celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 152
Category:

TV & Streaming

Channing Tatum in True Crime Story
TV & Streaming

Channing Tatum in True Crime Story

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Plenty of crime films make breaking the law look glamorous, but few are as wholesome as “Roofman.” Director Derek Cianfrance (“Blue Valentine,” The Place Beyond the Pines”) focuses on the human element of his true-crime inspiration in this superficial crowd-pleaser, based on the life of a North Carolina man who escaped from prison after the series of fast-food heists that gave this film its title. He then proceeded to live in the bowels of a Toys “R” Us store for more than six months, before being caught again after committing another armed robbery at the same store where he had been hiding out. 

It’s the kind of yarn that earns the description “stranger than fiction,” and the details of how Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum, gaunter than usual but just as toned) was able to build a makeshift life out of items scavenged from a toy store are fascinating. (This was in 2004, so a lot of “Spider-Man” merch was involved.) Unfortunately, however, “Roofman” also capitulates to the feel-good demands of Hollywood storytelling, leaving the pricklier aspects of Manchester’s story on the table. And the film is forgettable as a result. 

'Rental Family'

Here, “the human element” means Jeffrey observing the everyday dramas and petty power struggles at Toys “R” Us through a series of baby monitors he cleverly mounts in the manager’s office, not the crushing irony of him hiding out in a store overflowing with the same plastic status symbols that made him an outlaw in the first place. (As we learn early on, the humiliation of not being able to buy his daughter a bike for her sixth birthday was the inciting incident of Jeffrey’s criminal career.) The latter is way too political for this particular film, which is true even as “Roofman” is overwhelmingly on Jeffrey’s side. 

LaKeith Stanfield co-stars as Steve, Jeffrey’s old Army buddy who has a sideline in fake passports. At one point, Steve leaves for a tour of duty in Afghanistan, and picks right back up with his forgery business when he gets back. He does this not because he’s a greedy person, nor for the thrill of it; in the America in which these characters live, a little law-bending is just what you have to do to get by. “Roofman” expends little effort considering the deeper (and, to be fair, more depressing) implications of this reality; instead, it shrugs and says that it’s okay, because they’re really not bad guys deep down.

This is especially true for the character of Jeffrey, who Steve accuses of being a “bad criminal” because he cares too much about the people around him. Tatum does stretch his acting abilities in scenes where Jeffrey’s con-man charisma is underlaid with desperation and deception, but there’s nothing in Cianfrance and Kirt Gunn’s screenplay to seriously challenge Tatum’s persona as a leading man. The opening scene is downright charming, as Jeffrey breaks into a McDonald’s before opening and takes three employees hostage, insisting that they put on their coats before he locks them in the walk-in freezer so that they don’t get cold. The manager doesn’t have a coat that morning, so Jeffrey lends him his. 

Making Jeffrey any less likable would completely sink the second half of “Roofman,” which slows the pace to a meander as Jeffrey begins a sweet romance with Leigh (Kirsten Dunst), a single mom who works at the Toys “R” Us. There’s a world where it’s creepy for Jeffrey to court Leigh after secretly watching her for months, but again, this isn’t that kind of movie. Instead, Cianfrance simplifies another complicated dynamic as Leigh, her daughters, and the married couple (Ben Mendelsohn and Uzo Aduba) who preach at her church embrace Jeffrey — or, as they know him, “John Zorn” — with the open-hearted naiveté that only church people can have. If Leigh has any reservations about “John’s” sudden appearance from “New York City,” or his extremely fake-sounding job, she doesn’t express them. This isn’t a flaw in her character, but yet another symptom of a working-class exhaustion that’s present, but never addressed, in the story. 

Tatum and Dunst have good romantic chemistry, although Dunst really shines when “Roofman” briefly gets both more serious and more artfully shot late in the film. Her disappointment at learning that, no, she can’t just have something good happen to her for once is devastating, and too little screen time is dedicated to it. It’s all part of a moral footnote that feels like an obligation — okay, fine, maybe it’s not cool to be a criminal, even if you are smart and charming and unusually agile — compared to the film’s comedic scenes. Of these, Peter Dinklage emerges as an underdog MVP as the store’s dickhead manager, particularly in a scene where he catches Jeffrey naked and showering in the men’s room sink. On the whole, however, “Roofman” is more of a slog than a romp, largely because of an extended 119-minute run time that still leaves many of its juiciest elements unexplored. 

Buzz around “Roofman” will undoubtedly focus on its true-crime elements, as well as the reconstituted Toys “R” Us store where much of the film takes place. Nostalgia is one thing, but if you really think about it, there’s something perverse about taking the husk of a chain store driven to bankruptcy by leveraged buyouts and rebuilding it using money from a movie studio partially owned by a private equity firm to tell the life story of a man who, by his own recounting, became a thief because he couldn’t provide for his children by doing things “the right way.” The difference is, Jeffrey Manchester went to prison for what he did. 

Grade: C+

“Roofman” premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. Paramount will release the film in theaters on Friday, October 10.

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 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
CrimeCon Clue Award Winners List 2025: 'Gabby Petito,' 'PD True'
TV & Streaming

CrimeCon Clue Award Winners List 2025: ‘Gabby Petito,’ ‘PD True’

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

MGM+’s “Godfather of Harlem,” Paramount+’s “PD True” and Netflix’s “American Murder: Gabby Petito” were among the winners on Saturday at the 4th annual Clue Awards. The event, hosted by Ice-T, was held during the annual CrimeCon event in Denver.

Among honorees were the families of Liberty German and Abigail Williams (victims of the Delphi murders) and Lead Investigator Lt. Jerry Holeman of the Indiana State Police, who received the 2025 Crimefighter of the Year award — as presented by last year’s recipient, John Walsh.

Also Sgt. Julissa Trapp of the Anaheim, Calif., Police Department was named 2025 “America’s Greatest Detective” for her work on the case of serial killer Steven Dean Gordon and accomplice Franc Cano. Additionally, true crime podcast “Crime Weekly,” hosted by Derrick Levasseur and Stephanie Harlowe, was voted by fans for the Clue Awards’ “Creator of the Year” honor.

This repped the first year scripted series were included in the competition, with “Godfather of Harlem” landing the award for outstanding scripted series.

Here are the 2025 Clue Award winners:

TV: Outstanding Docuseries

  • WINNER: “American Murder: Gabby Petito” (Netflix) | Produced by The Cinemart
  • “Hey Beautiful: Anatomy of a Romance Scam” (Hulu) | Produced by ABC News Studios and Anchor Entertainment 
  • “Betrayal: A Father’s Secret” (Hulu)| Produced by Glass Entertainment Group and ABC News Studios
  • “Beauty Queen Killer” (Hulu) | Produced by by 101 Studios, Ample Entertainment and ABC News Studios
  • “Mastermind: To Think Like a Killer” (Hulu) | Produced by Campfire Studios, in association with Lewellen Pictures

TV: Outstanding Episodic Series

  • WINNER: “PD True” (Paramount+) | Produced by Bright North Productions
  • “Hostage Rescue” (The CW) | Produced by Committee Films and Vice TV
  • “Crime Beat TV” (Hulu) | Produced by Corus Entertainment Inc.
  • “Killer Cases” (A&E) | Produced by The Law&Crime Network
  • “Prosecuting Evil With Kelly Siegler” (Oxygen True Crime) | Produced by Wolf Entertainment, Universal Television Alternative Studio and Magical Elves

TV: Outstanding Scripted Series

  • WINNER: “Godfather of Harlem” (MGM+)| Produced by ABC Signature Studios
  • “Long Bright River” (Peacock) | Produced by Sony Pictures Television, UCP, a division of Universal Studio Group, Black Mass Productions, Pascal Pictures and Original Film
  • “Not My Family: The Monique Smith Story” (Lifetime) | Produced by Undaunted Content, in association with GroupM Motion Entertainment

Podcast: Outstanding Docuseries

  • WINNER: “Who Killed Jennifer Judd?” | Produced by ID and Ark Media
  • “True Crime News Presents: American Hustlers” | Produced by Frequency Media, in conjunction with True Crime News
  • “In Esto Podcast with N Leigh Hunt” | Produced by N Leigh Hunt
  • “Up and Vanished” | Produced by Tenderfoot TV
  • “San Miguel Kidnappings” | Produced by Audible

Podcast: Outstanding Episodic Series

  • WINNER: “True Crime News: The Podcast” | Produced by Telepictures Productions Inc., in partnership with Warner Bros Entertainment
  • “Courtroom Confidential” | Produced by Via Fortuna Media
  • “Crime Fix with Angenette Levy” | Produced by Law&Crime
  • “Dead Sleep: True Crime for Bedtime” | Produced by Nancy Miller
  • “Betrayal: Weekly” | Produced by Glass Podcasts, a division of Glass Entertainment Group, in partnership with iHeartPodcasts

Outstanding Documentary Film

  • WINNER: “The Girl Who Looked Like Me” (ABC) | Produced by ABC News 20/20
  • “The Menendez Brothers” (Netflix) | Produced by Campfire Studios
  • “Serial Killer Capital: Los Angeles” (Oxygen)| Produced by Jupiter Entertainment
  • “Left for Dead” (Tubi) | Produced by Streetcar Entertainment
  • “Sins of the Parents: The Crumbley Trials” (Hulu) | Produced by ABC News Studios

True Crime Book of the Year

  • WINNER: “Story of a Murder: The Wives, the Mistress, and Dr. Crippen” (Penguin Random House/Dutton) | Written by Hallie Rubenhold
  • “My Time to Stand” (BenBella Books) | Written by Gypsy-Rose Blanchard, Michele Matrisciani and Melissa Moore
  • “The Scientist and the Serial Killer” (Random House) | Written by Lise Olsen
  • “The Atlas of Art Crime: Thefts, Vandalism, and Forgeries” (Prestel Publishing) | Written by Laura Evans, PhD
  • “The Impostor Heiress: Cassie Chadwick, the Greatest Grifter of the Gilded Age” (Diversion Books) | Written by Annie Reed
  • “The Rent Collectors: Exploitation, Murder, and Redemption in Immigrant LA” (Astra House) | Written by Jesse Katz

The Clue Awards recognize “excellence and responsible storytelling” in true crime fare, including TV, film, podcasts and publishing. CrimeCon, which has been held since 2017, is a three-day event that takes place at the Gaylord Rockies Resort & Convention Center.

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
US Open Organizers Want TV To Ignore Trump Protests Sunday
TV & Streaming

US Open Organizers Want TV To Ignore Trump Protests Sunday

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Reaction to Donald Trump‘s attendance at the U.S. Open Men’s Final on Sunday just stepped into Center Court.

A memo sent to the likes of ESPN and Sky Sports this afternoon from the United States Tennis Association asks “all broadcasters to refrain from showcasing any disruptions or reactions in response to the President’s attendance in any capacity.”

Whether censorship, a very heavy handed request for civility amidst political division, both or an unintentional shooting of their own foort, the USTA entreaty Saturday has had the immediate effect now of putting an added spotlight on Trump’s appearance at the prestigious match.

Shown on ABC, ESPN Unlimited and other platforms of the sports giant, the dramatic battle between Carlos Alcaraz (who won the U.S. Open title in 2022) and Jannik Sinner (who won Wimbledon two months ago) is set to start at 11 am PT/2 pm ET.

According to guidance from the White House, Trump will be in the stadium at that time. He is expected to be front and center on Arthur Ashe Stadium’s giant video screen during the national anthem. Unlikely to be talking tariffs by any measure, Trump is at the match as a guest of Rolex.

When contacted by Deadline, ESPN had no comment on the USTA correspondence. However, indications from insiders at the Disney outlet is that they will be concentrating their coverage on the tennis but not ignore Trump or his presence. That last part may be the wiggle room Disney, who paid then president-elect Trump over $15 million back in December to in a much derided move to settle his defamation suit against ABC News and anchor  George Stephanopoulos, occupies to turn the cameras on or off any jeers, banners or more that break out at Sunday’s match

For USTA, who have seen a constant stream of high profile attendees like Common, Walton Goggins, Hugh Jackman, Anna Wintour, Naomi Watts, the Great One Wayne Gretzky and the G.O.A.T. Billie Jean King, at this year’s U.S. Open, the attitude is this is all business as usual – just bigger. “We regularly ask our broadcasters to refrain from showcasing off-court disruptions,” USTA Managing Director, Head of Communications and Content Lisa Cradit told Deadline tonight.

Certainly, Trump showing up at other sporting events recently like July 13’s FIFA Club World Cup final at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium and February at Super Bowl LIX in New Orleans resulted in a bellow of boos. In the latter case, which saw Taylor Swift booed too, there were cheers for the former Celebrity Apprentice host. The same couldn’t be said of the last time Trump showed up at Arthur Ashe Stadium for the U.S. Open in 2015 — then the boos far out blasted any positive response.

Will history repeat itself?

Well, there is some precedent of recurrence at the U.S. Open this year.

Having won in 2024, Aryna Sabalenka remains the U.S. Open’s women’s champion. The Belarusian player defeated  Amanda Anisimova in straight sets earlier today. Sabalenka was applauded and received a standing ovation for her hard fought second consecutive Ashe victory.

Aryna Sabalenka after winning against Amanda Anisimova during their Women’s Singles Final match on Day Fourteen of the 2025 US Open (Photo by Elsa/Getty Images)

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Inside the Rock Band Series
TV & Streaming

Inside the Rock Band Series

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from The Runarounds season one.]

“There were times, even when I first started, where I was like, ‘Is this the story of the band that doesn’t make it?’” says The Runarounds creator Jonas Pate while discussing the making of his new Prime Video series. 

It wouldn’t be the first time Hollywood explored the breakout-to-breakup pipeline of the American rock band. Alongside documentary or dramatized looks at bands like The Doors, The Runaways or The Four Seasons there’s That Thing You Do, Daisy Jones and the Six, Almost Famous, Eddie and the Cruisers and more that have all charted the rise, the fall and the turbulence of the music industry. 

For Pate, The Runarounds wasn’t going to be that kind of story. “I felt like it might be more interesting if I didn’t have them go to the top instantly. You’re not going to be an overnight success. You’re gonna be one of those workhorse bands that keeps going, keeps writing great album after great album, and the fanbase will keep acknowledging it until the world has to,” he tells The Hollywood Reporter. 

For the executive producer, bands like U2 that “have been friends since junior high” and the belief that being an artist is a “noble cliff jump” would instead inform his approach. “You’re sacrificing your youth with a group of other people, and your odds of succeeding is almost zero. But you’re so naive and full of hope about the whole thing,” he says. “It’s a real life-defining thing. I wanted to tell a very dramatic true story of that.” 

In some ways, The Runarounds is also a mirror of Pate’s journey in Hollywood. “I worked for a long time before I had a success, and I’d almost resigned myself to being grateful enough to work consistently, even though I never really had a big hit. It happened to me late in my career and by then, I had realized the thing I actually cared about was the process. If you become results-oriented all the time in Hollywood, you can drive yourself to misery.

“So if you realize that we’re doing this thing and it’s really about the joy — about the process — could I just tell that story?” he adds. “That they’re going to have an amazing time with each other, even if it doesn’t work? That art doesn’t need to be transactional, and you can just do it for its own sake? In a place like Hollywood, that’s super hard to remember. The culture is designed to get you to believe the other way.”

***

Ahead of the show’s Sept. 1 premiere, Pate is speaking about his new series over Zoom from Charleston, coming off of shooting the fifth and final season of his and brother Joshua’s YA drama Outer Banks. The Netflix series was filmed in the South Carolina city for three seasons as a stand-in for the real Outer Banks, which reside in Pate’s home state of North Carolina. 

That’s where the writer-director has set his new series The Runarounds, by way of Wilmington, a town of over 100,000 whose band scene he knows well and has served as the backdrop for teen dramas like Dawson’s Creek and The Summer I Turned Pretty. Like fellow YA shows, Pate wanted The Runarounds’ backdrop to say something about the teens who reside there. “I didn’t want the band to come out of a big urban center where they’re more aware of media culture and all that,” he continues. “These are just guys in their garage playing guitars, and I wanted it to feel that way.”

Pate’s choice gives the desired color to his coming-of-age tale about a tight-knit group of teens navigating their dreams alongside their complicated families and budding romances in a small-ish town. But thanks to several of the show’s other elements, including its casting approach and the band’s musical performances, it’s also an uncannily meta music drama that breaks tradition around what the rock band drama can do and be.  

Much of how the show subverts expectation is through its cast — Will Lipton, Zendé Murdock, Axel Ellis, Jesse Golliher, and Jeremy Yun — a group of twenty-somethings hailing from across the country who, since their casting, have become a real band amid an industry rock resurgence. “All of us have played music since a frighteningly early age,” Yun says. “It’s something we love. It’s in our DNA.”

Some of the members, like Lipton and Yun, had already played in bands together. Ellis’ band, Ax and the Hatchetmen, is currently signed to Arista Records, and has been touring and putting out music videos. Golliher had long-standing dreams of being a professional musician, while Zendé, whose father used to sub for Fishbone, says Pate, came from a musical dynasty. 

“Three of the guys are singing leads, and Jeremy can sing backup. They’re all multi-instrumental,” Pate explains. “When Zendé sent me his tape, he sent it to me on guitar. When I looked at it, his playing was super percussive, so I called him, and I’m like, ‘You don’t play drums, do you?’ and then he sent me a tape playing drums. I was like, ‘How did you not lead with that!’” 

They were connected through Pate’s casting call, which was amplified over social media by his Outer Banks cast and garnered 5,000 submissions for what was initially conceived as a four-piece band. “My wife [Jennifer Pate] and I just sat in bed and scrolled through videos. We’d be like, ‘We like this guitarist, we like this drummer,’” he recounts of those moments in 2021. “At first, I thought about who was most compelling — who did my eye go to — in those tapes? There was one, Jesse, he’s this really amazing songwriter, so it was then these are the five I liked the most.” 

“They were all like 17. We talked to their parents, tried to convince them that we weren’t just some insane, strange Hollywood people, and then flew them down to Charleston,” Pate adds. He gave the group a few Iggy Pop songs to learn, and set up instruments so they could play for him during lunch on the Outer Banks’ set. The quintet would be the first — and only — five to audition for the gig. 

“They’d literally met 15 minutes before, but they just melted the paint off the walls,” Pate excitedly recalls. “Their chemistry was bananas. I was like, ‘Could it be that this is it? We just picked five out of the ether and we’re done?’” 

***

While the group had instantaneous musical chemistry, only one — Lipton, who has appeared on General Hospital — had ever acted for the camera. So while Outer Banks and The Runarounds don’t share a universe, according to Pate, he put the band in a season three episode of the Netflix series, “just so these green high school kids weren’t freaked out when people started sticking cameras in their face,” he tells THR.

When The Runarounds began filming, the director and EP then brought in an acting coach and wrote the script to versions of the band members. “We would do these work sessions — almost like therapy sessions where I would say, ‘Tell me about your parents, tell me about your sister, tell me about why you want to do this.’ Then we built that into the storylines,” he says. 

On set of the pilot and series, which filmed in 2022 and 2024, respectively, Pate says he wanted to create an environment where “we’re just at play and having fun” and “it’s all about being connected to that interior spirit.” So he didn’t hold his young ensemble to the script, allowing the group to constantly ad-lib and they frequently shot with three cameras, “so if they didn’t do the same thing take-to-take, it was fine” — a trick he’d learned from Jeff Reiner, who, like Pate, directed on Friday Night Lights.  

Yun described the experience as both led with love and a well-oiled machine, with Golliher noting there were only a few times the cast had to be wrangled by Pate. “There’s people putting their time and energy into this art, so you have to show up and do the work, but the work is fun itself,” adds Lipton. 

Part of that fun came from how Jonas says he unburdened the cast from the technical aspects of filmmaking, and leaned harder into organic performance. Realness is something he built into other aspects of the music and YA drama, which was inspired by things like the Chapel Hill-born Merge and friend Jay Faires’ Mammoth record labels.

“I had a brother who went to Chapel Hill in the ’90s, and there was this amazing indie rock and roll scene happening. It was wildly competitive, where people were stealing drummers and bassists from each other. I was mesmerized by all of it. I knew all these stories and to me, it was dramatic, but I was worried that it wasn’t life and death, so it was going to be a tough pitch, the trials and tribulations of a high school rock band,” he tells THR. 

“There’s so much to not understand or know. What does the music sound like? There’s no hard plot,” he continues. “But when Outer Banks became a hit, which was super fortunate, I realized that now might be the chance to tell this story.” 

***

Despite the demand of the Outer Banks production schedule and due to his own trepidations about the pitch, Pate created a proof of concept to help distributors understand the concept, he says. He would secure funding from a friend to shoot the pilot “completely on spec, with the music and everything — a gigantic gamble on my friend’s part. I kept telling him, ‘You realize this investment can go to zero, like you can lose all this?’ But he was cool about it.”

The director’s real and working North Carolina film family would also show up in support of the project, including Pate’s brother and daughter, Lilah, who are credited on the series. “There’s a tight film community in Wilmington and Charleston, so it’s the same crew from Outer Banks, and two-thirds of the crew is related,” he says. “So it was easy to rally a bunch of people who were willing to jump in and help, and make [the pilot] as efficient as possible.”

Yet even with the funding and bodies, The Runarounds was still incredibly risky. “You’re really going in with these kids that have never acted, and if this thing fails, that’s going to be the reason, and it’s going to be a totally fair reason,” he says. “But I always wanted to get real musicians and hope they could act. I just felt like the mistakes and authenticity was the whole thing.

“We’re a bunch of young kids, and he put the fate of an entire TV show in the hands of us,” says Lipton. “There were some times when we had self-doubt, but the way that we communicated with one another, he kept on inspiring us. It’s so beautiful that a show like this that promotes authenticity had that element behind the scenes, too.” 

Bez (Zendé Murdock), Topher (Jeremy Yun), Charlie (William Lipton), Neil (Axel Ellis), Wyatt (Jesse Golliher)

Prime Video

That authenticity would stretch beyond the set and screen. As Pate was building his drama, The Runarounds were molding themselves into young adults — and a real band. Like their characters, the ensemble has made big choices since graduating from high school, including whether to go or pass on college in the name of, or despite, their burgeoning careers. 

One band member says he “refused to get a job” to focus on his professional music career, while others headed to university to study subjects like music or economics at places like Princeton, USC or Columbia College Chicago, while scoring Daytime Emmy nominations, competing as a collegiate-level golfer, and even performing at Lollapalooza along the way. 

Collectively, the nearly half-decade since being cast has been about “honing in on the craft,” says Murdock. They have done multiple multicity tours and written upwards of 40 songs for use by the show but also, separately, as a band. Talking Heads’ Jerry Harrison produced a live EP with the band, with a second live album recorded at Amazon Music’s live-streaming and production studio in Williamsburg this past June. 

“They started to do tour dates. They played The Troubadour in L.A. They played some festivals,” Pate says. “They put the time into actually getting good and becoming a real band, and the whole time they were getting older.”

***

Pate says he saw the band’s creative growth throughout the two weeks of filming the pilot. Once it wrapped, he took them and his proof of concept to Skydance and then Prime Video, who gave him a straight to series greenlight. The result is something that isn’t quite Almost Famous, Ladies & Gentlemen, The Fabulous Stains, Jonas or even The Monkees, whose 1966 series launched nearly 60 years ago with help from a casting call in entertainment trades like The Hollywood Reporter. 

Yet, much like The Monkees’ timeliness amid Beatlemania, The Runarounds arrives in a particularly opportune moment in music. One in which rock, which last dominated mainstream music charts in the early 2010s, is back on the rise as evidenced by the rebirth of indie sleaze and events like the When We Were Young Festival and this year’s three-city return of the Vans Warped Tour. “People are like, ‘Why are you doing a show about a rock band? Nobody cares about rock and roll,’” Pate says. “I’ve talked to label heads. The fastest growing music demographic right now is indie rock. It’s 100% making a comeback.”

The series portrays both the old and new ways of breaking into the industry, as evidenced when the band — who are managed by their own teen friends — are approached by a record label after releasing a colorful (and viral) video reminiscent of OK GO’s breakout 20 years ago. It’s a storyline Pate says was inspired by a $2 million record deal one of star Lilah Pate’s friends brokered for a classmate while they were all still teens in college. 

All of this is set within a universe of performances, hosted everywhere from backyards and a fair to a makeshift club and a larger theater. The result is a season one soundtrack that Pate argues doubles as a live record. “Amazon, who had just done Daisy Jones, kept waiting for us to pre-record the songs, but I was like, ‘No, what’s in the show is live. They’re not supposed to be perfect. They’re a high school band.’ That was a huge debate because it was just not the way they had done it,” the director says. 

Typically, productions record in studio and do playback on set with actors lip syncing. But for The Runarounds, the band played the “equivalent of three shows in a row easily on set any given day that we were shooting music,” according to music sound mixer Scott Steiner. So the show’s music team of four, with initial work from Stephen Price on the pilot, had to function almost “like a touring production company,” says band manager Alex Collier, with the team setting up and tearing down shows once they moved beyond the basic setup of the pilot. “We were adding a completely new department into the way a normal production works,” notes Music Playback Brandon Hackler. “It is putting up a rock concert and then being asked to move that in a second. ”

With a limited budget, the department leaned on Amplify Entertainment (Bohemian Rhapsody) to connect them with equipment partners, which included Mojo Tone, Shure, and Yamaha, for loans. Time crunches led the team of four — including production assistant Chaandmon Croft — to streamline the pilot process so other departments could quickly work with material amassed between takes that could start and restart from various points in a song. 

“We came up with a system that interconnected me and Mike Rayle, head of the sound department, and all the components that we needed to record — microphone, preamps and recorders,” says Steiner. Adds Hackler, “The amps were going through these [isolation cabinets] that were planted so far away that you couldn’t even hear them, so when you were on set, you would just hear the drummer playing and some vocals.”

A console with a mix pre-set by the department meant “you could just roll it out there with one cable and a power cord, and plug it in” says Steiner, while in-ear monitoring systems and high quality mics were hidden under long hair and within the drum kit, “as no high schooler is ever going to have that sort of system,” notes Collier. “Scott’s recording rig had a lot of redundancy, so that if something failed, it was always there to pick it back up.”

“I wanted it to be authentic because everyone assumes that they’re faking it, right?” says Pate of the decision to lean into on-set performances. “I just wanted to do everything I could to convey that this is real.”

*** 

Just as the live music was real, so was the songwriting, which was composed through a “symbiotic” process between Pate and the young band, who wrote songs with the help of lyricists like Madison Love, Matt Koma, and Dave Bassett. “At first, we were just shooting in the dark, coming up with whatever we gravitated towards. Sometimes, it would be really special that the script and the plot would gather around a song that we had already made, and then other times it was more for the show,” says Ellis. 

When Pate asked the band for a song about the emotional journey of graduation, the “next day, they handed me ‘Senior Year,’” he says. There were also songs that didn’t make the season, including one the band wrote for when Amanda (Kelley Pereira) comes out to Topher (Yun), that are still on the show’s official soundtrack. “We spent two entire months in L.A. finishing the bulk of the songs about six months before we were about to shoot. We were cranking out like two songs a day,” says Golliher.

Topher (Jeremy Yun), Pete (Maximo Salas), Bender (Marley Aliah), Sophia (Lilah Pate), Charlie (William Lipton), Wyatt (Jesse Golliher), Bez (Zendé Murdock) and Neil (Axel Ellis).

Prime Video

Since then, Pate says the band has written more music, including a song for a potential season two, after meeting one of their musical inspirations Cage the Elephant. Cage may seem like an unlikely favorite for a group this young, but a quick YouTube search of The Runarounds live performances reveals covers of Jet and The Strokes — more bands less likely to get passed down directly by their parents.  

It’s yet another way the series speaks to the current music moment, with The Runarounds highlighting how modern music taste is shaped in a world where bands like Pavement have garnered a hit decades later via TikTok. “Three of the five were raised in very musical households, so they know everything from the 90s going back to the 60s,” says Pate. “But the way this generation works, because of Spotify and TikTok and the ease with which you can access music, the algorithm realizes what they’re listening to, and it also starts to offer older stuff.”

That’s reflected in both the series’ music supervision and the band’s sound, the latter of which will go on the road this fall as part of The Runarounds’ Minivan Tour. In terms of whether fans can expect to see the characters or actual people performing when they attend, both Pate and the group agree that real life is on stage. “You’re coming to see the band,” says Lipton. 

Still, Ellis and Murdock understand why the wires might get crossed. “The performances were very real, and I think that just carries on into real life live shows,” says Ellis. Murdock adds, “It’s really cool that you can come and see what you’ve been watching on your TV screen with your own eyes,” adds Murdock. “I feel a lot of people will come and want to watch it as if they’re coming to a show in the TV show, and I think that’s a really fun angle to look at it from.”

The Runarounds have also signed with AWAL, a division of Sony Music, and are already beginning work on a record unrelated to the show, set to release between now and a potential season two. As for the future of the series, the executive producer and creator sees a five season run with eight episodes each. The second season would follow them in a “super crappy van on the regional tour playing colleges and 200 capacity rooms” as they work to land a slot at a premium festival, before ending with them opening at Bonnaroo. 

A possible third season would see the band opening for a more established group on a European tour before the fourth finally sees them as “a headliner with 5,000 capacity rooms and all the pressures and issues with fame.” That includes “how fame exploits and magnifies whatever your weakness is because there’s no guard rails anymore,” Pate says. That fifth and final season would be the stadium tour, as The Runarounds have become the biggest band in the world. “The dream is can I legitimately take this all the way and feel like you actually were in the van with them,” says Pate. 

It’s a big vision and one that could easily be disrupted by any number of Hollywood-esque realities around a show starring a burgeoning ensemble and a real life band. But The Runarounds stars tell THR they can’t imagine not sticking it out, whether it’s because they “won’t forget their roots” with the show, says Ellis, that they’ve already made it five years, says Lipton, or that they’d still be young by the time they “completed this journey,” adds Murdock. 

“This is a band, and it has a sound that evolves, grows and changes as the people grow and change, too,” says Yun. “That’s a story that doesn’t have a defined end, so this’ll last as long as we last.”

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
EastEnders responds to calls for Jo Joyner return as Tanya Cross
TV & Streaming

EastEnders responds to calls for Jo Joyner return as Tanya Cross

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

However, one person who remains absent but is often mentioned is Max’s ex-wife and the mother of Lauren and Oscar, Tanya Cross (Jo Joyner).

Originally appearing as a regular character from 2006 to 2013, Tanya was last seen struggling outside the funeral of her and Max’s youngest daughter, Abi Branning (Lorna Fitzgerald), during a guest appearance in 2018.

Tanya has been mentioned recently as she’s washed her hands of troubled son Oscar, while Max revealed in flashbacks to Zoe Slater (Michelle Ryan) that their granddaughter Abi Branning Jr. is staying with her now.

Of course, Joyner remains a very busy actress and is often on our screens, but could we dare to hope for a return for the beloved Tanya?

” alt=”A promo image in front of the Walford East tube station set consisting of smiling, from left to right, Pierre Moullier, Jacqueline Jossa, Ben Wadey, Jake Wood, and Scott Maslen for EastEnders.” classes=””] ” alt=”A promo image in front of the Walford East tube station set consisting of smiling, from left to right, Pierre Moullier, Jacqueline Jossa, Ben Wadey, Jake Wood, and Scott Maslen for EastEnders.” classes=””] Executive producer Ben Wadey (centre) stands between the Branning family, consisting of Oscar Branning (Pierre Moullier, far left), Lauren Branning (Jacqueline Jossa, second from left), Max Branning (Jake Wood, second from right), and Jack Branning (Scott Maslen, far right). BBC Pictures/Jack Barnes

Speaking at a press event on the set of the soap, executive producer Ben Wadey remained full of praise for Joyner but did note there was already an embarrassment of riches in the cast.

Responding to my question on a potential Tanya return, Wadey laughed: “We’ve just given you Max and Zoe!”

He did continue: “Yeah, I mean, Jo’s amazing, isn’t she? We’ve also got an amazing cast with brilliant performances that deserve and need stories…”

Jake Wood as Max Branning and Michelle Ryan as Zoe Slater standing in a bar talking to each other, Max is holding a drink, for EastEnders.

Max already has a complicated romance with Zoe Slater (Michelle Ryan). BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron

Actor Scott Maslen then humorously interjected: “We need a bit of naughty Max first, don’t we? Yeah, we need him back for a while and let her come and sort him out.”

So, we’re not letting our hope of a Tanya comeback die just yet!

There’s certainly enough drama on the way for Walford in the meantime…

Read more:

Visit our dedicated EastEnders page for all the latest news, interviews and spoilers.

Add EastEnders 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 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 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
LOVE CON REVENGE. Cecilie Fjellhøy in episode 101 of LOVE CON REVENGE.
TV & Streaming

Cecilie Fjellhøy Talks Case Update and ‘Tinder Swindler’ Spinoff (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Almost immediately after she appeared in The Tinder Swindler, Cecilie Fjellhøy got to work on Love Con Revenge, which almost serves as a companion piece to Netflix’s 2022 documentary.

“Because it was such a need,” she explained the quick turnaround in an interview with Swooon. “The amount of people I already have now, people reaching out to me wanting help. Can you imagine? Like, ‘I need help from you because no one else is helping.‘ So that’s what happened after The Tinder Swindler even before Love Con Revenge was born.”

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
2025 Creative Arts Emmys Winners List: Night One
TV & Streaming

2025 Creative Arts Emmys Winners List: Night One

by jummy84 September 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The 2025 Emmys season is coming to a close, and to kick off the grand finale to months’ worth of FYC events and campaigning to recognize the year’s best in television art is the 2025 Creative Arts Emmys. The full winners list for Night One is listed below. That’s right: It’s a two-night affair, taking place September 6 and 7 at L.A. Live’s Peacock Theater.

The best craftspeople and below-the-line artisans in the industry will be honored in categories spanning music and casting (both categories for which IndieWire has held “Pass the Remote” FYC panels this year) as well as stunts and guest actors. If there’s a theme that defines each night it’s that Night 1 is about scripted TV and Night 2 recognizes unscripted. IndieWire Honors host Robby Hoffman will be among the starry presenters for the event, along with Jamie Lee Curtis, Noah Wyle, Anika Noni Rose, Ahmir “Questlove” Thompson, Marlee Matlin, and more.

Agnieszka Holland’s Franz

IndieWire will be live-updating the winners lists both nights. Keep refreshing here for updates.

Full Creative Arts Emmy Awards Night 1 winners list below.

GUEST ACTRESS IN A COMEDY SERIES
Winner: Julianne Nicholson, “Hacks”

CONTEMPORARY MAKEUP (NON-PROSTHETIC)

PROSTHETIC MAKEUP

PERIOD OR FANTASY/SCI-FI MAKEUP (NON-PROTHETIC)

PERIOD COSTUMES

CONTEMPORARY COSTUMES FOR A SERIES

CONTEMPORARY COSTUMES FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE

FANTASY/SCI-FI COSTUMES

PERIOD OR FANTASY/SCI-FI HAIRSTYLING

CONTEMPORARY HAIRSTYLING

PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE CONTEMPORARY PROGRAM (ONE HOUR OR MORE)

PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE PROGRAM (HALF-HOUR)

PRODUCTION DESIGN FOR A NARRATIVE PERIOD OR FANTASY PROGRAM (ONE-HOUR OR MORE)

CASTING FOR A DRAMA SERIES

GUEST ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES

CASTING FOR A COMEDY SERIES

CASTING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE

STUNT COORDINATION FOR COMEDY PROGRAMMING

STUNT COORDINATION FOR DRAMA PROGRAMMING

STUNT PERFORMANCE

ANIMATED PROGRAM

CHARACTER VOICE-OVER PERFORMANCE

INDIVIDUAL ACHIEVEMENT IN ANIMATION

CHOREOGRAPHY FOR SCRIPTED PROGRAMMING

PICTURE EDITING FOR A SINGLE-CAMERA COMEDY SERIES

PICTURE EDITING FOR A MULTI-CAMERA COMEDY SERIES

GUEST ACTRESS IN A DRAMA SERIES

PICTURE EDITING FOR A DRAMA SERIES

PICTURE EDITING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE

SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SEASON OR A MOVIE

TITLE DESIGN

SPECIAL VISUAL EFFECTS IN A SINGLE EPISODE

MOTION DESIGN

SOUND EDITING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES

SOUND EDITING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES, MOVIE OR SPECIAL

SOUND EDITING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (HALF-HOUR)

SOUND EDITING FOR AN ANIMATED PROGRAM

SOUND MIXING FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES OR MOVIE

SOUND MIXING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (ONE HOUR)

SOUND MIXING FOR A COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES (HALF-HOUR) AND ANIMATION

PERFORMER IN A SHORT FORM COMEDY OR DRAMA SERIES

MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A SERIES (ORIGINAL DRAMATIC SCORE)

MUSIC COMPOSITION FOR A LIMITED OR ANTHOLOGY SERIES, MOVIE OR SPECIAL (ORIGINAL DRAMATIC SCORE)

ORIGINAL MAIN TITLE THEME MUSIC

MUSIC SUPERVISION

ORIGINAL MUSIC AND LYRICS

CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A SERIES (HALF-HOUR)

CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A SERIES (ONE HOUR)

CINEMATOGRAPHY FOR A LIMITED SERIES OR MOVIE

GUEST ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES

TELEVISION MOVIE

September 7, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sam Worthington and Gugu Mbatha-Raw on 'Fuze' at TIFF
TV & Streaming

Sam Worthington and Gugu Mbatha-Raw on ‘Fuze’ at TIFF

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

A ticking bomb in the heart of London sets the stage for “Fuze,” a taut new British crime thriller from director David Mackenzie. The film, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival, combines the urgency of a heist film with the dread of an unexploded World War II bomb unearthed at a bustling construction site.

Written by Ben Hopkins, the feature stars Aaron Taylor-Johnson, Theo James, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Sam Worthington. As the military and police scramble to evacuate the city against the clock, chaos unfolds across London’s streets.

For Mackenzie, whose credits include the best picture-nominated “Hell or High Water” and “Outlaw King,” the concept was born years ago.

“I wanted to mash up the tensions of the heist movie with an unexploded bomb movie,” Mackenzie tells Variety in the TIFF Studio. “In the U.K., there’s always a discovery of an unexploded World War II bomb somewhere. Evacuations are forced, and they’re often blown up in situ. It felt like a very real thing to lean into. With ‘Fuze,’ I just wanted to make something purely entertaining, visceral and cinematic — not trying to be a message film. It’s a high-tension, hopefully enjoyable ride.”

At just over 90 minutes, Mackenzie calls it his leanest feature yet: “I genuinely want the audience to feel a sense of relief that it’s over and to have had a good, entertaining experience of a thrilling, high-tension, modern heist movie.”

Mbatha-Raw, who plays Chief Superintendent Zuzana, says she was drawn to the project’s realism and immediacy.

“When I read the script, it felt so propulsive, almost like it was playing out in real time,” she shares. “I hadn’t played a police officer before, and I was excited to tackle something this grounded and gritty. I got to meet with London-based police officers and observe command centers like the one my character oversees. That was a fascinating insight.”

Mbatha-Raw praises Mackenzie’s style: “His long takes and constantly moving camera feel so authentic and exhilarating. Watching it with an audience for the first time, I was on the edge of my seat — even though I knew what was going to happen.”

Worthington, who reunites with Mackenzie after several collaborations, said his character X didn’t exist in early drafts.

“I just phoned David and said, ‘What can I do in this one?’ He told me all the roles were gone,” Worthington recalls. “But when I read it, I thought I could do something with this henchman figure in Theo’s gang. I asked him to let me create something, and David gave me that trust. That freedom allowed me to help serve the story and be a foil for Theo.”

Worthington, best known for his role as Jake Sully in James Cameron’s “Avatar” franchise, added that Mackenzie’s confidence in his actors keeps him coming back: “He trusts me, which is fantastic. Then you can just go and create.”

Alongside Taylor-Johnson and James, the cast builds tension through two opposing forces — the bomb squad and the robbery gang.

“They’re both really strong actors, deeply committed to what they’re doing,” Mackenzie says of Taylor-Johnson and James. “Aaron brings a very real representation of the Army EOD squad, while Theo delivers this visceral energy as part of the robbery crew. It was great to work with them both.”

While Mackenzie called “Fuze” his “pure cinematic entertainment” effort, he teased a passion project long in the works: an adaptation of a generational spaceship travel novel spanning 100 years.

“It’s incredibly complex, a 190-page script at the moment,” he admits. “If realized properly, it could be a heck of a trip. That’s something I’d still love to find a home for.”

For Mbatha-Raw, the role marked another chance to explore range. “I’d love to do a two-hander on film — something really intimate and soulful. I’m always looking for characters with depth,” she shares.

And for Worthington, with off “Avatar: Fire and Ash” on the horizon, “Fuze” proved another chance to collaborate with a trusted director. “It’s all about whether a movie connects with an audience,” he said. “If it does, you hope you get the chance to keep telling these stories.”

Worthington also offered an update on James Cameron’s sprawling “Avatar” sequels. He confirmed that Avatar 2 and 3 were shot together, with portions of 4 filmed as well to accommodate the younger cast’s aging. “There was a scene or two where the kids had to be the same age, so we shot that back in 2018 or 2019,” he explains. He added that Cameron has written Avatar 4 and 5 in full, teasing that the saga will jump forward in time if audiences continue to embrace the films. “We’re not arrogant enough to assume they’ll keep connecting, but if they do, we get to keep telling the story.”

Worthington also addressed the uncertain future of Kevin Costner’s “Horizon” saga, in which he had a significant role. He confirms that Costner had mapped out and written four films, with Worthington having read all of them, but the project’s continuation now rests in limbo. “That was Costner’s passion project — he’d been working on it for 10 years,” Worthington says. “It all comes down to whether the audience connects. The passion is always there, but sometimes it’s just about whether it’s the right time for people to embrace it.”

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'The Rookie' Spinoff 'Gearing Up' To Shoot Pilot, Timing Revealed
TV & Streaming

‘The Rookie’ Spinoff ‘Gearing Up’ To Shoot Pilot, Timing Revealed

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

The Rookie North, Alexi Hawley’s anticipated spinoff from his long-running ABC drama The Rookie, is getting closer to fruition.

“I think we are looking at shooting a pilot in the spring or late winter, so we are gearing up for that,” Hawley told Deadline of the project, which has not been officially picked up to pilot, on the red carpet at ABC’s End of Summer Soirée Friday night.

Deadline revealed exclusively in December that ABC was developing a second Rookie spinoff set in Washington state, written/executive produced by Hawley and executive produced by The Rookie star/executive producer Nathan Fillion and fellow EPs Bill Norcross and Michelle Chapman.

“I’ve been going back, and there’s a script, I’ve been doing some drafts and getting some notes,” Hawley told Deadline in May. “You know me, I’m a hopeful person, so I remain hopeful.”

By early July, The Rookie North was in serious pilot consideration at ABC. As Deadline reported at the time, the project had been gaining momentum for a pilot order, which was believed to be contingent on casting the lead role, a former overachiever in his 40s-50s who becomes a rookie cop after his life does not go as planned. A well-known TV actor was approached, but things didn’t work out.

I hear a pin has been put in the casting process to wait for the new cycle when more big names become available. ABC brass are looking to cast the role with someone of the caliber of Scott Speedman, who headlines the network’s only drama pilot ordered so far this year, RJ Decker, now filming.

Additionally, I hear the network and producing studios, Lionsgate TV and 20th Television, took their foot off the gas to give the script more time and not rush it to production.

Those considerations are consistent with the timeline provided by Hawley, and a formal pilot pickup is expected.

If The Rookie North comes to fruition, it would be the third series in the franchise, following spinoff The Rookie: Feds starring Niecy Nash, which was canceled after one season in 2023. Of that offshoot’s demise, Hawley said last year: “A lot had to do with the forces that led to strike … the consolidation of the industry, the economic impact of the streaming wars have had on different companies. I do feel it was not a creative decision. It was a business decision. I can’t argue with that. I’m not running anything. It was a treat for us. We love that show … it’s all I can really say.”

The mothership series, headlined by Fillion, will return for its eighth season in early 2026, re-teaming with High Potential and Will Trent on ABC’s Tuesday schedule.

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Noah B. Taylor in 'Wednesday' season two.
TV & Streaming

Wednesday’s Noah B. Taylor on Bruno and Enid’s Relationship, Future

by jummy84 September 6, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from Wednesday season two, Parts 1 and 2.]

While Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega) was trying to save Enid’s (Emma Myers) life for most of Wednesday season two — just your typical Nevermore Academy craziness — Enid was also trying to have a somewhat normal high school experience, crushes and all.

That’s where Noah B. Taylor’s Bruno enters the equation, a fellow werewolf who takes a liking to Enid. As the pair explored their relationship throughout the season, they also found themselves in some sticky situations, such as being tied up together by Agnes (Evie Templeton) with tons of knives hanging overhead in part 1 (luckily, Wednesday is the hero once again, no matter how much she hates it).

However, their relationship takes a turn in Part 2, when it’s revealed that Bruno actually has a secret girlfriend back home, breaking Enid’s heart. When Taylor initially learned the fate of his character, he tells The Hollywood Reporter he was thinking, “That’s a very interesting angle to go at it from, and it was an exciting challenge to try to still humanize the character in a way — ‘cause high school’s crazy.”

Below, Taylor opens up about his experience joining the cast of Wednesday for season two, navigating Bruno and Enid’s relationship, and his hopes for his character if he returns in the already renewed third season.

***

How excited were you to join the cast of Wednesday, which has become such a beloved show?

I was so stoked. It was so surreal ,and they were so welcoming from the get-go. It was an amazing time, a great eight months.

Your character Bruno is with Enid a lot this season — what was it like working so closely with Emma Myers?

She is incredible at what she does. She made my job very, very easy. She snaps in and you’re there and doing it, and she’s also a great person to be around and a great friend to have. 

Emma Myers and Noah B. Taylor in season two.

Netflix

What was it like filming the intense knives scene with Emma in season two, Part 1, where you were both tied up together?

It was a lot of fun. It was a great forced proximity. We got to know each other. We played 20 questions a lot, except we would make it infinite questions. We would just think of something and the other person would ask yes or no questions for hours until they got it. It was a good time. 

Do you prefer filming the more intense scenes or the calmer ones?

I like both for different reasons. Calmer days are fun because it’s like summer camp. You get to hang out with your friends and maybe you’re standing in the background of a shot but all day you get to hang out. But the intense scenes are a lot of fun because that’s why I do it — you get to act and that’s the joy. 

To take on your character, which is a werewolf, did you have to do any specific training?

We did a couple of preparatory werewolf movement sessions, I focused a lot [of my prep] on the physicality of a really confident teenage boy; trying to get that down, making sure I knew what I was doing with my hands and my posture and my stance. A lot of pockets going on. 

Between you and Enid’s romantic relationship and drama, what was it like being the ones to bring those normal high school clichés to the show amid all the Nevermore craziness? 

It was a really interesting angle to approach the world from. Most of the stuff my character is dealing with are interpersonal relationships and have less to do with crazy outcasts, magical stuff. So it felt like I had an opportunity to bring a different viewpoint and more a grounded angle, which was fun to play with.

Jenna Ortega, Emma Myers and Noah B. Taylor in season two.

Netflix

In Part 2, viewers learn that Bruno has actually been lying to Enid and has a girlfriend back home. What did you think when you first read that in the script? 

[Writers] Al [Gough] and Miles [Millar] took me in before we even started shooting. Right when I got to Dublin, we had a meeting and they said, “Something is gonna happen, but we’re not gonna tell you because we don’t want you thinking about it.” Then at some point, like rumors, I sort of heard about it, and then when I finally read the script, I was kind of excited. That’s a very interesting angle to go at it from, and it was an exciting challenge to try to still humanize the character in a way — ‘cause high school’s crazy.

Do you think Bruno did actually like Enid, or was there potentially an alternative motive for him to get so close to her?

I was interpreting it from a place that he did genuinely care about her. I think we see that in moments, especially in the clock tower scene and the knives that he does really connect with her. I was approaching it from the standpoint that he was trying to play it like he was too scared to hurt anybody. He should have been honest and hurt somebody a little bit to avoid hurting everybody a lot. 

Obviously, Enid fully ends it with Bruno when his secret girlfriend shows up at the Nevermore gala. But it wasn’t really clear whether he goes back to his girlfriend. What do you think he does?

I’m not sure. I could see it going a couple ways. I was really trying to go for a feeling of devastation in that scene, or I’m mainly shocked, but then also like, “Oh my God, I’ve really, really messed up this time.” I think he would try to weasel back in there a little bit, to keep fighting for her. I think that could be interesting. 

Since you’re playing a werewolf as well, what’s your reaction to Enid becoming an alpha and then getting stuck as a werewolf after transitioning to save Wednesday during a full moon in the finale? 

I thought it was awesome. I was really excited to watch. Episode eight was one of my favorites. Just to sidetrack for a second, Owen’s performance — Oh, my God! I didn’t have any scenes with him. I hung out with him a bunch and I could tell he was an amazing actor just from the way he talked about the work and the prep stuff he was doing, and finally getting to actually see it, I was glued to my screen. He’s incredible! But with Enid turning into a werewolf and all that, I thought it was a great cliffhanger and a really good setup for next season. There are so many new threads for the writers to follow, so I’m excited. 

Noah B. Taylor and Georgie Farmer in season two.

Netflix

Do you know if Bruno is returning for season three, and if so, what are your hopes for him? 

I don’t know yet, and if he does, there’s a couple different ways it could go for sure. He’s probably at a bit of a crossroads and he could either try to better himself or this could kind of break him and he could go down a much darker path. I think either one would be a lot of fun, but I’m not sure. 

What are you looking forward to most in season three overall? 

I’m excited to see the Wednesday and Fester road trip. That’s gonna be awesome! 

Coming off the momentum of Wednesday, what do you hope to accomplish next in your career?

I would love to be able to play a range of characters and branch out. I would love to do some indie stuff. I got my start working on indie shorts and whatnot in New York City and in high school. That’s sort of where my heart is, so that would be amazing to get to do something like that. Also, on the music side of things, I just released an album and that was really rewarding. I’m working on new music as well, so I’m gonna keep that going. I’m just excited for the future. 

***

Wednesday season two is currently streaming on Netflix. Read THR’s interviews with Tim Burton and Jenna Ortega, and Catherine Zeta-Jones on season two.

September 6, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,606)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • The Black Beauty Club Is Turning a Block Party Into a Shopping and Discovery Experience

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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