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'Honey Bunch' Review: TIFF Retro Thriller
TV & Streaming

‘Honey Bunch’ Review: TIFF Retro Thriller

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Like “The Shining,” Dusty Mancinelli and Madeleine Sims-Fewer’s “Honey Bunch” begins with its characters heading deep into a rural countryside that immediately suggests isolation from the wider world. Its central couple, Homer (Ben Petrie) and Diana (Grace Glowicki), are en route to an experimental therapy institute where they hope the latter’s memory and motor control lapses from a bad car accident might be healed.

No sooner does the pair arrive at this backwoods facility than the film adopts the aesthetic of throwback ‘70s madhouse thrillers like Gore Verbinski’s “A Cure for Wellness” and Peter Strickland’s neo-gialli. Homer and Diana emerge from their car to a disembodied POV shot gazing down at them from a window and slowly zooming in with surveilling paranoia. One of the institute’s medical personnel, Farah (Kate Dickie), greets them with the kind of clinical cordiality that undercuts its outwardly soothing welcome with unnerving detachment.

'The Fence'

For the film’s first hour, “Honey Bunch” moves at a deliberate crawl, sinking into the simultaneously soothing and alienating qualities of the baroque manor that the institute repurposed into a therapy center. Slow pans and zooms take in large hallways within and ample grounds surrounding the building, the placating pace not quite disguising the subtle emphasis on the center’s total isolation from the outside world and the many places within its walls where it might hide secrets. Rooms are filmed in golden hues of sunlight beaming through windows, rendering everything in a bright, gossamer haze that prefigures Diana’s increasingly fraught visions of recovered memories and other, less personal hallucinations of mysterious, distorted figures in various states of illness who haunt the corridors and parlors of the vast estate.

While these unsettling details accumulate, the actors use the time to build their characters out from simple genre types to more complicated human beings. Glowicki initially has little to do as Diana other than to struggle through therapy sessions involving hypnosis and other techniques, but as Diana recovers more of her lost memories, she begins to chafe against her previously compliant, docile nature. Increasingly suspecting both her doctors and her husband, Diana nonetheless also finds moments to connect deeper with them as her inquisitiveness extends to basic human interaction alongside sleuthing for clues. Diana, already struggling to regain her full mental faculties, is loath to call attention to these misgivings, and Glowicki excels for underplaying the kind of role that tends to descend into expressionistic displays of madness in favor of subtle cues — a darting second glance, a forced tone of innocent curiosity used to phrase prying questions — to signal the woman’s mounting stress.

Similarly, Petrie strikes a careful balance between the doting, attentive husband seeking to help his wife heal and flashes of a darker side to his personality. Homer’s constant hovering can be overbearing, and there are hints that his suffocatingly intense focus on Diana’s recovery masks a guilt over some past difficulties in their marriage. By the same token, the earnest warmth with which Homer attempts to help Diana prevents the character from too quickly coming across as a controlling spouse. Both leads lean into the ambiguities of the story to explore the contours of a long-term relationship and the ways that a major trauma complicates it, in ways that can be as positive as they are frustrating.

At the halfway mark, the film shifts away from a slow-burn madhouse thriller toward a more grotesque entry in the latter-day body horror revival as the true nature of the facility’s treatment is revealed. This transition initially throws off the rhythm, losing the careful parceling out of character detail in favor of a series of plot complications and reversals and largely swapping out one set of cinematic reference points for another. To the film’s credit, it’s one of the few of the recent batch of body horror pictures to recognize the genre’s capacity for tragedy over allegorical statement and shock value. 

Nonetheless, the directors get sidetracked poring over all the sordid mutations suddenly on display to the detriment of both the narrative tension and the leads’ nuanced performances. Glowicki and Petrie spend an extended portion of the second half shedding their naturalistic body language and ambiguous behavior in favor of explicit confrontations that too boldly underline what had been left unsaid to that point. Diana, Homer, and supporting characters like Farah repeatedly state aloud the film’s themes or, worse, give protracted recaps and explanations of twists as they happen.

Only in the final minutes does “Honey Bunch” regain its footing, bringing together its various stylistic and plot elements into a cohesive and thought-provoking rumination on the hazy line that separates the moral imperatives of lifelong commitment to another person from the selfishness that can ultimately undermine care for that person. Harking all the way back to Mary Shelley’s “Frankenstein,” irresolvable questions arise regarding the ethical imperatives born of embracing technological breakthroughs too rashly. Unlike many of its obvious influences, “Honey Bunch” is built on a foundation of its characters’ genuine love and desire to help, but in some ways that makes their actions all the more horrific and troubling.

Grade: B-

“Honey Bunch” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. Shudder will release it in the United States.

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

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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Stephen Colbert Addresses Charlie Kirk's Shooting Death
TV & Streaming

Stephen Colbert Addresses Charlie Kirk’s Shooting Death

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Stephen Colbert condemned the shooting of Charlie Kirk on Wednesday night’s episode of “The Late Show.” His statement came in a pre-taped segment that aired before the opening credits ran as normal.

“Good evening, everybody,” a solemn Colbert said. “After our scripts for tonight’s show were finished, we learned that Charlie Kirk, a prominent right-wing activist, was killed at a speaking engagement in Utah. Our condolences go out to his family and all of his loved ones. I am old enough to personally remember the political violence of the 1960s, and I hope it is obvious to everyone in America that political violence does not solve any of our political differences. Political violence only leads to more political violence. And I pray with all my heart that this is the aberrant action of a madman and not a sign of things to come. And now, ladies and gentlemen, the show that we had prepared for you.”

Kirk died on Wednesday after he was shot at a college event in Utah. He was 31.

Colbert isn’t the only late-night host to speak out against Kirk’s shooting. Jimmy Kimmel took to Instagram to demand an end to “the angry finger pointing” in the wake of the incident.

“Can we just for one day agree that it is horrible and monstrous to shoot another human?” Kimmel wrote. “On behalf of my family, we send love to the Kirks and to all the children, parents and innocents who fall victim to senseless gun violence.”

Donald Trump announced Kirk’s death on Truth Social on Wednesday afternoon. In his post, he wrote, “The Great, and even Legendary, Charlie Kirk, is dead. No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie. He was loved and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us. Melania and my Sympathies go out to his beautiful wife Erika, and family. Charlie, we love you!”

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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Matthew Dowd No Longer With MSNBC After Charlie Kirk Comments
TV & Streaming

Matthew Dowd No Longer With MSNBC After Charlie Kirk Comments

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATED: Matthew Dowd is no longer with MSNBC, a network source confirmed, following a furor over remarks he made in the aftermath of the shooting of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.

Earlier, the president of MSNBC apologized for remarks made by Dowd, a political analyst who had been with the network since 2022. Dowd also issued his own apology.

Rebecca Kutler said in the statement, “During our breaking news coverage of the shooting of Charlie Kirk, Matthew Dowd made comments that were inappropriate, insensitive and unacceptable. We apologize for his statements, as has he. There is no place for violence in America, political or otherwise.”

Statement from MSNBC president Rebecca Kutler: “During our breaking news coverage of the shooting of Charlie Kirk, Matthew Dowd made comments that were inappropriate, insensitive and unacceptable. We apologize for his statements, as has he. There is no place for violence in…

— MSNBC Public Relations (@MSNBCPR) September 10, 2025

Around 3 p.m. ET, as networks were scrambling for more details of what happened, MSNBC’s Katy Tur spoke about Utah’s gun laws before asking Dowd to talk about the “environment in which a shooting like this happens.” He told her, “We don’t know if this was a supporter shooting their gun off in celebration. So we have no idea about this.”

He added about Kirk, “He’s been one of the most divisive, especially divisive younger figures in this, who is constantly sort of pushing this sort of hate speech or sort of aimed at certain groups. And I always go back to, hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions. And I think that is the environment we are in. You can’t stop with these sort of awful thoughts you have and then saying these awful words and not expect awful actions to take place. And that’s the unfortunate environment we are in.”

Political analyst Matthew Dowd on MSNBC wonders whether the Charlie Kirk shooting may have been “a supporter shooting their gun off in celebration.” pic.twitter.com/cW3IQzLEcD

— The Recount (@therecount) September 10, 2025

Dowd’s comment quickly spread on social media, drawing criticism for him and the network.

Dowd later wrote on Bluesky, “My thoughts & prayers are w/ the family and friends of Charlie Kirk. On an earlier appearance on MSNBC I was asked a question on the environment we are in. I apologize for my tone and words. Let me be clear, I in no way intended for my comments to blame Kirk for this horrendous attack. Let us all come together and condemn violence of any kind.”

RELATED: Celebrities Who Support Donald Trump

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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From left: Polly Holliday, Linda Lavin and Beth Howland on ‘Alice.’
TV & Streaming

“Kiss My Grits” Waitress Flo on ‘Alice’ Was 88

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Polly Holliday, the Alabama-born actress who told folks to “Kiss my grits!” as the spirited waitress Flo on the CBS sitcom Alice and her own spinoff, has died. She was 88. 

Holliday died Tuesday at her home in Manhattan, Dennis Aspland, her theatrical agent and friend, told The New York Times.

In 1990, Holliday received a Tony nomination for playing Big Mama in a revival of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. Four years earlier, she starred opposite Jean Stapleton on Broadway in another revival of a classic, Arsenic and Old Lace.

On the big screen, Holliday played Ruby Deagle, the wealthy and wicked widow who meets her swift end after a ride on a tampered stair-lift chair in Joe Dante’s Gremlins (1984).

She also appeared in John G. Avildsen’s W.W. and the Dixie Dancekings (1975), Paul Mazursky‘s Moon Over Parador (1988), Chris Columbus’ Mrs. Doubtfire (1993), Mr. Wrong (1996) — as Ellen DeGeneres’ mom — Nancy Meyers’ The Parent Trap (1998) and the Farrelly brothers’ remake of The Heartbreak Kid (2007).

Sporting a bouffant red wig, Holliday shot to national prominence on Alice in a version of the character originated by Diane Ladd in the 1974 film Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore, directed by Martin Scorsese.

Both the series, which debuted in August 1976 and starred Linda Lavin, and the movie were set on the outskirts of Phoenix at the grubby Mel’s Diner. (Robert Getchell wrote the screenplay and created the show as well.)

Holliday appeared as Florence Jean Castleberry for four seasons of Alice, but amid reported tension with Lavin, she left in the 1979-80 season finale, with her character quitting Mel’s to take a hostess job as a fancy restaurant in Houston. (Ladd ostensibly replaced her as another waitress named Belle Dupree.)

“People assumed that because Flo was very big that Linda must have had her nose out of joint,” Holliday said in a 1980 interview with People magazine. “Well, Linda’s a bigger person than that.”

When her Flo spinoff came on the air in March 1980, Ms. Castleberry was now the owner of a roadhouse in Cowtown, Texas; it turned out she had bought the place in Fort Worth on a whim on her way to Houston. However, the comedy was canceled after two seasons while Alice ran through 1985. (Holliday never returned as Flo except in a flashback episode.)

For playing Flo, Holliday won Golden Globes in 1979 and 1980 and received four Emmy nominations, including two in ’80 for Alice and her own show.

Holliday was born on July 2, 1937, in Jasper, Alabama. Her mother, Velma, was a housewife and her father, Ernest, a trucker whom she rode with during summer vacations.

“We’d eat at truck stops, and there would always be a waitress like Flo with a joke ready,” she told People magazine in 1980. “The men would say all kinds of risqué things to her, but it was understood that it wasn’t serious, just a way to make everybody’s day happier.”

After graduating from Alabama College for Women near Birmingham and a year at Florida State, Holliday taught the piano before turning to acting in the 1960s, spending seven or so seasons with the Asolo Theatre Company in Sarasota, Florida.

In 1972, she appeared opposite Ruby Dee in a New York Shakespeare Festival production of Alice Childress’ Wedding Band, a World War I period piece set in South Carolina.

Two years later, Holliday made her Broadway debut in the comedy All Over Town, directed by Dustin Hoffman, and he helped her land a part as a secretary to Ned Beatty‘s character in All the President’s Men (1976). 

It was Alan Shayne, the casting director on that movie and later president of Warner Bros. Television, who suggested she audition for Alice.

“I think I brought a complete knowledge of that type of woman to that role,” Holliday said in 2003. “She was a Southern woman you see in a lot of places — not well-educated but very sharp, with a sense of humor and a resolve not to let life get her down.”

Shayne also approved the idea of the spinoff for Holliday.

“We really had hoped Flo would be a big success and believe me, we did everything,” he recalled in a 2012 interview. “We changed writers, changed producers, nothing seemed to work, but God knows we tried. … The public kind of wanted her there saying, ‘Kiss my grits’ in the diner, and she became really a different character when she had her own show. She wanted to be different.”

Later, Holliday recurred on other shows including Private Benjamin, Home Improvement and The Client and guest-starred on The Golden Girls (as Rose’s blind sister, Lily), The Equalizer and Homicide: Life on the Street.

She leaves no immediate survivors.

Regarding “Kiss my grits,” she called her catchphrase “pure Hollywood” in a 2003 interview. “When the writers gave it to me, I said, ‘What is this supposed to mean? Why am I saying that?’”

When fans asked her to repeat it, “I usually just smile and say, ‘Oh, I’m sure you could do it better.’”

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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Emmerdale star teases John Sugden "twists and turns" as Aaron and Robert remain in danger
TV & Streaming

Emmerdale star teases John Sugden “twists and turns” as Aaron and Robert remain in danger

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

However, with things getting ever more complicated for John, it would seem that surely he’s only moments away from being caught out? Or maybe not…

Speaking with RadioTimes.com on the red carpet for the National Television Awards 2025, John’s actor Oliver Farnworth was asked whether there was more carnage on the way for his character.

He teased: “It wouldn’t be Emmerdale without a few twists and turns, would it? So I’d say, just when you think something’s gonna go one way, it can always go another.”

John Sugden in Emmerdale. ITV

Farnworth also said that John does love Aaron “1 million per cent”, and that he “feels like he’s his soulmate”.

“But the problem that comes with that, with someone who’s been kind of shielded from love as John has a lot of their life, is that he doesn’t really know what to do with love.

“So he’s got Aaron, and he goes, ‘Well, I just love you so much, I just want you, I don’t want anyone else.’ It just becomes quite possessive, quite dangerous. And I think that’s what’s happened in this instance, and that’s what’s led to all of this carnage.”

It was previously reported that Farnworth will be departing from the soap “imminently” – but just how soon that actually ends up being, and how much damage John can do in the meantime, remains to be seen. ITV previously declined to comment on John’s future.

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1. Stream on ITVX.

Check out more of our Soaps 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 11, 2025 0 comments
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LITTLE HOUSE ON THE PRAIRIE, on set, with Dean Butler Composite(1983), 1974-1983.
TV & Streaming

‘Little House on the Prairie’ Star Finally Reveals Why Everyone Said Almanzo’s Name Wrong

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

As all Little House on the Prairie fans know, the show’s characters had a slightly unusual way of pronouncing the name of Almanzo Wilder, Laura Ingall’s love interest. And as actress Lucy Lee Flippin has revealed in a new interview in BuzzFeed, the epic mispronunciation goes back to the nerves she felt on her first day filming.

Flippin, 82, portrayed schoolteacher Eliza Jane Wilder in the show’s final three seasons. With her thick glasses and red curls, Flippin was one of the series’s more visually memorable characters, inspiring fans to embrace their “Eliza Jane Era” in modern times.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Joins ‘Sinners’ and ‘Hamnet’ as Early Oscar Frontrunner
TV & Streaming

Paul Thomas Anderson’s ‘One Battle After Another’ Joins ‘Sinners’ and ‘Hamnet’ as Early Oscar Frontrunner

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

At a packed Warner Bros. VistaVision industry screening on Tuesday night, Christopher Nolan, A.G. Iñárritu, Daniel Scheinert, and Rian Johnson were on hand to watch, followed by a half-hour Q&A with Anderson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Sean Penn, Teyana Taylor, Benicio del Toro, and more.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Charlie Kirk Dead After Being Shot: Trump Ally Was 31
TV & Streaming

Charlie Kirk Dead After Being Shot: Trump Ally Was 31

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Charlie Kirk, the conservative activist and Turning Point USA co-founder who helped mobilize the youth vote for Donald Trump, has died Wednesday after being shot during a college event in Utah, Trump announced on Truth Social. Kirk was 31.

“The Great, and even Legendary, Charlie Kirk, is dead,” Trump wrote on Wednesday afternoon. “No one understood or had the Heart of the Youth in the United States of America better than Charlie. He was loved and admired by ALL, especially me, and now, he is no longer with us. Melania and my Sympathies go out to his beautiful wife Erika, and family. Charlie, we love you!”

Andrew Kolvet, a spokesman for Kirk, confirmed his death to The New York Times.

Kirk was attacked at about 12:10 p.m. while speaking with Utah Valley University students on his “American Comeback Tour.” A bullet penetrated his neck as he was answering a student’s question about mass shooters. He was immediately rushed to the hospital by his security. Graphic videos of the shooting circulated on social media as Republicans and Democrats shared prayers for Kirk on social media.

An initial suspect was put in handcuffs but later released, as police continue to look for the shooter. The FBI has launched an investigation alongside local law enforcement agencies.

Born in the Chicago suburbs, Kirk was a right-wing media personality and the CEO of Turning Point Action, a nonprofit political advocacy group that helped elect Trump to his second term. Connecting religious leaders with local politics, Kirk founded the spinoff organization Turning Point Faith, and he also developed Turning Point Academy with the mission of “reviving virtuous education.”

Kirk was perhaps best known for his viral “Prove Me Wrong” videos, in which he set up a table on college campuses and welcomed students to debate him on select topics. On his radio program, “The Charlie Kirk Show,” he endorsed conservative cultural viewpoints and often railed against liberal beliefs relating to climate change, critical race theory and gun control.

Kirk often sparked controversy for his viewpoints. He opposed gay marriage and advocated against mask mandates during the pandemic. Following Trump’s loss in 2020, he propagated disproven claims about election fraud.

In the lead-up to Trump’s reelection in 2024, Kirk became one of the most recognizable faces in the MAGA movement and one of the key operators in the effort to swing the youth vote red. His prominence in modern political culture is epitomized by a recent parody of his “Prove Me Wrong” concept on “South Park.”

Kirk’s success in reaching young voters online and promoting conservative beliefs and values at universities was acknowledged by Democrats who wished to replicate Turning Point’s influence on the left. “I’ve got to admire what you’ve been able to do, not to weaponize, but to organize on these college campuses a different point of view,” California Gov. Gavin Newsom told Kirk in the inaugural episode of his podcast earlier this year. The governor, one of the leading Democratic figures in the fight against Trump, denounced the Sept. 10 attack against Kirk as “disgusting, vile, and reprehensible” on social media, adding, “In the United States of America, we must reject political violence in EVERY form.” The nation’s top political figures including JD Vance, Kamala Harris, Bernie Sanders and more also condemned the assassination.

Kirk is survived by his wife Erika Frantzve and their two children.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Charlie Kirk Shot At Utah Event; MAGA Activist Condition Unknown
TV & Streaming

Charlie Kirk Shot At Utah Event; MAGA Activist Condition Unknown

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATED: Charlie Kirk is in “critical condition” after being shot at an university in Utah.

With Kirk in a local hospital after apparently taking a bullet to his throat just over an hour ago, the Associated Press is citing a “law enforcement” source for the conservative advocate’s state of health.

PREVIOUSLY, 12:13 PM Conservative activist Charlie Kirk has been shot at an event at an Utah university.

Details are scant on what happened, but it seems only one shot was fired and an individual is in custody.

Video circulating online from the scene at the well-attended outdoor gathering at Utah Valley University appears to show Kirk being hit in the neck. His condition is unknown right now.

As more becomes known, already leading members of the Trump administration have expressed their concern over what occurred with the influential voice in the MAGA movement. President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance took to social media quickly as Kirk’s shooting became widely covered.

“Please pray for Charlie Kirk and his family,” said Trump of his MAGA ally on Truth Social

Donald Trump walks on stage after being introduced by Charlie Kirk at the Turning Point Action on July 15, 2023 in West Palm Beach, Florida. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

VP Vance took a similar stance.

Say a prayer for Charlie Kirk, a genuinely good guy and a young father.

— JD Vance (@JDVance) September 10, 2025

The 31-year-old Turning Point USA co-founder frequently tours college campus’ to debate with audience members across the political spectrum. Wednesday was the opening date of the American Comeback tour, with his “Prove Me Wrong” stance a center piece of the dozen or so stops of the Fall stint.

In fact, Kirk’s tours, debating style and strategic outreach to younger voters have become such a hallmark of the current culture wars that South Park mimicked the events in the opening episode of its current 27th Season. To that, earlier this year, California Gov. Gavin Newsom launched his recent podcast series with a sit-down with Kirk, where the two agreed on a number of issues in which was clearly an attempt by the ambitious Newsom to broadened his brand and reach with conservatives.

Newsom today called Kirk’s shooting is “disgusting, vile, and reprehensible.”

The attack on Charlie Kirk is disgusting, vile, and reprehensible. In the United States of America, we must reject political violence in EVERY form.

— Gavin Newsom (@GavinNewsom) September 10, 2025

On a busy news days of Russian drones over Poland and more Jeffrey Epstein cover-up coverage, the Kirk shooting took over CNN, MSNC, the BBC and MSNBC.

Fox News contributor Jason Chaffetz, a former congressman from Utah, told viewers on the Rupert Murdoch-owned outlet of witnessing the event and shooting. 

Chaffetz said: “First question was about religion. He went on for about 15, 20, minutes. Second question, interestingly, was about transgender shooters, mass shooters, and in the midst of that, the shot rang out. Now I happened to be watching Charlie. I can’t say I saw blood. I can’t say I saw him get shot, but as soon as that shot went out, he fell back … and everybody hit the deck, everybody’s a lot of people started screaming, and then everybody started running. As you might expect. There was some police presence, but there was no security check going in. Charlie has some security in front of him, but you got the sense that the shot came kind of straight at him. And I don’t think there would be many vantage points too far away, because he was under an awning. It’s a bright, sunny, beautiful end-of-summer summer day in Utah. And I just hope and pray that somehow, someway, he survives this.”

The home invasion and brutality against former Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband in 2022 aside, the past year alone has seen an apparent increase in open violence in the political arena in America. Trump was the subject of one assassination attempt on the campaign trail last year in Pennsylvania, as well as a potential attack on the golf course in Florida. Keystone State Gov. Josh Shapiro and his family were attacked with a break-in and arson at official residence in April. More recently and tragically, there was the fatal June shooting of top Minnesota Democrat  Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark by the conservative leaning Vance Boelter. That shooting also left state senator John Hoffman and his wife, Yvette injured. In August, reportedly angry over vaccine mandates, Patrick Joseph White fired almost 200 shots upon the Atlanta HQ of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and killed police officer David Rose.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Geoff Cooper Named New Channel 4 Chair
TV & Streaming

Geoff Cooper Named New Channel 4 Chair

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Geoff Cooper is the new chair of Channel 4, the U.K. network said on Wednesday.

After months of speculation, Channel 4’s interim CEO Jonathan Allan released a statement lauding Cooper’s “extensive board-level experience” and “fresh insights.” Reports emerged last month that Cooper, chairman of the online electrical goods retailer AO, had interviewed for the British state-run broadacaster.

“I would like to congratulate Geoff Cooper on his appointment and, on behalf of everyone at Channel 4, extend a warm welcome to this uniquely special broadcaster at a critical time for public service media in the U.K.,” Allan said.

“Geoff brings extensive board-level experience from a wide range of businesses, as well as proven commercial acumen. As a publicly owned but commercially funded company, his fresh insights and new perspectives will be invaluable as we look to the next phase in Channel 4’s evolution.”

“I also want to thank Dawn Airey for her outstanding leadership and huge support as interim chair since April,” he continued, “This has been Dawn’s second spell as interim chair and we owe her a huge debt of gratitude as she returns to her important role as a brilliant non-executive director.”

Cooper’s experience so far includes board roles at companies including the Dunelm Group and builders’ merchant Travis Perkins. His appointment was reportedly signed off by U.K. culture secretary Lisa Nandy.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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