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FM26 release date confirmed, as Football Manager finally comes back
TV & Streaming

FM26 release date confirmed, as Football Manager finally comes back

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Returning players won’t need to be reminded that last year’s FM25 ended up being cancelled, with the franchise’s shift to a new game engine ultimately being a bigger, longer, more difficult job than the team at Sports Interactive initially anticipated.

And now, with the Football Manager social media accounts recently having lurched back to life, there’s a big reason to celebrate.

As Sports Interactive has announced today, the FM26 release date has been confirmed as 4th November 2025.

This, of course, is slap-bang in the middle of the period in which fans would expect a new Football Manager game to drop.

On 4th November, the computer and console versions will launch across PC, Mac, Xbox and PS5. On that same date, the mobile version will arrive as an Netflix exclusive.

Nintendo Switch players will have to wait a little bit longer, with that version not slated to drop until 4th December 2025.

Here at Radio Times Gaming, we’re very much looking forward to starting a new save and searching for new wonderkids (all the while fearing for our jobs).

Football Manager 2026 will see the introduction of women’s football to the series, at long last, which is sure to open up some fun new avenues for players.

Sports Interactive gaffer Miles Jacobson said in a statement: “I’m honoured and delighted to be revealing Football Manager 26’s release date today.

“Setting Sports Interactive up for the next 20 years and beyond was an enormous undertaking but I couldn’t be prouder of the efforts of the whole team over the past two years.

“FM26 represents a landmark release in our quest to produce football management perfection and the whole studio is really excited to share it with the world.”

FM26 pre-orders are open now with a £49.99 RRP. Bring on November!

Indeed, it’s nice to return to normal scheduling – it’s been a long old wait since FM24 arrived in our lives, hasn’t it?

Read more on FM:

Check out more of our Gaming 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 10, 2025 0 comments
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Chase Chrisley attends the boohooMAN x Quavo Launch Party
TV & Streaming

Chase Chrisley Reveals Health Issue on ‘Chrisleys: Back to Reality’

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The Tuesday, September 9, episode of The Chrisleys: Back to Reality featured Chase Chrisley dealing with some health issues that he was having trouble getting to the bottom of. He opened up to girlfriend Jodi Laine Fournerat about feeling “kind of scared” as he struggled to keep food down.

“Within, like, the last year I’ve lost a lot of weight,” Chase said. “My body’s just, like, rejecting food.” He told Jodi that he couldn’t “keep anything down” and admitted to feeling “absolutely miserable.” Footage showed Chase getting sick after multiple meals, and Jodi revealed that he even had trouble keeping down water sometimes.

While Jodi tried to change her boyfriend’s diet to see if that would help, he “refused.” He saw a doctor who wanted to run tests on his stomach and gallbladder, as well as possibly a CT scan to see if he had a brain tumor.

On a phone call from prison, Chase’s dad, Todd Chrisley, said Chase had been struggling with the stomach issues for years, but noticed that it had gotten worse since his parents went to prison in January 2023. “You find out what’s wrong and you get it fixed, and you go on with your life,” he urged his son.

Even amid her tension with Chase, Savannah Chrisley was worried, too. “There is some fear in me that something’s gonna happen to Chase. And it’s very valid,” she admitted. “Just in the way that he looks. Chase is not Chase.” She pointed out that her brother has “rings around his eyes” and lost a lot of weight.

“He’s not who I know as my brother,” Savannah added. “I feel like I’ve already buried my brother.” The specifics of Chase’s health issues were not revealed within the episode, but there’s still one more episode to go next week.

The Chrisleys: Back to Reality, Tuesdays, 8/7c, Lifetime

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Review: A Small Animated Wonder
TV & Streaming

Little Amélie or the Character of Rain Review: A Small Animated Wonder

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Possibly the first bonafide coming-of-age movie about a two-year-old girl who learns her place in the world and how it works, Maïlys Vallade and Liane-Cho Han’s “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” might operate on a similar emotional wavelength as recent genre classics like “Boyhood” or “Lady Bird,” but this animated bildungsroman — impressionistically adapted from an autobiographical novel by the Belgian novelist Amélie Nothomb — feels as though it belongs to a different universe altogether. 

For one thing, its chubby-cheeked namesake believes that she’s God. Or, begrudgingly, at least a god. Buddhist tradition holds that children are “of the gods” until the age of seven or so, when they make their transition into the mortal world, but something must have gotten lost in translation for the French-speaking Amélie, who was born to Belgian parents in the mountains of Japan toward the end of the 1960s. The youngest of three children, Amélie is so slow to develop that a doctor tells her parents that she’s a vegetable, and instructs them to place her in a protective bubble. “God did nothing, and was forgotten,” says her constant and precocious inner monologue (voiced by the older Loïse Charpentier). 

'Wayward,' a Netflix series, stars Toni Collette as Evelyn Wade, shown here watching over group therapy

And then, one fateful day, her visiting grandmother (Cathy Cerde as Claude) feeds Amélie a piece of Belgian white chocolate and the little girl erupts in a blaze of light like something out of “Dragonball Z.” From that point on, the former “vegetable” is a walking, talking vessel of wonder. And the movie around her — which is just as short, strange, and suspended between reality and imagination as its pint-sized heroine — is likewise open to the mysteries of the universe, as “Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” blossoms into a uniquely childlike meditation on all of the beauty that life has to offer, and on all of the loss which makes that beauty worth cherishing while you can. 

As anyone who’s ever had a two-year-old could tell you, kids that age don’t quite see things in such abstract terms. And yet, Vallade and Liane-Cho Han’s borderline anthropomorphic film is so arresting for how beautifully it approximates a child’s experience of entering the world, and of realizing that it extends beyond the limits of their gaze. That it existed before they were born, and doesn’t revolve around any single one of us. 

That awakening is both subject and story for “Little Amélie,” and yet it would be hard to imagine a less didactic approach to the lessons involved. Plotted like a series of ever-expanding bubbles, the movie is primarily driven by splendor more than anything else, and by the sheer joy of discovering what life has to offer for the first time. Amélie’s world is a feast for the senses, and the rotoscope-like style of the film’s digital animation — not performance-captured, but illustrated to make it look as though a soft and hyper-vivid filter has been placed over reality as we know it — transforms even the most ordinary kitchens or flower gardens into the stuff of core memories. 

The girl’s massive green eyes constantly re-center the movie around the act of looking, and that focus — when combined with the overall aesthetic — has the added effect of making everything she encounters seem equally real. When Amélie imagines her mean older brother as a mindless carp sucking away at the surface of a pond, we understand that’s how she thinks of him in her mind’s eye. When she becomes convinced that her mother’s vacuum cleaner must also be a god (how else could it make things permanently disappear like that?), there’s no sense in doubting her conviction. 

In the film’s most effective sequence, Amélie’s loving young housekeeper — a Japanese woman who’s either fluent in French for some reason or our first hint of the movie’s interchangeable approach to language — uses a rice cooker to explain the horror of the bombs that rained down on the country during the war, and to do so in a way that a (super-advanced) two-year-old might be able to understand. There isn’t so much as a hint of violence, and yet the image of grains being separated from each other amid the void of a closed pot offers a potent evocation of what it must be like to hear about and process such things for the first time.

Voiced by Victoria Grobois, Nishio-san will become Amélie’s best friend and most beloved teacher. The child’s world literally grows more fleshed out as a result of their time together, and while “Little Amélie” is rarely suspenseful or meaningfully story-driven, its visual progression from vague color splotches to Monet-like detail offers a compelling kind of plot development unto itself. 

The film gets sadder as it goes along and forces Amélie to contend with a handful of uncomfortable realities (including the reasons why their Japanese landlord is so standoffish towards her foreign tenants, and the fact that Amélie’s family won’t be staying in the country forever), but it becomes more beautiful at exactly the same rate. Lasting only 71 minutes, or just a little bit longer than a sunshower, sunshower, “Little Amélie and the Character of Rain” isn’t a moment too short for its material, and yet its brevity allows it to maintain that delicate balance between joy and grief — discovery and heartache — from start to finish, and to use the sweet cocoon of childhood as a way of crystallizing how that dynamic grows with us as we get older. “Life is a great chomping mouth that spares nothing,” Amélie surmises at her lowest moment, but there’s oh so much to see between each bite.

Grade: B

“Little Amélie or the Character of Rain” screened at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. GKIDS will release it in select theaters on Friday, October 31, and nationwide on Friday, November 7.

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 10, 2025 0 comments
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Wavelength Hires Producer Stacey Reiss as Head of Film
TV & Streaming

Wavelength Hires Producer Stacey Reiss as Head of Film

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Wavelength has hired producer Stacey Reiss as its new head of film, scripted and unscripted.

The company’s credits include Daniel Minahan’s narrative feature “On Swift Horses,” which starred Daisy Edgar-Jones and Jacob Elordi, Alex Braverman’s Venice award-winning documentary “Thank You Very Much” about Andy Kaufman, and the newly opened “Burlesque the Musical” featuring music by Christina Aguilera and Sia.

In her new role, Reiss will work closely with Jenifer Westphal, the company’s CEO and founder, and Joe Plummer, its president, to expand Wavelength’s slate of films, episodic series and shorts, while overseeing the company’s development and production teams.

An Emmy-winning filmmaker, Reiss has worked in both scripted and documentary storytelling. Most recently, she served as executive producer on the entertainment team at RadicalMedia, the company behind “Summer of Soul” and “Fog of War.” Her recent credits include Netflix’s “The Seat,” which followed Mercedes’ rookie Formula 1 driver; “Hollywood Black,” directed by Justin Simien, which won an Independent Spirit Award and received two Emmy nominations; and an upcoming documentary on musician Noah Kahan.

Reiss’ body of work includes  “Spaceship Earth,” which premiered at Sundance and was acquired by Neon, Netflix’s Emmy-nominated “The Andy Warhol Diaries,” Netflix’s “The Perfection” starring Allison Williams and Logan Browning and HBO’s “Tokyo Project” starring Elisabeth Moss and Ebon Moss-Bachrach. She also produced”The Eagle Huntress,” as well as the films “Santa Camp,” “It’s a Hard Truth,” “Ain’t It, Suited,” “The Diplomat,” “It’s Me, Hilary” and “I Knew It Was You.”

Reiss’ films have screened at Sundance, Telluride, Toronto, Tribeca, SXSW, IDFA and more. She previously spent over a decade as an Emmy-winning producer at “Dateline NBC” and holds a B.A. in Journalism from the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Reiss is a member of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Producers Guild and the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. She also serves as chair of Reboot, a Jewish arts and culture nonprofit, and sits on the advisory board of Reboot Studios.

“Stacey is an exceptional producer,” said Westphal and Plummer. “Her creative vision and leadership come at a pivotal moment as Wavelength expands its mission as a fully independent studio. She will be instrumental as we scale up our productions and take bold creative risks.”

“I’ve admired what Jenifer and Joe have built over the last decade,” Reiss said. “We share a commitment to telling extraordinary stories and championing new voices. I’m excited to join a team that’s fearless about creative risk and dedicated to building a truly independent studio.” 

Wavelength’s portfolio includes Sam Green’s “32 Sounds,” Frank Marshall’s “Rather” and Nanfu Wang and Jialing Zhang’s “One Child Nation.” Narrative credits include Ekwa Msangi’s “Farewell Amor.” Broadway productions include the Tony-winning “The Outsiders” and Tony nominees “The Who’s Tommy” and “Here Lies Love.”

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Equity To Appeal Against Spotlight Ruling From High Court
TV & Streaming

Equity To Appeal Against Spotlight Ruling From High Court

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

UK actors union Equity will seek to appeal the High Court judgement that saw its claim against casting directory Spotlight thrown out last week.

General Secretary Paul Fleming said the Equity Council, which met yesterday, “has decided to seek an appeal of the judgment” with the help of the Trades Union Congress (TUC).

This application to appeal will now be submitted to the UK Court of Appeal. Equity had 21 days after the ruling with which to appeal and the appeal has been backed by the TUC at its annual congress today.

The ruling of the much-publicized legal case dismissed Equity’s claim that Spotlight should be classed as an “employment agency” and should therefore only be able to charge fees that would “be no more than a reasonable estimate of the cost of production.” 

All claims were dismissed by the High Court last week, which found Spotlight “does not provide services for the purposes of finding persons employment with employers or of supplying employers with persons for employment by them.”

After the ruling, Spotlight CEO Matt Hood accused Equity of “misleading” its members about the case and described the case as a “cynical, performative and expensive legal proceeding.” When the appeal is resolved, it is understood that the costs for the case will be published by Equity.

Hood offered an olive branch to Equity last week to co-operate on the issue but Equity is instead going down the appeals route.

“It’s no surprise that the law has landed on the side of big business in this decision, with no regard for the many low-earning Equity members seeking to get by in an industry where the odds are too often stacked against them,” said Fleming. “This case simply sought the protection of regulation to limit fees to a ‘reasonable’ level through existing regulations, but the implications of the judgment are large and the idea that Spotlight can’t be regulated is dangerous and has consequences for the wider economy. Equally worrying are the sweeping implications for working people across the UK, who may now be left unprotected from up front charges by similar platforms elsewhere in the growing gig economy.”

Equity’s council met yesterday and voted to pursue the appeal and the union is also seeking a meeting with the government’s new employment rights minister.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Paul Wesley, Nina Dobrev and Ian Somerhalder in 'The Vampire Diaries' season 4.
TV & Streaming

Nina Dobrev Talks Fight for Equal Pay to Vampire Diaries Male Co-Stars

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Despite being the only actor playing multiple characters during the early seasons of The Vampire Diaries, Nina Dobrev has revealed that she was paid less than her fellow male co-stars Ian Somerhalder and Paul Wesley.

The actress opened up about the behind-the-scenes equal pay battle in Entertainment Weekly editor Samantha Highfill’s new book, I Was Feeling Epic: An Oral History of The Vampire Diaries. Dobrev not only played Elena Gilbert in the hit CW series, but also her character’s evil doppelgänger, Katherine Pierce, starting in the season one finale.

“Candice [King], Kat [Graham], and I were the three lowest-paid series regulars in the first two seasons,” Dobrev said. “It was a bit of a tricky situation because my contract only said to play Elena, but I was playing multiple characters, which doubled my workload. I had to be on set for double the amount of time, I had to memorize double the amount of lines.”

In the book, Highfill wrote that actors are typically able to start negotiating their contracts in season three, which means Dobrev was making less than Somerhalder (Damon Salvatore) and Wesley (Stefan Salvatore) for the first few seasons.

“I wanted to play Katherine, but I wanted to be compensated fairly for that, and I wanted to be an equal to the boys,” Dobrev added. The actress eventually got more money, Highfill wrote, but she never received equal pay to her male co-leads.

She recalled being told that “out of principle” the studio “wouldn’t bump me up to being equal to the boys, and so that was probably the most hurtful because it felt like I was really working hard and we shot eighteen-hour days sometimes, and nights, and I was putting my absolute heart and soul, blood, sweat, and tears into it.”

“I remember feeling like the studio didn’t appreciate what I was bringing to the show, and it felt like they were saying that all the hard work I was putting into it didn’t matter to them and that I wasn’t an equal to my male counterparts, and so that was upsetting to me,” Dobrev continued.

Vampire Diaries co-creator Julie Plec also shared in the book that things “got really heated” with the studio when they told the show’s writers they couldn’t use Katherine anymore because it meant the studio would have to pay Dobrev more each time.

However, Plec said that “was not something that I felt was right or fair,” leading them to “beg the network to let us even write story for Katherine.”

Plec said that the writers were eventually allowed to write for Katherine but recalled, “I literally think we had to say, ‘We’ll kill Katherine,’ in order to get permission to use her.”

“Over time, between Nina being generous and gracious and the tension simmering down a little bit, we were granted a certain number of episodes,” the co-creator said. “[But] I literally think we had to say, ‘We’ll kill Katherine,’ in order to get permission to use her.”

Dobrev exited the show after season six, when her character Elena was put under a sleeping spell by villain Kai Parker (Chris Wood), which linked Elena’s life to that of her best friend Bonnie Bennett. But since Elena wasn’t killed off, this left the door open for her to return (which she did in the series finale, titled “I Was Feeling Epic.”)

However, her return for the eighth and final season sparked another battle over pay, as revealed in Highfill’s book. Plec and co-creator Kevin Williamson said they initially intended to have Dobrev return for the entire final season.

“I really wanted Elena and Stefan to end up together,” Williamson admitted, “that would’ve been my preference, but we didn’t have Elena to bring that relationship back around. You couldn’t bring them back together in one episode.”

But Dobrev stood her ground and was only going to return if she was paid the same as Wesley and Somerhalder, who had gotten multiple raises since her departure from the series.

“I was always open to coming back for the finale, and storyline-wise it made sense. I felt like it was important and it needed to happen for the show, it needed to happen for the fans,” the actress explained. “It was just really important to me that at the end of the show, as a woman, I wanted to make sure that I was compensated and that I was an equal to my male counterparts on the show, and so it came down to that.”

Dobrev shared that the studio’s offer for her to return for the show’s finale “was five times less” than what she made when she left at the end of season six.

“That’s the only reason why at one point I almost didn’t come back,” she added. “I needed to be paid parity to the boys. I had to put my foot down and say if it didn’t happen I wouldn’t be able to come back,” she said. “And it wasn’t about the money — I didn’t give a shit about the money at all — it was the principle.”

Plec defended Dobrev, saying in the book, “She should’ve been making what those boys made all along, and nobody should’ve blinked at that request, but at the time it was very shocking. To her credit, she advocated for herself and she stuck to her guns.”

When Dobrev declined the studio’s less-than-equal offer, she said that’s when Plec stepped in and “put her foot down and spoke to everyone.” Though the studio eventually only agreed to pay for one episode at the actress’s requested rate.

“The reason we couldn’t have her for more than the one episode is because they just wouldn’t pay,” the co-creator shared. “It took a lot of work before they finally relented, but it came back that it was one episode only that they’d say yes for.”

Dobrev added, “For the fans I felt horrible and I wanted the story to be told in the best way possible, and it was heartbreaking that the artistry had to suffer because elf this, that we didn’t get to maybe have the few episodes at the end of the show that Julie wanted. … I’m very happy that we were able to make it work and that I came back, because I wanted to be part of the goodbye.”

I Was Feeling Epic: An Oral History of The Vampire Diaries is now available for purchase.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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House of the Dragon star calls out women being labelled "difficult"
TV & Streaming

House of the Dragon star calls out women being labelled “difficult”

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Olivia Cooke, star of House of the Dragon and new Prime Video series The Girlfriend, has spoken about the use of intimacy coordinators in the film and TV industry, and how women are still labelled “difficult” for raising issues.

Speaking with The i Paper, Cooke gave a shout-out to the intimacy coordinators on The Girlfriend, before adding: “It’s amazing to me that people had to just fudge their way through those scenes before those people existed.”

Cooke said that sex scenes put actors in “really precarious and vulnerable situations”, and that the inevitable embarrassment is amplified for “those who are just starting out and don’t have the vocabulary to say what they’re not comfortable with”.

“And for women, who’ll often get labelled ‘difficult’ or ‘a b***h’ for speaking up,” she continued.

Cooke added that good intimacy coordinators will “sense hesitation and become your voice”, and that while she believes “showing intimacy, passion is an integral part of reflecting the human experience”, it can be done without actors left feeling like “a chunk of yourself has been taken”.

Olivia Cooke stars in The Girlfriend. Christopher Raphael / Prime Video

In The Girlfriend, Cooke plays Cherry, the titular girlfriend of Laurie Davidson’s Daniel. When Daniel’s mother, played by Robin Wright, finds herself suspicious of Cherry, the two end up in a power struggle to have the greatest influence over Daniel.

Cooke is perhaps best-known for playing Alicent on House of the Dragon, but she has also had major roles in films such as Me and Earl and the Dying Girl and Ready Player One, as well as series including Bates Motel, Vanity Fair and Slow Horses.

The Girlfriend is available to stream on Prime Video now – try Amazon Prime Video for free for 30 days.

Add The Girlfriend 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.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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'Jeopardy!' Contestants Speak Out After Stunning End to Game
TV & Streaming

‘Jeopardy!’ Contestants Speak Out After Stunning End to Game

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for the Tuesday, September 9, episode of Jeopardy!]

Jonathan Hugendubler returned for his third Jeopardy! game on Tuesday, September 9, a true nail-biter that came down to the final question.

Hugendubler faced off against Ian Morrison from Aurora, Colorado, and Stacy Shelly from Rockford, Illinois. Hugendubler, from Baltimore, Maryland, was attempting to add to his two-day total of $63,601.

The game started well for him as he answered the first three clues correctly. He found the Daily Double on clue four and wagered all of his $1,600.

In “Body Parts Everywhere,” the clue read, “At the end of an 1831 novel, his skeleton is found in a cellar with a curved spine and soon crumbles into dust.” Hugendubler, a trivia host, hesitated, which prompted host Ken Jennings to encourage him to answer. “Who is Long John Silver?” Hugendubler answered incorrectly, dropping down to $0. The correct response was Quasimodo.

After that, Morrison, an airline ramp agent, and Shelly, an attorney, both answered clues, leaving Hugendubler at $0. However, he answered the last three clues before the commercial break, bringing him to second place with $1,800.

The rest of the round was a battle for first place, but Hugendubler came out on top with $4,000. Morrison was in second with $3,200. Shelly had $2,800. Right before Morrison selected the last clue, he said, “Bring it,” a classic line from Jeopardy! champion Sam Buttrey.

“I couldn’t help but say ‘Bring it,’ for that last clue in DJ! Sorry, everyone!” he wrote on Reddit. after the show.

“I am not in the hating ‘Bring it’ crowd! Congrats,” a fan replied.

In Double Jeopardy, Hugendubler plowed ahead. By the time he found the first Daily Double of the round, he had $15,200. He wagered $5,200 in “18th Century Notables.” The clue was “This archduchess & empress led Austria through the Seven Years’ War & was the mother of Marie Antoinette.” The adjunct music professor answered, “Who is Mother Theresa?” giving him a total of $20,400.

After the DD, Shelly ran the category “New Yorkers Head South” and moved to second place with $7,600. Morrison then found the last DD a few clues later. With $5,600 in his bank, he wagered $3,000.

In “I’m Getting Crafy in My Old Age,” the clue read, “When I hear this word, I no longer think soup but ‘pottery that’s been fired once in a kiln & hasn’t been glazed.’” He correctly answered, “What is bisque?” and moved into second place with $8,600.

By the end of the round, Hugendubler still led with $21,200, but his opponents weren’t too far behind. Morrison had $14,600. Shelly was in third with $10,800.

Hugendubler seemed like the clear winner, but Final Jeopardy can change everything. The category was “Classic Rock & Classic Films.”

“In 1976, Groucho Marx sent this band a telegram congratulating them on their ‘sage choice’ in album titles” was the clue. The correct response was “Who is Queen?” which only one contestant got right.

Shelly answered, “Who is Led?” She wagered $2,401, dropping down to $8,399. Morrison did get it right and wagered $7,409. This made his total $22,009, currently higher than Hugendubler’s. The reigning champion’s response was “Who is Led Zeppelin?” He wagered $8,001, making his total $13,199. Hugendubler lost, and Morrison became the new champion. He will return tomorrow for his second game.

On Reddit, Morrison thanked a commenter for their compliment on his checkered bowtie. He also revealed that he wore a kilt on The Weakest Link when he was on it three years ago. Find out what he wears tomorrow for game two.

Jeopardy!, weekdays, check local listings, stream next day on Hulu and Peacock

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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‘Wayward’ Review: Toni Collette Leads a Quirky Cult for Kids in Mae Martin’s Curious Netflix Thriller
TV & Streaming

‘Wayward’ Review: Toni Collette Leads a Quirky Cult for Kids in Mae Martin’s Curious Netflix Thriller

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Feel Good” creator and stand-up comedian toys with a new genre in “Wayward,” a mystery-thriller about a therapeutic boarding school whose eerie local influence and harsh psychological “treatments” prompt the small town’s newest deputy to ask questions no one wants to answer.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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James McAvoy Allegedly Attacked in Toronto Bar While at TIFF
TV & Streaming

James McAvoy Allegedly Attacked in Toronto Bar While at TIFF

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

James McAvoy was reportedly attacked in a Toronto bar on Monday while attending the Toronto International Film Festival to screen his directorial debut, “California Schemin’.”

According to a report by People, McAvoy was at Charlotte’s Room in Toronto on Monday when a man hit him just before midnight. The “Split” star allegedly tried to calm the aggressor down before others came to remove him from the bar.

An individual close to McAvoy told People, “James was having a casual get-together with the producers of his movie and, as he later learned when speaking with the staff, there was a man who drank too much who was getting escorted out. James’ back was to him and the man just punched him.”

The unnamed source added that McAvoy was fine after the alleged punch and that he stayed at the bar to laugh off the incident.

“California Schemin’” is inspired by the real-life story of Gavin Bain and Billy Boyd, two aspiring rappers from Dundee, Scotland. When they are turned away by the London music industry in the early aughts because of their accents, they rebrand themselves as Silibil N’ Brains, a bad-boy rap duo from the U.S. West Coast.

Before the film’s TIFF premiere, McAvoy shared his admiration for Bain and Boyd with Variety, comparing them to “folk heroes” like “Robin Hood.”

“Nobody cares that they got caught,” McAvoy said. “Nobody cares that they never made it. We just love that they fucking went down there and played the system. When the system’s rigged against you, try to undermine it or circumvent it. Game the game!”

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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