football Without Cable

Since the UCLA-Ohio State game airs on NBC, it’s also streamable on web-based streaming cable services, some of which even offer free trials — including DirecTV, Fubo and Hulu + Live TV.

DirecTV

Watch the UCLA-Ohio State game on NBC with DirecTV. All of the cable alternative’s packages offer NBC, along with more than 90 other channels — such as CBS, ABC, AMC, Bravo, CNBC, Disney Channel, ESPN and much more.

The streamer has a free trial available, which only lasts for five days, but that’s more than enough time to watch the college football game. You can cancel or keep the service after the free trial is over, with prices starting as low as $49.99 for the first month of service ($89.99 per month afterward) for the “Entertainment” package with the streamer’s current deals.

UCLA Bruins vs Ohio State Buckeyes: How To Watch NCAA Football Online

Fubo

Watch the UCLA-Ohio State game on NBC as well as more than 235 other news, entertainment and sports channels with a subscription to Fubo, starting at $54.99 for the first month and $84.99 per month afterward with the streamer’s current deals.

Hulu - Live TV's logo.

Hulu

Best streaming bundle

Hulu + Live TV

To livestream the UCLA-Ohio State online on NBC, a subscription to Hulu + Live TV is another fantastic option. The streaming service has access to more than 95 other live channels — including BET, CNN, Food Network and more — starting at $64.99 per month for the first three months of service ($82.99 monthly) and comes with Hulu’s entire streaming library, as well as Disney+ and ESPN Unlimited. Hulu is currently offering a three-day free trial to try before you commit.

UCLA Bruins vs Ohio State Buckeyes: How To Watch NCAA Football Online

Sling

Sling might be a good fit to watch the UCLA-Ohio State on NBC — and the live TV streaming service is on sale for half off your first month of service. With Sling Blue, which includes NBC. The streaming plan comes with other news, entertainment and sports channels, such as Fox, Discovery Channel, FS1, MSNBC, NFL Network, SYFY, National Geographic and others.

Please note: Pricing and channel availability varies from location-to-location.

How to Watch UCLA Bruins College Football With Cable

The UCLA-Ohio State game airs on NBC. You can watch by tuning in through your cable TV provider, on NBCSports.com or the NBC Sports mobile app with your cable TV account login — including streaming and traditional services such as DirecTV, Fubo, Hulu + Live TV, Sling, Verizon, Xfinity and others.

Where to Buy UCLA Bruins College Football Tickets Online

Want to watch the game in person? Tickets are available for the UCLA-Ohio State game at StubHub, Ticket Liquidator, Ticketmaster and GameTime — prices depend on seat location. For more info, visit UCLABruins.com/Tickets.

One of the best deals on last-minute tickets right now is at TicketNetwork, which offers The Hollywood Reporter readers $150 off orders of $500 with promo code THR150 or $300 off orders that are $1,000 and up with code THR300.

Meanwhile, other deals on tickets can be found at Vivid Seats, where you can save $20 with code THR30; or at SeatGeek where you can use promo code HOLLYWOOD10 to save $10 on eligible purchases of $250 and up.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Wild Cherry soundtrack | What songs feature in the BBC drama?
TV & Streaming

Wild Cherry soundtrack | What songs feature in the BBC drama?

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’re making your way through BBC One’s latest drama, Wild Cherry, chances are that you’ve been toe-tapping your way through each episode.

As well as taking us on quite the twisted journey through wealthy ‘island’ Richford Lake, the series centres on a scandal that rips through the local girls’ school and plummets teenage best friends Grace (Imogen Faires) and Allegra (Amelia May) into the spotlight.

But along with all the drama and backstabbing also comes a catchy soundtrack that is packed full of songs, ranging from artists like Jordan Rakei, Dave and Lykke Li. The title song itself is an original one that was crafted by the show’s creator and writer Nicôle Lecky, who also showed off her musical talents in previous series Mood.

She told RadioTimes.com in an exclusive chat for Pass the Mic: “It was always my intention, actually, I should say, to do the title music. I thought that was quite fun. Rotem and I got into a studio and we created the song – and that became the title track.”

But what other songs feature in Wild Cherry? Read on to find out.

Wild Cherry soundtrack: What songs feature in the BBC drama?

Grace (Imogen Faires) and Allegra (Amelia May) in Wild Cherry. BBC/Firebird Pictures/Natalie Seery

Episode 1

  • Baby I’m Yours – Cass Elliot
  • Where do we go now? – Gracie Abrams
  • Favourite Kind of Girl – Gotts Street Park (featuring Flikka)
  • They – Jem
  • Never Ever – All Saints
  • Radiance – Agent Whiskers
  • The Drive – Everyone You Know
  • Talkin the Hardest – Giggs
  • Immaculate – Shygirl & Saweetie
  • Decisions – Knucks, M1llionz & Shae Universe
  • Genesis. – RAYE
  • Fuel to Fire – Agnes Obel

Episode 2

  • Manifestation Manifesto – Lava La Rue
  • Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand) – Irma Thomas
  • Werewolf – Cat Power

Episode 3

  • Little Bit – Lykke Li
  • A Little Respect – Erasure
  • Sprinter – Dave & Central Cee
  • Colors – Black Pumas
Tara Webb as Noori Abas, Amelia May as Allegra Lonsdale, Imogen Faires as Grace Gibbons & Isabelle Allen as Jocasta in Wild Cherry all sitting together on a stoop.

Tara Webb as Noori Abas, Amelia May as Allegra Lonsdale, Imogen Faires as Grace Gibbons & Isabelle Allen as Jocasta in Wild Cherry. BBC/Firebird Pictures/Natalie Seery

Episode 4

  • In Your Arms – Someone & Tessa Rose Jackson
  • We, The Drowned – Lisa Hannigan

Episode 5

  • Wannabe – Spice Girls
  • Clouds – Jordan Rakei

Episode 6

  • Evergreen – Ritchy Mitch & The Coal Miners (featuring Caamp)
  • Colours out of Grey – Anders Lewén & James King
  • The Whirlwind – Alex Wilson
  • Free Yourself – Jessie Ware
  • Floating on a Moment – Beth Gibbons

Wild Cherry premieres on BBC One and BBC iPlayer on Friday 15th November.

Add Wild Cherry to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

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.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Diane Farr as Sharon Leone, Max Thieriot as Bode Leone, Jordan Calloway as Jake Crawford, and Kevin Alejandro as Manny Perez —
TV & Streaming

Ruby Wrote Note to Vince

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The November 14 episode of Fire Country features Manny stepping in as Station 42’s new battalion chief, causing tension with Sharon over leadership changes.
  • Bode and Sharon finally share their secrets, with Bode revealing the blackmail note and Sharon disclosing the ATF’s suspicion that Vince’s death was arson.
  • The episode ends with Sharon revealing that she knows who sent Vince that note.

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Fire Country Season 4 Episode 5 “Happy First Day, Manny.”]

There’s quite a bit to enjoy in the Friday, November 14, episode of Fire Country. Station 42’s new battalion chief is keeping it in the family with Manny (Kevin Alejandro) filling in the spot left open with Vince’s death. We even like that he and Sharon (Diane Farr) clash over changes he’s making (the coffee!) and who’s in charge during a call. Eve (Jules Latimer) comes up with a plan involving chickens to help build up Three Rock again. W. Earl Brown brings Wes Fox over from Sheriff Country, for some family time with Sharon and Bode (Max Thieriot). And speaking of those Leones, mother and son finally talk, sharing what they’ve been keeping from one another.

Now that Jake (Jordan Calloway) has told Bode about the note blackmailing Vince from an R, whom he and Eve think is his ex, Renee (Constance Zimmer), he wants him to tell his mom. But instead, Bode decides to search the house and finds a PO Box key. He hides it from her, but Sharon’s also keeping something from him: the fact that ATF thinks someone deliberately set the fire that led to his dad’s death. As she explains to Manny, she doesn’t want to tell Bode something that will unleash an anger in him.

Eve, meanwhile, pushes Jake to tell Bode to tell his mom, but the captain doesn’t want to ruin the fact that they’ve just gotten back onto speaking terms (after Bode blamed Jake for keeping him from going back into the fire that killed his dad). But it does come up on their way to a call, with Jake testing the waters in pointing out that Vince was a great man but nobody’s perfect; Bode refuses to even acknowledge the possibility of Vince having an affair since he worshipped Sharon.

During the course of responding to a fire at the drive-in, Bode can see something’s going on with Sharon and Manny and his mom is hiding something, and Jake calls him out on the irony of it. He finally tells Bode that he needs to tell Sharon. Eve agrees. And when Bode clues in Wes on the situation, Sharon’s stepfather agrees with Jake to tell his mom, play offense, and use his whole “team,” including Sharon and his friend. Good ones tell you what you don’t want to hear, Wes reminds Bode.

And so when Jake gets home, it’s to Bode moving back in. He also didn’t check out the PO Box, agreeing that his father wasn’t perfect and had his secrets. He then heads to his mom’s to tell her about it. But first, Sharon tells him about the ATF investigation and makes sure he knows he can’t go all vigilante. Then, Bode shows her the note. But Sharon assures him Vince wasn’t having an affair. Rather, the fact that “she” would extort him for money and he’d get into this position with her … So, who’s she? “She’s my mother,” Sharon reveals, teeing up Christine Lahti‘s debut as Ruby in the November 21 episode.

What did you think of the latest episode? What do you think of that tease about Sharon’s mom? Let us know in the comments section below.

Fire Country, Fridays, 9/8c, CBS

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Josh O'Connor Copes with Wildfire in Timely Drama
TV & Streaming

Josh O’Connor Copes with Wildfire in Timely Drama

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Editor’s Note: This review was originally published during the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Bleecker Street opens “Rebuilding” on November 14.

Loath as I am to label anything as “the movie people need right now,” it’s hard to think of Max Walker-Silverman’s “Rebuilding” in any other terms at the moment. A spare but deeply felt sketch of a drama about a divorced Colorado rancher (a hangdog Josh O’Connor) trying to make sense of what he’s got left in the wake of a devastating wildfire, the story is every bit as gentle as the rest of Walker-Silverman’s work (i.e. 2022’s “A Love Song”), and yet still honest enough to reckon with the heartache of losing one’s home. In fact, it’s only because “Rebuilding” is so raw in its pain that it’s able to resolve into such an effectively comforting balm; the film begins with generations of memory smoldering into 1,000 acres of scorched earth, and from the ashes rescues a new foundation on which its characters might credibly be able to create the next iteration of their lives. 

FRANKENSTEIN, Mia Goth, 2025. ph: Ken Woroner / © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection

The rancher is a man called Dusty — at least, that’s what he’s taken to calling himself. Makes him feel like more of a cowboy than “Thomas,” I guess. His grandparents built the cattle ranch where he lived before the fires, the one with the great view and the bright blue barn smack in the middle. There was a time when Dusty’s ex-wife Ruby (Meghann Fahy) and their young daughter Callie-Rose (Australian newcomer Lily LaTorre, a wonderful find) lived there too, but that’s been over for a while now.

Ruby claims that he “didn’t apply himself,” but I suspect that Dusty just didn’t apply himself enough to her and Callie-Rose; to judge by the silent anguish that sinks across O’Connor’s face at the cattle auction that opens the film, Dusty certainly seems to have been invested in his livestock. You can all but see the life seeping out of him — or a life seeping out of him, anyway. “Can you even be a cowboy without cows?,” someone asks. Dusty isn’t so sure. 

Even worse: He doesn’t have the slightest clue what else he might be. Dusty is so married to a certain image of himself that his first thought after the fire is to take a part-time ranching job a few states away. Ruby and Callie-Rose live the next town over from where Dusty’s ranch once stood, but it seems like being close to his daughter isn’t a crucial part of his self-identity — or to the family legacy he’s dedicated himself to continuing. 

That will gradually begin to change as Dusty mourns what he’s lost forever and takes stock of what he’s still got left. “You get what you get” is a common refrain, a motto of sorts for Ruby’s live-in mother (Amy Madigan, lovely in a role that proves a bit too convenient for such a naturalistic script), and Dusty spends most of this movie trying to understand his portion. 

It doesn’t come easy to him. He moves into a trailer park on a FEMA campsite with roughly a dozen other people who lost their houses in the fire (some of whom lost a lot more than that), and yet none of Dusty’s new neighbors seem quite as paralyzed by the whole ordeal. Not even Mila (an eminently believable Kali Reis), whose husband ran into the flames and never came out. 

Don’t hold your breath for him to show up at a pivotal moment — it’s clear from the opening twangs of Jake Xerxes Fussell’s tender acoustic score that “Rebuilding” won’t be as action-packed as its title implies. Some movies are verbs; this one is self-evidently a noun. Walker-Silverman prefers to express his characters through texture rather than incident, and while it would be patently false to say that nothing “happens” in his latest feature (not in a film where we repeatedly get to see Josh O’Connor work as a crossing guard for buffalo!), the story it tells is best defined by what doesn’t. 

Dusty doesn’t get a loan to rebuild the ranch, as the land won’t be farmable for at least the next 10 years. He doesn’t interfere with Ruby’s current relationship, or do anything to rewind the clock back to when they were married. He doesn’t even unpack the cardboard boxes in his trailer, as he just can’t bring himself to accept that all of this isn’t reversible somehow. Home is supposed to be forever — that’s what makes it home. Even if you move, it’s supposed to still be there.

But as Dusty begins to spend more time with Callie-Rose — often sitting in the parking lot of the local library so they can siphon its wifi signal — and forging generous friendships with the rest of the displaced people in the trailer park (played by a warm and memorable collection of non-professional actors, including Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings musician Binky Griptite), “Rebuilding” accrues a lasting power from all of the impermanence that it collects along the way. Even the film’s most schematic moments make it feel as though Walker-Silverman is simply unearthing something that was already there. 

Madigan’s character spends most of her time reminding Dusty of what he’s forgotten, and to introduce trenchant details he may not have known. It’s because of her that Dusty has reason to reflect on his grandparents, who only created the “forever home” he’s so determined to rebuild because they left Ireland and started over themselves. And, in a particularly egregious scene that manages to survive on the strength of its thematic weight, it’s because of her that Dusty is convinced that memory can be a legacy all its own — one that can be re-seeded even when it feels like nothing else will ever take root again. 

“Rebuilding” contains a number of crucial moments that might seem especially contrived in a film where everything else is so unforced, but O’Connor’s implosive performance helps keep everything grounded to the earth. While Fahy is tasked with most of the capital “A” Acting here (a task she pulls off without a false note), O’Connor can be found in virtually every frame, often staring at the dirt or squinting at the horizon. There are times when it feels like Dusty is little more than a cowboy hat in search of a character, but O’Connor’s marble-mouthed uncertainty reflects Dusty’s resistance to change. It’s as if the guy is so unwilling to imagine a different future than the one he first envisioned that he can’t even get through a sentence if he doesn’t have the whole thing mapped out in advance.

O’Connor can do more with a slight shake of his head than some actors could with an entire Shakespearean monologue, and “Rebuilding” is never more nuanced or humane than when you can feel Dusty retreating from Mila and the other kind souls in the FEMA park, afraid that every step he took forward would take him that much further away from going back. 

But Callie-Rose can’t help but push against that idea, if only because raising a child — if we can call it that — is its own form of rebuilding. And while Dusty isn’t the type to admit this out loud, watching his daughter make new friends and lose precious things of her own inevitably has a profound effect on him. 

The fact is that life is nothing more than a constant series of endings and beginnings; change is the only constant, cliched as that might sound, and while “Rebuilding” stops well short of asking its characters to be grateful for their misfortune, a lasting sense of hope emerges from the opportunity they’re given to re-imagine what home could mean.

How do you build something that lasts in a world where climate change can, has, and will continue to wipe centuries of history right off the map? When the threat of another tragic wildfire is not a matter of “if,” but “when?” “It’s funny,” someone says, “the things you pack and the things you leave.” This quietly affecting little movie finds real poignancy in paying attention to what those things are, and — ultimately — in forging them together so that someone else might have the gift of mourning these ruins one day.

Grade: B+

“Rebuilding” premiered at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival. Bleecker Street opens the film Friday, November 14.

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.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Egypt Seeks More Foreign Shoots
TV & Streaming

Egypt Seeks More Foreign Shoots

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The Egypt Film Commission aims to increase foreign shoots in Egypt, in the wake of recent high-profile productions, including Guy Ritchie’s “Fountain of Youth,” shot at the Giza Pyramids, Neil Burger’s espionage thriller “Inheritance,” shot in Cairo, Jon M. Chu’s “Wicked: For Good,” and Mr Beast’s online video, “I Spent 100 Hours Inside the Pyramids.”

Line production in Egypt for these projects was handled by ASAP Productions, Hama Film Productions, Misr International Films and Filmedia LLC, respectively.

ASAP Productions also serviced part of season one of the Paramount series “The Agency,” which filmed in Cairo in 2024, and the company’s executive producer, Amin El Masr, says he is actively seeking new productions.

Filmedia serviced “Wicked: For Good,” with a four-day shoot in Egypt’s White Desert National Park and previously line produced part of the prologue for Colin Trevorrow’s “Jurassic World: Dominion” in 2020, overseen by VFX supervisor, Pablo Helman.

“We’re immensely grateful to Universal for their continued trust and support,” says Ahmed Kardous, Filmedia’s CEO and co-founder, adding that he is currently in discussions on several international projects.

The EFC secured special access to the Giza Pyramids for Mr Beast’s 21-minute internet show, which clocked up 43 million views in its first 24 hours and generated over 200 million views on YouTube.

Since its launch in 2019, the EFC has assisted over 90 international productions. “This momentum reflects the country’s unparalleled historical landscapes, diverse urban backdrops, and highly capable production services,” says Ahmed Badawi, EFC’s managing director.

“A growing number of production companies from the United States, as well as leading studios and independent producers from Italy, India, China, Kuwait, and other countries across Europe, Asia, and the Gulf region, have expressed strong interest in filming here. This reflects Egypt’s unique combination of cinematic landscapes, world-renowned heritage sites, experienced local crews, and our competitive facilitation environment.”

The EFC’s activity is set against a broader government strategy to augment international awareness of Egypt’s cultural assets, encompassing recent initatives such as the opening of the $1 billion megaproject, the Grand Egyptian Museum.

The EFC is a subsidiary of the Egyptian Media Production City, which was founded 25 years ago, and covers an area of 2 million square meters (12.5 million square feet). It is considered to be the largest media and production entity in the Middle East, including sound studios and extensive backlots.

The EMPC offers a 30% cashback scheme for eligible on-site expenditure in its facilities and services. Badawi says that the EFC is currently in active discussion with relevant government authorities to introduce new broader production incentives for off-site and location-based spending in the country.

The EFC positions itself as a one-stop shop for filming in Egypt, including facilitating shooting permits and liaising with local line producers.

Other recent international shoots include Barbara Schulz’s “Treasure Hunters: On the Tracks of Khufu,” part of the climate change documentary “Groundswell,” and part of the Belgian eight-episode crime caper series “The Big Fuck-Up,” starring Willem De Schryver and directed by Wim Geudens.

To reeinforce collaboration with Asian and African film markets the EFC recently signed Memorandums of Understandings with China’s Ory Group and the African Film Finance Forum, with the stated goal of strengthening Egypt’s positioning as a central hub for regional co-productions. The EFC also met with India’s Joint secretary minister of information, and United Media Services in March 2025, to discuss how to enhance media and film collaboration between Egypt and India.

Recent productions from Asia include Korean TV show “Hit and Miss Tour 3,” and Chinese film “Welcome to Dragon Restaurant,” by Wen Muye (“Dying to Survive”).

As part of its campaign to attract foreign productions, in Cannes this year the EFC teamed up with Cairo Intl. Film Festival and El Gouna Film Festival to present a unified Egyptian Pavilion, and went on to win the Best Pavilion Design Award.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Vicki Gunvalson Returning To 'The Real Housewives Of Orange County' Season 20
TV & Streaming

Vicki Gunvalson Returning To ‘The Real Housewives Of Orange County’ Season 20

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Vicki Gunvalson is officially returning to The Real Housewives of Orange County as a full-time housewife.

It was during the taping of The Bravos amid BravoCon in Las Vegas that Andy Cohen presented Gunvalson with her orange.

”Vicki, would you join us as a housewife for Season 20?” Cohen asked Gunvalson on stage.

Gunvalson got emotional when Cohen handed her the orange while accepting to return to RHOC.

Deadline understands that no deal has been finalized yet but the offer is now on the table to start negotiations.

The OG of the OC will be returning for the epic Season 20. It was RHOC that started the franchise, which gave way to The Real Housewives franchise, expanding to other cities, including New York City, Atlanta, Potomac, Beverly Hills, Dubai, Miami, Salt Lake City, and more.

Gunvalson had been honored with the Wifetime Achievement Award at The Bravos in 2023, and many believed that was her farewell from the Bravo universe. However, the honor of holding an orange again as a full-time housewife to celebrate 20 years of the franchise proved that Gunvalson remains an icon.

RHOC premiered on Bravo in 2006, and Gunvalson quickly became a fan-favorite for her outrageous personality and her ability to “Whoop it up” at Andale’s in Puerto Vallarta, or any of the cast’s trips. She remained a full-time housewife for 13 seasons before being downgraded to a “friend of” role in Season 14. Gunvalson has continued to make guest appearances, but it will be in Season 20 where viewers will get to see her full-time return to the franchise.

RELATED: Jeff Lewis Set For Bravo Return With ‘Still Flipping Out’ Series

Gunvalson’s return comes as she and fellow RHOC co-star Tamra Judge appear to have reconciled following a feud that played out in the media and on social media. Judge had been estranged from Gunvalson and Shannon Beador, and Season 20 of the series will surely chronicle how the “Tres Amigas” will hash out their differences and get the trip back together.

RELATED: BravoCon 2025 Cast Photos: All The Stars Confirmed For Fan Event

The RHOC cast from Season 19 includes Tamra Judge, Shannon Beador, Heather Dubrow, Gina Kirschenheiter, Emily Simpson, Jennifer Pedranti, and Katie Ginella. Gretchen Rossi appeared as a friend of in the latest season.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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How Will 'Golden Bachelor' Couple Defy the Odds?
TV & Streaming

How Will ‘Golden Bachelor’ Couple Defy the Odds?

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Finding love on reality TV isn’t easy — and neither is sustaining a long-term relationship once the cameras stop rolling. After wrapping the second season of ABC’s The Golden Bachelor, star Mel Owens and his winner, Peg Munson, say they aren’t looking to the couples before them for a roadmap.

“I don’t know about the others who came before us. I’m not worried about them. I’m worried about us,” Owens told The Hollywood Reporter one day after revealing the ending to his season during the live After the Final Rose finale special — that he picked Peg and that they remain together, though not engaged.

The first Golden Bachelor in the reality dating franchise, Gerry Turner, was in Owens’ live finale audience — but he was there with the fiancée he met after the show; his estranged ex, Theresa Nist, was also in attendance, though she noticeably kept her distance following back-and-forth allegations exchanged in the press.

“It’s a tough way to progress after the show, because I’ve only known her [Peg] for a few weeks before the show stopped filming. Now I’m getting to know her, and this is the first time we’re really together for a sustained time and out,” Owens explains. He and Munson finished filming their season three months prior and have been carrying out their relationship in hiding ever since. “When you’re sequestered in your home and you can’t leave, it’s tough to be real. You get to know each other better, but it’s tough,” he admits. “Our understanding 1763190927 is going to be to be together and grow.”

Before Owens even made his debut on ABC‘s senior-aged spinoff series of The Bachelor, the 66-year-old former NFL-player-turned-lawyer had to atone for some off-putting comments he made on a podcast shortly before filming began. The first night of his season featured his group of 60-and-over female contestants taking him to task for saying on that podcast that if the women are “60 or over, I’m cutting them.” He had said, “This is not The Silver Bachelor, this is The Golden Bachelor.”

But he apologized. The women forgave him, and then several of them fell for Owens, including runner-up Cindy Cullers, who self-eliminated before her Fantasy Suite overnight date because Owens said he wasn’t ready to propose by the end of the show.

“My whole thing [on the show] was that it has to happen naturally. It’s gonna take some time. I’m not gonna force anything, because I don’t have to force anything,” he says, standing by his stance that his goal at the end of the Golden Bachelor wasn’t a proposal. “Peg was on the same page all along. When we were in the Fantasy Suite, we spoke about it, and I went, ‘Wow, she’s on the same page.’ We’re going to write our own story when we want and whenever we want.”

Munson jumps in, adding to THR, “We’re not looking for a quick fix. We’re not looking for a quick marriage. We’re not looking for the quick proposal. As I said throughout the entire show, I’m not looking for the fireworks — they fizzle out. I’m looking for the fireplace. You refuel that fireplace and you get a beautiful, slow burn for the rest of our lives, and that’s what we want. We want that mature, sustainable relationship.”

Mel Owens with his winner, Peg, during the Golden Bachelor live finale as host Jesse Palmer looks on.

Disney/John Fleenor

Instead of promising forever, Owens gave Munson a promise ring. What that gesture means now to Munson, a 62-year-old retired firefighter and bomb tech from Las Vegas, is that they get to “continue to write our own love story.”

“Being in our 60s, it’s nice that we get the prerogative to do that,” she says. “As you grow older, you realize that’s something we’ve earned the right to do.”

Turning back to Cullers, Owens says “she had her own idea about what she wanted out of the show, and she wanted to be married off the island. She said it numerous times: ‘Til death do us part. I’m gonna be hand in hand, ring on my finger.’ She wanted to be married. That was her endgame. That wasn’t my endgame. My endgame is to find somebody and to understand them and have a life with them and grow slowly, like Peg said. Cindy wanted to be married. And I wasn’t going to tell her something that I didn’t hold true in my heart.”

Munson insists that the Owens she knows is “not afraid of commitment. He loves marriage. He loves commitment,” she says. “He just wasn’t ready to commit to her at that moment. We both want something sustainable. We want something long term, therefore, let’s take it slow. I know I felt love for him. He felt love for me. We get to write our own love story at this age, and that’s the cool part of it.”

Next up in the Bachelor franchise will be The Bachelorette (not the network’s usual winter staple, The Bachelor) for season 22 with Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star Taylor Frankie Paul in the title role, premiering March 22. The Golden Bachelor franchise has yet to be officially renewed, but both Owens and Munson put forth Debbie Siebers as their pick to be the next Golden Bachelorette (“If I was casting, that’s my No. 1 choice,” says Owens of his ex-contestant), while Munson has advice for the producers for a third season of The Golden Bachelor.

“Let things happen more naturally instead of pushing it,” she says of the reality dating process, which filmed for six weeks. “If there’s a connection, there’s going to be a connection. You can’t force things. I think there would be a lot more success stories if there was just a little more room to breathe. I know the more I was pushed, the more defenses I had up. I was having feelings for him, and my heart was opening up to him, but sometimes I felt pushed, and I’m like, ‘You guys, just give me a minute here. Let me breathe. Let me process this.’”

She continues, “Because you’re dealing with something very fragile, and that’s people’s hearts. Nobody wants to get their heart broken. At this age, a lot of us have had our hearts broken not once but twice or maybe three times. Let’s back up and give us time. I think they would get a lot more authenticity and connection if they did that.”

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Who won Big Brother 2025? Winner revealed after grand final
TV & Streaming

Who won Big Brother 2025? Winner revealed after grand final

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Big Brother 2025 has now come to the end – with one housemate coming out on top as the winner.

Six contestants made it to the final: Cameron, Elsa, Emily, Jenny, Richard and Tate were all hoping to become the show’s latest champion and walk away with the life-changing cash prize of £100,000.

Tate was the first to be eliminated followed by Emily and Cameron. Jenny then finished third, leaving Elsa and Richard as the final two contestants in the house.

Ultimately it was Richard who was announced as the winner of Big Brother 2025.

This is the third season of Big Brother since it arrived on ITV. Since 2023, the Big Brother brand has now surpassed 150 million streams on ITVX.

Richard now joins the hall of fame of ITV Big Brother winners which already includes the likes of Ali Bromley who won last year and Jordan Sangha who won the first season of the reboot in 2023. There have also been two celebrity iterations of the show which saw TV personality David Potts win in 2024 and Coronation Street actor Jack P Shepherd take the crown earlier this year.

This year’s finalists were confirmed after a season full of twists, turns and shocking eliminations.

Early on, housemate George Gilbert was removed for “repeated use of unacceptable language and behaviour” and the show then introduced one of it’s most shocking twists yet with a fake elimination where it brought back two previous housemates. More recently, viewers were left stunned after fan favourite Zeelah was eliminated after failing to secure enough of the public vote.

This left Richard as the favourite to win after his hilarious outburst in the diary room following his “nemesis” Caroline’s eviction, the two having been at odds for their entire six weeks in the house.

It has not yet been confirmed whether Big Brother or Celebrity Big Brother will return for new seasons in 2026.

Big Brother is available to stream on ITVX.

Add Big Brother to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

Check out more of our Entertainment 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.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Sonequa Martin-Green and Donnie Wahlberg in
TV & Streaming

What Happened in Episode 5?

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Boston Blue Season 1 Episode 5 explores parental responsibility and generational trauma.
  • Danny Reagan and Lena Silver attempt to solve the infamous Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum art heist, uncovering family secrets but leaving the decades-old case unresolved.
  • The theme of parent-child connection runs throughout, with Danny and his son Sean working to bridge their emotional distance.

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Boston Blue Season 1 Episode 5, “Suffer the Children.”]

Parents taking responsibility for their children was the name of the game in Boston Blue‘s fifth episode. “Suffer the Children” aired on Friday, November 14, on CBS, and it showed different sets of parents intertwined into one storyline, intended to make the characters and viewers question how culpable parents are for the state of their families. The answer was more than Danny Reagan (Boston native Donnie Wahlberg) could admit at first, but Sarah Silver (Maggie Lawson) was on a mission to prove that a dangerous teen’s parents were at fault for their son’s crimes in the Blue Bloods spinoff. The episode also addressed a famous Boston art heist that’s been unsolved for 35 years.

The episode began violently, with teenagers being killed in a shooting at a yogurt shop. Sarah eventually connected the dots to a teen named Kyle, whose parents were “responsible gun owners.” They taught their kid how to use a gun safely at a shooting range and kept their weapon locked up at home, but they failed to do enough to address their son’s mental health struggles that resulted in violence. Danny and the law said that the parents aren’t responsible for the murders when they were responsible gun owners. He used his late wife, Linda, as an example.

At the Silver family Shabbat dinner, Danny argued that he, as a detective, wanted to teach his sons how to safely use a firearm. Linda, however, didn’t, because she didn’t want her sons using the weapons at all. He posed a hypothetical question: If Sean Reagan (Mika Amonsen) or his brother, Jack, were to commit a serious crime with that firearm, should Linda be held responsible for not teaching them gun safety?

It was more complicated and insidious with Kyle’s family. Sarah proved that his parents knew he was prescribed a medication intended to help decrease the symptoms that triggered Kyle’s violence. She also proved that they knew he wasn’t taking the medication and that they didn’t do enough to address his increasingly concerning behavior. They were arrested for involuntary manslaughter, and the son was sent to jail as well.

Connecting with your children was a big theme of the episode. Danny, who’s been living with Sean in Boston so far, has been struggling to connect with his son. And the proximity of living together had raised tensions between them, making Sean distant, disinterested in bonding, and displeased at his dad’s attempts to connect.

While on a case with Jonah (Marcus Scribner), Sean encountered an elderly man experiencing dementia-like symptoms who needed help reconnecting with his son, not just because he was lonely living on his own, but also because of the safety hazards caused by his memory issues. Danny, meanwhile, was on a case with new partner Lena Silver (Sonequa Martin-Green) about a legendary Boston art heist at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

In March 1990, 13 works of art were stolen from the museum. Lena told Danny in the episode that every once in a while, they’ll get people claiming to have a lead about the paintings. Most of the time, it’s a prank, but this time, it might have actually been real. The man who came to the precinct left before filing a report, and he wound up dead later. It was his own family that got him killed, all in the name of keeping the stolen paintings stolen.

The episode offered up its own version of the real supposed art thief, who said he’s been living his everyday-man life for 35 years and nothing could stop him now. The heist remained unsolved at the end.

John Medland / CBS

A daughter not knowing that her family was connected to this infamous theft brought up Lena’s complicated feelings about her own biological father, whom she’s never met.

Lena revealed to Danny that she once dreamed of studying art in college, and she had a talent for it. But she decided against that life because her mother, Mae (Gloria Reuben), didn’t have any artistic talent, leading young Lena to believe it was a trait she inherited from her absent father. She wanted to distance herself from that, but adult Lena regrets having unanswered questions about him.

These cases made Danny and Sean realize the importance of getting past the problems that made them distant and finding new ways to connect. They got started by beginning a new tradition of Sean introducing Danny to all of the Marvel movies, starting with The Avengers. There was no mention of Danny’s father, Frank Reagan (Tom Selleck), in the episode, but he’s been referenced a couple of times in the spinoff so far.

Fun fact: This isn’t the first time in recent TV seasons that this art heist has been referenced. One of the stolen paintings from the Gardner Museum is Rembrandt’s “Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee.” That painting is hanging in the background of the Dubai penthouse apartment in AMC‘s Interview With the Vampire. Lena, get Daniel Molloy on the phone — he’s an eyewitness!

Boston Blue, Fridays, 10/9c, CBS

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Why Oz Perkins' Movies Keep Getting Worse at Neon
TV & Streaming

Why Oz Perkins’ Movies Keep Getting Worse at Neon

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Don’t cry, Neon. It’s not all Oz Perkins’ fault that “Keeper” is getting such nasty reviews. This mess of a horror movie and its director’s mystifying track record in the genre is your doing, too!

Starring the ever-incredible Tatiana Maslany in a stew of baffling choices, Perkins’ third feature at Neon has its fans — but it’s damned by faint praise with 67 percent on Rotten Tomatoes (low for the generally positive platform) and 52 percent on Metacritic, which doesn’t bode well for opening weekend.

“Keeper” hits theaters today and it’s projected to be Perkins’ least lucrative film yet. Yes, the single-location haunted house story cost a lot less to make than his earlier “Longlegs” and “The Monkey.” But diminishing returns and precipitous reputation decline suggest the oddball filmmaker, whom a lot of indie folks seem to like personally, has been hurt by bad marketing.

Arco

Coming Up Short After “Longlegs”

Anyone who has survived a rocky relationship knows the road to hell is paved with good intentions, and there’s no question Neon pushed the auteur trajectory for Perkins in hopes of providing a foothold in horror. After acquiring “Longlegs” on the 2023 European Film Market, the studio ripped a hyperbolic marketing strategy straight from the 1970s that, for good or bad, totally worked. Despite Nicolas Cage’s impressive transformation into a supernatural killer of children, and Maika Monroe’s wide audience of fans and reigning status as a scream queen, the FBI procedural didn’t have the goods to be one of the “scariest” movies ever made. Not even close.

LONGLEGS, front, from left: Blair Underwood, director Oz Perkins, Maika Monroe, on set, 2024. ph: Asterios Moutsokapas /© Neon / Courtesy Everett Collection
Blair Underwood, Oz Perkins, Maika Monroe on set for ‘Longlegs’ Courtesy Everett Collection

Paired with a cryptic ad campaign that was fun to see but oversold the terror, “Longlegs” got as far as it did on Neon’s insistence that Perkins’ debut title at the studio wasn’t just “good” but revolutionary. That insulted many of the more intense genre-heads online. It also created a false impression for moviegoers unfamiliar with their horror history, inadvertently setting up Perkins for the eyerolls he’s enduring from seasoned cinephiles (as well as newbies) now. “Longlegs” made $127.9 million in global ticket sales, again proving that clear messaging is key when you want to put butts in seats. But you can’t rip off the ad campaign for “The Exorcist” twice — certainly not for the same guy — and Neon hasn’t been able to figure out what story they’re telling with Perkins since.

Marketing That Put “The Monkey” on Perkins’ Back

There’s no question “Longlegs” is still Perkins’ best film, but when the director delivered “The Monkey” earlier this year Neon made a mess of the movie’s campaign. Quality filmmaking has to take over for buzz eventually, and “The Monkey” has demonstrable flaws. It’s a junk drawer of darkly comic ridiculousness based on a Stephen King story but Perkins’ decidedly original approach — and his first film with future “Keeper” star Maslany — deserved a smarter playbook. Neon got what it wanted then, but it’s partly why Perkins is in trouble today.

“The Monkey” made $68.9 million worldwide, riding the reputation of “Longlegs” to set up Perkins’ next film as proper “event horror.” Tons of moviegoers who didn’t consider themselves outright scary movie “fans” got into the genre because of “Longlegs,” and Perkins’ impressive production speed gave them a new project in less than a year. Both box office and critical reception declined. “Longlegs” stands at 86 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and a 3.3 rating on Letterboxd, while “The Monkey” has a 77 percent and a 2.7 rating — good enough but not great.

Many legendary horror directors struggled to get audiences to appreciate their lighter side in sophomore features; see Sam Raimi, Wes Craven, and Tobe Hooper, for starters. Neon decided to push “The Monkey” on the basis that it was not a scarier answer to “Longlegs” but an extraordinarily violent one.

THE MONKEY, from left: Theo James, director Osgood Perkins, on set, 2025. ph: Asterios Moutsokapas / © Neon / Courtesy Everett Collection
Theo James and Oz Perkins on the set of ‘The Monkey’Courtesy Everett Collection

Skip Genre History Class? Fail Basic Psychology

“The Monkey” campaign ultimately undermined the credit Neon deserved for their part in “Longlegs.” During the first film’s rollout, the studio built public suspense by showing real restraint with the assets they shared. The “Longlegs” trailer didn’t reveal much and by splashing cryptic clues across billboards, posters, and marquees they made their money through intrigue.

“The Monkey” took the opposite tactic. Armed with its “Longlegs” association, the trailer racked up more than 100 million views on YouTube in three days. But when TV stations refused to air the only marginally violent material without edits, Neon spun that response to suggest an audacity in Perkins’ movie that wasn’t there. By law, the level of gore and violence on social media can’t always play on primetime TV. But that doesn’t make every movie with promo materials rejected by major networks more extreme than other movies.

Still, Neon presented fairly normal rejection emails as a declaration of war “The Monkey” couldn’t wage. They shared redacted screenshots of their failed marketing efforts as evidence from a pop-culture crime scene. Positioning “The Monkey” as outrageously controversial and ultraviolent put even more pressure on Perkins’ second film and let down a big chunk of his audience.

Then, there was “Keeper.”

Sure You Want to Use an Eli Roth Quote Right… Now?

After “Longlegs,” Perkins was viewed as a horror legend in the making. The son of “Psycho” star Anthony Perkins, he gave a series of tender interviews that reflected the considerable heart and thought he put into the film. Some more aggressive “Longlegs” critics softened their assessments when they understood that emotional context (myself included), also remembering Perkins-the-director as the quietly lovable actor they met in the background of all-time greats like “Legally Blonde” and “Secretary.” They chose to root for him.

That’s what makes the bone-headed move Neon pulled days before “Keeper” came out so maddening. Poster quotes can come from almost anywhere: professional film journalists, social media influencers, and even the random Letterboxd user. Hell, studios have used out-of-context quote pulls for more than a century. But if you’re going to borrow credibility from another filmmaker, it’s worth being more careful than Neon was in connecting “Keeper” to Eli Roth.

The director of the horror classic “Hostel” and recent slasher hit “Thanksgiving” appears in the latest teaser for Perkins’ new nightmare, praising it as “like a surreal David Lynch movie.” To be fair, Lynch served as an executive producer on Roth’s “Cabin Fever,” and Roth has often described Lynch as one of his biggest mentors. Still, calling something a “surreal David Lynch movie” is more than redundant.

Despite his schismatic professional history and provocative approach to discussing Israel and Palestine online (when activist Greta Thunberg was detained amid aid efforts to Gaza, the filmmaker posted on Instagram, “She needs to be eaten by cannibals”), Roth is networking more visibly to promote his own indie genre label, The Horror Section. It makes sense that Roth would want to be associated with Perkins after “Longlegs,” but that quote wouldn’t have gotten a fraction of the scrutiny if it weren’t attributed to Roth. Running his flattened assessment of Perkins’ work alongside sentiments from Guillermo del Toro and Bong Joon Ho created a viral meme with a stronger message at the wrong time.

Trust One Director, or Annoy Every Audience?

Full disclosure: While “Keeper” is an opaque arthouse effort that might work for someone, it’s one I genuinely detested. Walking into a press screening of the film earlier this week in Los Angeles, other horror critics mentioned the Roth/Lynch snafu, and those same conversations — now with specific complaints about the movie! — continued on the way out.

I tried to put the debacle aside when I gave Perkins’ latest a “D+” review. In fact, I looked for something nice to say about “Keeper” precisely because Neon was letting Perkins do something different. But heading into opening weekend, the embattled director should consider if the studio “gets” him at all.

Of the three movies Perkins has made at Neon, all in the last 16 months, “Keeper” is projected to earn the least but also cost the least. That means the first-look deal Perkins signed earlier this year — giving Neon right of first refusal for all of his projects, including the upcoming “The Young People” in 2026, set to star Nicole Kidman — is still working out for them. Consciously or not, the risky strategy that put money in the bank on “Longlegs” and “The Monkey” could tank “Keeper.”

KEEPER, from left: Tatiana Maslany, Rossif Sutherland, 2025. © Neon / Courtesy Everett Collection
Tatiana Maslany and Rossif Sutherland in ‘Keeper’Courtesy Everett Collection

The creative partners have at least one more film to make and they could turn things around. That said, Perkins made other movies before he signed with Neon and he has plenty of serious cinephiles still rooting for him elsewhere. Best to finish out this contract and move on.

From Neon, Oz Perkins’ “Keeper” is in theaters now.

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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