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Laura Dern as Linda Shaw/Penelope Rollins in Palm Royale season two.
TV & Streaming

‘Palm Royale’ Creator Breaks Down the Carol Burnett Season 2 Scene

by jummy84 December 15, 2025
written by jummy84

With Palm Royale, creator and writer Abe Sylvia has crafted a bright, boisterous dramatic comedy pitched perfectly to the charms and talents of its star, Kristen Wiig (who plays aspiring socialite Maxine Dellacorte-Simmons). But just under the surface of the series’ high comedy, high society and high hair lie hard truths about being a woman of ambition: what it means to be a “have-not” in the glamorous world of “haves,” and the cost of getting all you’ve ever wanted — and what some are willing to do to hold on to even a handful of it. In season two of the series, which also stars Carol Burnett, Laura Dern, Allison Janney and a coterie of notable faces that includes Julia Duffy as fellow socialite Mary Davidsoul, Sylvia ups the ante, putting his characters in direct conflict as they stake even more entitled claims to things that were never theirs. Old frictions become new frays in the very first episode as Norma (Burnett) and Linda, née Penelope (Dern), collide in a tête-à-tête dispensing new secrets and poignant credos after the explosive season one finale that left Robert (Ricky Martin) shot and Linda cuffed.

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

After Carol Burnett’s Norma spent much of season one mumbling or unconscious in the background, Sylvia wanted her front and center, driving action in season two. “I really wanted to take the opportunity to introduce the audience to Norma in her full power, as only Carol Burnett could embody her,” Sylvia says. “This season, we wanted to leave nothing on the table in terms of the wondrous powers of our actors. And so right out of the gate, we wanted Norma to be driving the first episode.”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

When talking about harsh societal realities, Sylvia distills the ethos of the entire show through Norma in this quick exchange. “She’s saying a real truth there: ‘You have agency, you have your own money and you have conviction. You are the poster girl for the enemy within,’ ” Sylvia says. “It’s set against this ridiculous story, but what woman in this country hasn’t felt that way? Look at what happens to women in this country who have ambition and how they’re vilified. Linda’s an idealist and Norma’s a realist. These women of society, even though they had money, still faced all the misogyny and barriers that women have always faced.”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

“I like to say, nothing is ever wasted in our show. For all the planning you do, there are some decisions that you make along the way and we won’t always know why we did it until much later, and it totally pays off,” Sylvia says. “Case in point, even though Norma paints a really vivid and convincing picture of how they could pin [the shooting] on Maxine, I was sitting in the writers room and I was like, ‘We need one more piece of evidence. It isn’t enough that she invited Nixon to the ball. It isn’t enough that she had been hanging out with Linda in the feminist bookstore in season one. Like, we need a piece of hard evidence.’ And then I realized that the real culprit we had named Mary Davidsoul, and she has the same initials as Maxine. Those little things, you know. It’s like a puzzle sometimes.”

It’s not only Wiig’s accent and diction, familiar to fans of her work on SNL, that gives Palm Royale its comedic sense of heightened reality, “There’s a very sort of singsong rat-a-tatness to our dialogue that heightens the whole series. But we then also have these actors that can play [up the writing] style, but still do it in a really grounded way,” Sylvia says. But writing for the show means also knowing when to pull back, and Sylvia says he empowers the actors to tell him when enough seems like enough. “I had this one line in this scene … I think at the start it was, ‘just a confluence of convenience,’ which seems very fitting for the show,” Sylvia says. “And Carol goes, ‘Now that’s just even too wordy for us.’ And I said, ‘OK, fair enough.’ ”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

Comparing how this scene plays out to what was written on the page highlights that so much of what the actors do was never written into the character or the script, Sylvia says. “There’s a beautiful moment later in the scene where, for a moment, Linda considers [Norma’s proposition]. And we didn’t put that in the dialogue, that at the last moment, Linda almost goes along with it,” Sylvia says. “But I remember that when we were doing this scene, I went up to Laura, and she’s one of our greatest living actresses, and I said, ‘Why don’t we put in this moment at the end?’ And when you watch the scene, you’ll see for a moment she realizes that Norma is right, that she is going to fry for this. And you just watch it in Laura’s eyes. There’s a passing moment where she goes, ‘Oh, maybe, maybe I will.’ ”

Sylvia and the writers, up to this point, have breadcrumbed distinct mysteries that they lurch into full steam through the dialogue here. For many viewers, it might raise an intrigued eyebrow to hear Norma saying to Linda that being born rich ruined her. “Norma’s had to hustle. Norma wasn’t born rich,” Sylvia says. “Linda doesn’t know that Norma wasn’t born rich. The origin story begins in the finale of season one, and by episode three of season two, more is revealed — or the story we already know, we get to watch play out.”

This story first appeared in a December stand-alone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

December 15, 2025 0 comments
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WWE's Triple H responds to angry fans after John Cena's final match
TV & Streaming

WWE’s Triple H responds to angry fans after John Cena’s final match

by jummy84 December 14, 2025
written by jummy84

WWE legend John Cena wrestled his final match last night (13th December), but many fans were less than pleased with the result – prompting chief content officer Triple H to explain why it happened.

Cena returned to the company where he made his name this year for a retirement tour that saw him turn heel for the first time in his career, win an unprecedented 17th world title, and take on fellow superstars such as Randy Orton, AJ Styles and CM Punk one last time.

The Peackemaker star’s final opponent was two-time world champion Gunther, who had pledged to make Cena tap out during their showdown at Saturday Night’s Main Event this weekend.

And to the shock of the 19,000-plus fans at the Capital One Arena in Washington DC… that’s exactly what he did, as Cena’s glittering career ended with a loss by submission after Gunther locked him in a sleeper hold.

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Following the event, Triple H sat down to speak on the official WWE post-show where he was loudly booed by fans watching on in the background, who chanted their disapproval.

“I’m actually mildly disappointed, I thought it would be so much louder,” Triple H joked to a chorus of jeers.

He continued: “There are time-honoured traditions in our business and there are ways that you handle your business. John has said the right thing his entire career, that it is about leaving this place better than you found it.

“There’s no way for people to understand that in the moment. But you do what is right for the business. You do what is right for this industry. John has done that his entire career, and I’m going to do that my entire career. I will do what I believe is right for this business.

“It just is what it is. I understand that’s tough for people to understand, but it’s part of what we do. That is the role we have chosen.”

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Triple H concluded: “If you were to say, what will Cena do on his way out – take the emotion out of it and ask people, what will John Cena do? He will put over somebody on the way out. He will leave this better than he found it, he will go into the ring and he will make somebody on his way out. That’s what John does.”

Cena will next be seen on the big screen, with two films currently scheduled to release in 2026 – the long-delayed Looney Tunes live-action and animation hybrid Coyote vs Acme, and the action comedy Matchbox from Extraction director Sam Hargrave.

As for WWE, the Road to WrestleMania will soon begin in earnest, with Saturday Night’s Main Event returning next month, as well as the 2026 Royal Rumble, which takes place in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia for the first time.

WWE is available to watch on Netflix in the UK and Ireland, including RAW, SmackDown, NXT, all Premium Live Events and the WWE archive.

You can sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media.

Check out more of our coverage or visit our and to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to .

December 14, 2025 0 comments
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Steve Burton (L) attends the 51st annual Daytime Emmys Awards at The Westin Bonaventure Hotel & Suites, Los Angeles on June 07, 2024 in Los Angeles, California; John Patrick Amedori and Annika Noelle attend “Three Women” New York City Premiere on September 09, 2024 in New York City.
TV & Streaming

All the Soap Stars Who Got Married in 2025

by jummy84 December 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The love lives of your favorite soap characters are always complicated, with so many twists and turns happening every weekday. Thankfully, their portrayers don’t have to deal with all that emotional whiplash in real life.

The year 2025 is winding down, and we’re beyond excited for 2026. As Swooon looked back at the year in love, several soap stars got married. Just before Hope (Annika Noelle) married Liam (Scott Clifton) on The Bold and the Beautiful, Noelle got her own happily ever after with fellow actor John Patrick Amedori.

December 14, 2025 0 comments
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Guillermo del Toro, Oscar Isaac Talk 'Frankenstein' with Patti Smith
TV & Streaming

Guillermo del Toro, Oscar Isaac Talk ‘Frankenstein’ with Patti Smith

by jummy84 December 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Guillermo del Toro has never met a Q&A he doesn’t like. More than most, he enjoys sharing his enthusiasm with moviegoers and smart interlocutors like poet-musician-author Patti Smith (her latest memoir, “Bread of Angels,” is in bookstores). Oscar Isaac joined them for a lively conversation about the awards contender “Frankenstein,” which is currently streaming on Netflix. Watch the video exclusively above.

Here’s the December 2 New York Q&A, edited for brevity and clarity.

Patti Smith: In the early 50s, when I was a child, I saw, as we all did, James Whale’s “Frankenstein” and “The Bride of Frankenstein” and was greatly beguiled and saddened. But when I read, as you did, “The Modern Prometheus” by Mary Shelley, I saw that there was a whole world of imagination and thought processes and the evolution of the creature. And [I] wish that James Whale was still alive and would do another one. But we didn’t need him, because you came along and you gave us really something so much more akin that merged your sensibilities with Mary Shelley’s. Give us a little bit of you as a child. What world of books? I know how it happened to me. I want to hear about you.

Models show walk up stairs at the 2007 Oscar Fashion Preview at the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences on January 30, 2007 in Los Angeles, California.

Guillermo del Toro: I was weird. I was extremely thin. I’m not joking. I used to button my shirt all the way up, and had a bowl haircut. I was like a Rutger Hauer son. almost albino, very pale. And in 1969, my father won the National Lottery, and he became a millionaire, and he bought a house, and somebody told him that he needed a library, because he was now a cultured gentleman. So he bought a huge library, which he never visited, and I read everything in there.

I read an encyclopedia of art that made me know as much about painting or sculpture as I would have a comic book artist: Jack Kirby or Monet or Manet or Renoir, they were all mixing in my imagination. I read an encyclopedia of health that made me the youngest hypochondriac in history. I stayed and read. And that was part of the disappointment. “This child is not well.” They sent me to a psychologist, and he gave me clay and said, “Could you do something with this?” And I did a skeleton. It didn’t go well.

Patti Smith: I’ve seen this movie now three times, on a little screen, on the airplane, on a bigger screen… One thing that always intrigues me is Victor Frankenstein’s body language. It’s almost like an artless choreography that becomes art. You’re always in motion. You make everything seem almost like a dance. It gives the film almost an operatic sensibility. I wanted to ask you about your body language, if that was a choice.

Oscar Isaac: It was very much in the conversation with Guillermo. The camera never stops moving. It’s always moving, and so often I’m moving in counterpoint to the camera. It always felt very musical. The whole thing, that first scene, when he’s in the medical conference, it feels very much like an aria. There were times when I was filming it where I was expecting people to start singing; the sets were so operatic as well. And a lot of the movement came from Kate Hawley’s incredible costumes.

Patti Smith: You can see the fabric, like in your shirts, and the threads.

FRANKENSTEIN, Jacob Elordi as The Monster, 2025. ph: Ken Woroner / © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection
‘Frankenstein’©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection

Oscar Isaac: There was a lot of pleasure in wearing those little black high-heeled boots and running up and down the stairs in those plaid pants and the things that she would put me in, that crazy robe. It also came a lot from Guillermo. He’s a fucking superhero of pain (laughs) and darkness and hilarity and absurdity. And so, we became completely linked and synchronized, for better or worse.

Guillermo del Toro: We’re still trying to shake it off.

Oscar Isaac: The movement was like a symbiosis that happens.

Patti Smith: The creature, like you and Jacob — that’s like ballet movement. Then, when you’re giving the exhibition to the courtroom, it’s a different sweeping, and then you take Elizabeth in your arms and a different kind of sweeping, the whole thing, your body language is fantastic.

Guillermo del Toro: We actually designed the wardrobe to look like ’60s London, like he would be coming out with The Rolling Stones or Jimi Hendrix. We wanted him to feel like a rock star.

Oscar Isaac: Yeah, you talked about, especially that scene, that you wanted that swagger, to command that, the flowing shirts. But even using that cape is almost like a matador, yeah, it’s expressive, heightened.

Guillermo del Toro: And a lot of hips.

FRANKENSTEIN. (L to R) Mia Goth as Elizabeth and Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein in Frankenstein. Cr. Ken Woroner/Netflix © 2025.
‘Frankenstein’Ken Woroner/Netflix

Patti Smith: You’re right about the sets. They’re so majestic. You should do [the opera] “Parsifal,” the holy fool. Just throw out Wagner’s “Parsifal,” do some of it!

Guillermo del Toro: Like a Mexican “Parsifal.” Well, we tried to design as if it was an opera, the big Medusa, the minimal elements that are around everything. I always say there’s no eye candy in my movies. There’s high protein, because we’re telling the story. I can take you through the shapes and the colors, precisely why we designed them like that, but we wanted to make it as a novel, as epistolary. And one of the things that Gothic romance does is have a story within a story within a story. So I wanted to have self-contained color and camera language and shape language in each of the points of view, and if I made the fabric of the main characters, we wove. We didn’t buy it. We made it. We hand-embroidered it, we printed it, we dyed it, everything. We created rolls of fabric because all the language and the clothes is from nature, like Elizabeth has natural patterns from minerals, from butterfly wings. Her shawls are X-rays. Victor has the embroidered circulatory system. The vest had that. And we wanted to create this world of natural anatomical fields, and we repeat the patterns of the sets on the clothes, etc.

It’s impossibly rich, all those things. And even with the movement, again, to talk about it, starting in this vital place, alive with movement. And slowly calcifying as he gets more angry and more regret[ful]. And then he becomes more creature-like, even with those costumes and the prosthetic leg, as the creature becomes more human. So even those two are rising in opposite ways.

Patti Smith: I was so in love with that ship. I love all the Antarctic explorers and Shackleton.

Oscar Isaac: Imagine rolling up to the Netflix studio, and there’s a fully-sized ship, like the huge, actual-size ship, on gimbals in the parking lot. That was one of the first things that I saw when I arrived.

Patti Smith: It looks like these glass pictures, found in Antarctica. It almost made me feel nauseous, in a good way.

Guillermo del Toro: My producing partner felt nauseous when I said, “We’re building it for real,” but I was making a point that it should be a handcrafted movie by humans, for humans. There’s something that happens when 90 percent of what you’re seeing has a physical component. Yes, we built a ship. When he moves the ship, it’s on motors, and he’s moving the ship with all the sailors on top. When you see the ship, every shot you see is a real ship. We covered the parking lot with ice. We came up with a method to sandwich translucent solids on the icebergs. And we were inspired mainly by Caspar David Frederick, the glass plates from Shackleton, whatever has been found undocumented. We went to the places in Scotland, the UK. We shot in real locations. And we built full-size sets.

Patti Smith: How you worked is the same process as Victor, because when he’s making the sinews of [the creature’s] fingers and all the details of how he’s putting them together and stripping the other bodies, it’s all by hand. It’s a metaphor for your work.

Oscar Isaac: What’s beautiful is that, as opposed to it being this horror scene, it’s lit so beautifully. There’s this beautiful waltz playing, it’s him at his most calm and peaceful.

Guillermo del Toro: He’s happy.

Oscar Isaac: Yeah, that’s what he knows how to do, make his creature…It’s fast, it’s passion, it’s heightened. This isn’t naturalism. We watched movies, different films, to find the tone of it. Oliver Reed was somebody that we watched; what a complicated, huge, magnetic, and scary person. And Pedro Infante, we watched these 1930s Mexican films. We spoke a lot in the words of telenovelas. [Guillermo] would say, “I need you to give me the Maria Cristina. Come on.” We spoke in Spanish the entire time to each other. For me, it is the mother tongue. My mother spoke to me only in Spanish, even though I grew up here since I was a year old. But there was something about speaking that way, that unlocked a mode of unconscious expression, and giving over to that kind of unbridled expression.

Patti Smith: Of the female characters, like Ofelia [“Pan’s Labyrinth”], who I love so much, and Elisa [“The Shape of Water”], and now Elizabeth, and they all give themselves. They all feel empathy with something that everyone else would be frightened of or repelled by, they’re all drawn. And I wrote my notes, “Who are you in all these films?” I think you’re the little girls. You have that eternal young girl longing for a pure love, and they all find it even in death.

FRANKENSTEIN, from left: Mia Goth, Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein, 2025. ph: Ken Woroner / © Netflix /Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Frankenstein’©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection

Guillermo del Toro: The Catholic part is to suffer. But there is a pristine way of looking at life in all its ups and downs. And if you don’t look for perfection, if you look for imperfection, but necessarily, you can either accept or let go. That’s about it. And both are in the lexicon of existing. Elizabeth is the only modern character [in “Frankenstein”] and the only character that is not alone. It’s about loneliness so much, and then for a moment, a brief moment, [she and the creature] are together. The creature and Victor are always in the mirror together because they’re part of one single soul, which is what fatherhood and being a child is. You don’t realize it’s a soul that has been split in two, but Elizabeth and the creature are an emptiness split in two, and they attract each other because they feel that they both were broken in the same way. The tone visually has to be of a piece with the tone of the actors. When you think of Jimmy Cagney or Oliver Reed, they’re not naturalistic, but they’re real.

I like the heightened sensation that you’re in a movie, you’re not in the real world. But all that goes to hell if Elizabeth looks at the creature and she sees makeup. She has to see it like a real soul. So, every time they were together, I would shoot them at 36 frames. So I would be able to slow down when she enters with the dress, it floats, and when she’s looking at him, I speed it up to 18 frames so her face is vibrating. And when she’s looking at him, all these little things that you learn through 30 years of craft are invisible, but her performance being real is the key, the performance of Victor and the creature has to be real. Their arc starts in opposites. Victor finishes his life’s work the night the creature starts his life. And also, he’s so heartbreaking; they’re never going to see eye to eye. He basically becomes a mother in the first four weeks of postpartum. Those three characters form a single soul, Elizabeth, Victor, and the creature for me.

Patti Smith: He starts his sorrow the minute he achieves his goal, when he sits on those steps and thinks that there’s no more, forget what he says about the horizon, it’s done. He’s finished his course, and now the debris of all his work is going to haunt him. But as a girl, I was attracted to the creature. Frankenstein, the monster as James Whale gave us, I was never attracted to him. I felt empathy for him always, even when he accidentally killed the little child; you still have pain for him, but the way that I felt about your creature was completely different. He gave me hope, the idea that he would achieve another level of intelligence or answers to immortality. How did you decide how his countenance would look?

Guillermo del Toro: The two main inspirations were a statue of Saint Bartholomew in Rome, which is made of alabaster, and the lines are anatomically incorrect, but they’re beautiful. They’re almost Art Deco, and the head was designed after the patterns of phrenology that were created as a pseudoscience in the 1800s. There are so many echoes of Christ in the movie with the creature, and we can go through them and raising him, the crown of thorns, the red mantle on his shoulders, the wound on the side when he resurrects after three days, but it’s also Adam expelled, and finding a tree with red fruit, and getting to know pain through that. So all the biblical beauty, for me, tells you this is not a repair job, it’s a newly minted soul. Therefore, the ruining of it is more painful. They’re not ruining something they patched up. They’re ruining something that he minted.

And the pursuit has to be the red of the mother. The color red of the mother pursues Victor through the film and comes back with Elizabeth, the scarf, the gloves, the batteries, the angel, blah, blah, blah. He says he’s interested in life. He’s interested in vanquishing death. The way he treats life is completely cavalier. So the creature needs to be on the same color palette as Elizabeth, and they achieve this sort of translucent alabaster, nicotine oyster grace. And they come together at the end on their wedding night, which I wanted to make the one moment they have together. And the creature becomes, first, a baby, and the reactions are completely clean. And it’s very hard for an actor to do nothing, but he achieves it. Jacob, and then I give him three words: Victor, Elizabeth, friend, and the more he accumulates words, the more he knows pain. And with pain comes questions, and with questions comes the need for answers, and he finally achieves Grace at the end of the film.

He’s brutal with those that are brutal with him, he’s loving with those that are loving, and at the end, he is loving with those that were brutal with him, and accepts the grace of the son. So his performance tracking from Jacob was far from Victor’s part from Oscar, because they have such a beautiful arc together. For that, forgiveness seemed to work. I was betting on one gesture, and that’s the hand grabbing the hand. Oscar found it on the day. The first scene we shot together with the two guys was that scene.

Oscar helped me so beautifully. I wrote it for him, so I would send him pages before anyone, and we found the pentameter, so to speak, the rhythms of the language, so that 90 percent of the dialogue in the movie is completely new. It doesn’t come from the book, but he needed to have the same poetic breath of the book, and we found that.

FRANKENSTEIN, Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein, 2025.  © Netflix / courtesy Everett Collection
‘Frankenstein’©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection

Patti Smith: When [Elizabeth] said, “Who hurt you?” I felt like that phrase hovered over the entire film. I felt like it was echoing over and over, even when the brother died, when the brother says, “You are the monster who hurt him.” He has this realization of how no one really hates the other, it’s just human nature or animal nature…The world consciousness, everything.

Guillermo del Toro: Pain is basically inevitable, and because we are mammalian hunter-gatherers, we’re going to necessarily get in the way, because your hope and my hope are never going to fully coincide all the time. And that’s why I wanted to paraphrase the book in giving the creature its own voice and [making] it a fairy tale. And he learns from the animals, the ravens give birth to him. The deer teach him violence. Then the mice adopt him, and then the wolves are the world. The wolves don’t care, but they’re going to hurt you, and that’s a fact. My father was kidnapped in 1998, kept for 72 days. And we had to go through it, and continue functioning, because you cannot stop functioning. You have to stay yourself. And the final image comes from that. When my father was kidnapped in the middle of the kidnapping, I resented the sun. I said, “Why does the sun rise, when I’m in pain?” And then the question became, “Why am I in pain when the sun rises?” You have to give yourself to that grace of a metronome that is much larger than your woes. And if you give in to that metronome, then you find release. So brutality is part of the language that structures reality. I don’t say I’m in favor of it existing. I was so familiar with loss when I was a kid. The familiarity that I have with Mary Shelley, my mother had many miscarriages. I had two siblings younger than me, and whenever she went to the hospital, I thought s”he’s gone, she’s not coming back.” “Who hurt you?” comes from a fairy tale, Oscar Wilde’s “The Selfish Giant.” When he raises the baby Jesus and he says, “Who hurt you?” I love that.

Horror, parable, and fairy tale are closely related. Horror articulates trauma in a way that no other genre does, except fairy tale and parable. And that’s why we are so moved by things that are intangible. Hans Christian Andersen and Oscar Wilde are the masters of pain and beauty. Those are two guys that are as much in touch with the brutality as they are in touch with the beauty. Every other tale can be sadistic or not, and in a more Jungian way. But those two, they are turning to aesthetics, pain, horror, and beauty.

Patti Smith: Well, thank you for being the eternal child. Thank you, Oscar. You’re both awesome.

“Frankenstein” is now streaming on Netflix.

December 13, 2025 0 comments
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LaKeith Stanfield to Star in Dennis Rodman Movie, Replacing Jonathan Majors
TV & Streaming

LaKeith Stanfield to Star in Dennis Rodman Movie, Replacing Jonathan Majors

by jummy84 December 13, 2025
written by jummy84

LaKeith Stanfield is set to play NBA legend Dennis Rodman in Lionsgate’s “48 Hours in Vegas,” taking over the role after Jonathan Majors was dropped from the film following his 2023 assault conviction.

The upcoming comedy is “inspired by the untold story of Dennis Rodman’s legendary trip to Las Vegas during the 1998 NBA Finals — just as the Rodman’s Chicago Bulls are on the verge of completing their second consecutive threepeat championship in eight years,” according to a release.

Rick Famuyiwa (“The Mandalorian,” “Ahsoka”) will direct “48 Hours in Vegas” and write the next draft of the screenplay, following an earlier draft by Jordan VanDina.

The film will be produced by Lord Miller’s Phil Lord, Chris Miller, and Aditya Sood. Executive producers include Ari Lubet, Rodman and Lucy Kitada, with Nikki Baida serving as co-producer. Meredith Wieck and Pavan Kalidindi will oversee the project for Lionsgate, while Robert Melnik negotiated the deals on behalf of the studio.

“I’m genuinely excited to help create an exhilarating, joyful work that both honors and thoughtfully examines the legacy of Rodman and fellow trailblazers,” Stanfield said in a statement. “Those who moved to the beat of their own drum, undeterred by the obstacles placed before them, then and now.”

Stanfield received an Oscar nomination for his performance in 2021’s “Judas and the Black Messiah.” He is known for roles in films including “The Book of Clarence,” “Sorry to Bother You” and “Get Out,” as well as the FX dramedy series “Atlanta.” He most recently appeared in “Roofman” and “Die My Love,” and will next be seen in “I Love Boosters.” Stanfield is represented by CAA, Stark Management and Ginsburg Daniels Kallis.

“Dennis Rodman is more than a basketball player, more than a personality—he’s an entire cultural phenomenon. His bold style and physical presence, combined with an iconic persona, created a larger-than-life impact on and off the court,” said Erin Westerman, president of Lionsgate Motion Picture Group. “There’ll never be another like him. LaKeith and the incredibly talented team on this film will bring the legend to life in this most extraordinarily unbelievable story.”

Majors was previously attached to the Rodman film until he was convicted of two misdemeanor counts of harassment and assault stemming from a domestic dispute with his former partner. He was sentenced in April 2024 to one year of domestic violence counseling.

Insneider was first to report the casting news.

December 13, 2025 0 comments
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James Cameron Says Merger Can't Shut Down Theatrical
TV & Streaming

James Cameron Says Merger Can’t Shut Down Theatrical

by jummy84 December 12, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Three-time Oscar winner James Cameron remains eerie on a Netflix-Warner Bros marriage, particularly in its impact on the theatrical business and the window. However, Cameron plans to stand in the way of any steamroller making a path toward the big screen.

Deadline Awards Editor Antonia Blyth caught up with the Avatar: Fire and Wash filmmaker, who shared his feelings on the pending merger, now that Warners has accepted Netflix’s bid (yes, nothing is done yet, as Paramount has launched a hostile takeover over the 102-year-old studio).

“Look, it’s no secret that Netflix, they’ve kind of, in a funny way, they’ve had to make an accommodation with a few filmmakers like Guillermo del Toro and so on to keep a foot in theatrical, but I think it’s no secret that they want to replace theatrical,” Cameron told Deadline today.

20th Century Studios

“OK, I mean, maybe that happens, I don’t know, maybe I’m a dinosaur,” he continued, “I happen to think that there’s something sacred about the movie going experience and just the ease and broad access of streaming is not the complete answer. Maybe the universe adjusts around those two principles, but you can’t just steamroll theatrical out of existence and I’m going to stay opposed to that.”

On Monday, Netflix co-CEO Ted Sarandos walked back his comments of recent months, and exclaimed that he’s pro-theatrical, particularly for those greenlit Warner Bros titles that are being developed and made for multiplexes. He’ll even honor the downstream window. However, sources says that Sarandos is a champion of a 17-day exclusive theatrical window, which is far apart from the 45-day window which exhibition craves. For many, 17-days theatrical to Netflix is a shotgun to the moviegoing business.

Cameron said, “Now, maybe Netflix modifies its game once it has the responsibility for the survival of theatrical as well. If they prevail in this, they’ll become a major and we’re down to half the number of majors that existed when I came into the business. This is going to sort itself out, but I’m pretty four-square on the side of let’s keep that theatrical experience alive. Clearly, I make movies for that, primarily.”

“They play well through the waterfall because a good story is a good story. You put it on the smallest screen you want, it’s still a good story. You look at it through a fricking pinhole, it’s still a good story, right?” said the director whose last movie, 2022’s Avatar: The Way of Water became the third highest grossing movie worldwide at $2.3 billion and cleared $531M in profit after all ancillaries. Again, you don’t get to those numbers, Netflix, on a 17-day theatrical window. Duh.

Then bringing back to home, meaning Avatar: Fire and Ash, which runs 3 hours and 15 minutes long, the longest of any Avatar movie, Cameron added, “But the way it’s meant to be enjoyed is in a theater in 3D, in an unbroken stream of consciousness, three hours long, because that’s when the emotion will wash over you and through you in a way that it never will on a smaller screen in an interrupted flow.”

“The second you’ve got a remote and you composite, you just lost half of the impact,” Cameron continued, “Boom! Mic drop. I’ve never said it that concisely.”

Avatar: Fire And Ash opens next Friday and is expected to clear $100M+ at the domestic box office in its opening weekend.

December 12, 2025 0 comments
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Best TV Shows of 2025
TV & Streaming

Best TV Shows of 2025

by jummy84 December 12, 2025
written by jummy84

Daniel Fienberg’s Top 10

It is, I’m sure, a complete coincidence that the two shows that hit me hardest in 2025 were very different dramas cautioning viewers about fascism, each delving into the rise of banal evil — but only one offering a template for how to plant the seeds of revolution. It turns out that our contemporary lives have a lot in common with life a long time ago, in a galaxy far, far away (or 100 years ago in Europe).

For the first time since critics and television executives began discussing “Peak TV,” there were stretches of 2025 during which it was possible to feel the impact of a global pandemic, multiple extended industry strikes and the looming specter of unprecedented media consolidation. There was never too little television, but sometimes the search for greatness took us to offbeat outlets like Mubi or settings like the North Pole. 

Some of the creators behind my favorite shows of the year arrived fresh off acclaimed classics, but there was room for new voices as well. Greatness could be found in tried-and-true genres like the biopic or the medical procedural, but also in reality-comedy hybrids or animated shows that messed with our ideas of linearity and reality.

My list contains shows that will tie you up in knots, reminding you of the uncertain state of the world at large, but also shows offering a bit of escapism or warmth. 

Here’s just some of the good stuff from the small-screen year that was.

  • 1. Mussolini: Son of the Century (Mubi)

    Luca Marinelli in 'Mussolini: Son of the Century'
    Image Credit: Andrea-Pirrello

    Some years I might look for a more polished, conventionally satisfying top choice, but unsubtle times call for unsubtle art, and Stefano Bises and Davide Serino’s chronicle of the rise of Italian dictator Benito Mussolini is an audacious and orgiastic warning about the mechanics of encroaching fascism. Joe Wright directs the eight-part series, borrowing aesthetic devices from opera, German Expressionism and the primordial ooze of early cinema, and fusing it all into a cacophonous piece of horror propaganda, elevated by Seamus McGarvey’s breathtaking cinematography and a uniquely unnerving soundtrack from Chemical Brothers veteran Tom Rowlands. Towering over the whole thing is Luca Marinelli’s terrifying, animalistic performance in the title role, perfectly pitched for a series that was probably the year’s best and definitely its MOST show.

  • 2. Andor (Disney+)

    'Andor' season one.'Andor' season one.
    Image Credit: Disney+

    Poor Andor has to be satisfied with being only the year’s second-best warning about the mechanics of encroaching fascism, though it’s hard to equal creator Tony Gilroy’s audacity in using Disney’s Star Wars universe to deliver something this smart, this angry and this thrilling. Gilroy’s great gift in the 12-episode sophomore season — split into four three-episode arcs — is providing both the epic excitement the franchise demands and a prism through which to view the rise of Trump 2.0, the quagmire in Gaza and any future conflict pitting authoritarian governance against civilian unrest. Andor is now the standard by which the aspirations of all future Star Wars projects must be judged.

  • 3. Eyes on the Prize III: We Who Believe in Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015 (PBS)

    Angela Davis in Eyes On The Prize III: We Who Believe In Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015Angela Davis in Eyes On The Prize III: We Who Believe In Freedom Cannot Rest 1977-2015
    Image Credit: Courtesy of HBO

    The mechanics of encroaching fascism are only in the background of the essential third installment of this essential Civil Rights Movement history, which HBO effectively buried in February. In the six-episode docuseries, a sextet of directors look past the uproar of the ’50s and ’60s at more recent struggles including community activism in the South Bronx, the fight for affirmative action and the organization of the Million Man March. Each chapter is a reminder that progress isn’t always linear, with every hard-earned gain contextualized by the audience’s awareness of the steps taken by the Trump administration to undo the good work.

  • 4. The Rehearsal (HBO)

    Nathan Fielder in The RehearsalNathan Fielder in The Rehearsal
    Image Credit: John P. Johnson/HBO

    Underestimate Nathan Fielder at your own peril. The first season of The Rehearsal was already a dazzling fusion of comedy, reality TV and autobiography, but the second season took and landed a precarious leap. Fielder started with a jokey (if timely) premise about fixing communication between airline pilots and co-pilots and somehow leveraged it in directions as serious as sit-down meetings with actual DC politicians and as surreal and silly as a recreation of Sully Sullenberger’s life, as impersonal as an ambitious fake singing competition and as heartbreakingly personal as the attempts to diagnose his possible autism.

  • 5. Long Story Short (Netflix)

    A still from ‘Long Story Short’ on NetflixA still from ‘Long Story Short’ on Netflix
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

    It isn’t surprising that Raphael Bob-Waksberg’s first solo creation post-BoJack never felt as buzzy as his exploration of Hollywood and depression. Built on a foundation of family and Judaism, Long Story Short is elliptical and evasive, playing with memory and time to illustrate what is often so infuriating and so necessary about family. It’s a show that works well from episode to episode — Bob-Waksberg’s love of puns, wordplay and silliness infiltrates even the darker chapters — and works even more beautifully as the pieces come together in a true animated tapestry.

  • 6. The Lowdown (FX)

    The Lowdown Ethan Hawke as Lee Raybon.The Lowdown Ethan Hawke as Lee Raybon.
    Image Credit: Shane Brown/FX

    Sterlin Harjo follows up perennial list-topper Reservation Dogs with a shaggy-dog mystery comedy that’s ostensibly a convoluted whodunit with Tim Blake Nelson as the verbose victim, but turns out to really be a love letter to Oklahoma’s melting pot of cultures and the unique pleasures of watching Ethan Hawke repeatedly getting beat up. It’s more a collection of magical moments and immaculate vibes than a tightly composed narrative, but every second of The Lowdown looks and feels right.

  • 7. Pluribus (Apple TV)

    Rhea Seehorn in PluribusRhea Seehorn in Pluribus
    Image Credit: Apple TV

    Returning to his X Files roots while retaining his Albuquerque grounding, Vince Gilligan riffs on Invasion of the Body Snatchers with a very funny, very sad, very inventive meditation on loneliness and the allure of monoculture in a fragmented world. It’s a simple premise, executed with thrilling versatility through a uniquely dyspeptic heroine. As that grumpy protagonist, who was uncomfortable with the old world and likes the cheery new world even less, Rhea Seehorn completes the transition from Your Favorite TV Critic’s Favorite Actress to National Treasure.

  • 8. Adolescence (Netflix)

    Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller in AdolescenceOwen Cooper as Jamie Miller in Adolescence
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

    The combination of just enough profundity to avoid being simply a technical stunt and more than enough televisual pyrotechnics to avoid being simply a polemic helped make Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham’s Netflix four-parter into 2025’s buzziest show. Director Philip Barantini’s one-shot wizardry — sometimes navigating great distances without blinking, other times turning a one-room conversation into a claustrophobic thriller — never upstaged stars including Graham, Erin Doherty and breakout newcomer Owen Cooper, nor did it distract from the cautionary tale of youthful masculinity in chaos.

  • 9. Such Brave Girls (Hulu)

    Such Brave GirlsSuch Brave Girls
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Hulu

    No show currently makes me laugh as frequently, as hard or as guiltily as Kat Sadler’s BBC Three/Hulu comedy (season 2 aired this year) about two generations of women — played by Louise Brealey, Lizzie Davidson and Sadler — united by the sense that their shared family trauma is unparalleled, even if their lives are, at worst, complicatedly ordinary. Sadler’s confident voice, turning domestic toxicity into perfectly honed, invariably scathing punchlines, finds the humor in mental illness, romantic dysfunction and death.

  • 10. North of North (Netflix)

    Anna Lambe in Netflix’s North of North.Anna Lambe in Netflix’s North of North.
    Image Credit: Jasper Savage/Netflix

    If this list is topped by the year’s most aggressively uncomfortable shows, it ends with a slice of comfort in the form of Stacey Aglok MacDonald and Alethea Arnaquq-Baril’s thoroughly heartwarming CBC/Netflix comedy. Set and filmed in an Inuk community in the Canadian Arctic, North of North is an utterly distinctive spin on countless coming-of-age tropes, anchored by a star-making performance by Anna Lambe. The series manages, in only eight episodes, to build a fictional community characterized by eccentric togetherness at an otherwise turbulent moment.

    ***

    Honorable mentions (in alphabetical order): Abbot Elementary (ABC), The Bear (FX/Hulu), The Chair Company (HBO), Common Side Effects (Adult Swim), Dark Winds (AMC), Everybody’s Live With John Mulaney (Netflix), Hacks (HBO Max), Katrina: Come Hell and High Water (Netflix), The Pitt (HBO Max), Severance (Apple TV) 

  • Angie Han’s Top 10

    I’ll just say it: This was not a great year for television. 

    We’ve been talking about the big TV slowdown for a couple of years now, but the past several months have been especially sparse, with the release calendar alternating between weeks of drought and days-long flurries of activity. 

    Supposedly “safe” bets like IP extensions, dramas about miserable rich white families and ripped-from-the-headlines true crime fare yielded more forgotten duds (remember The Rainmaker? Or Good American Family? Me neither) than lasting hits. When the medium did grab headlines, it often did so for upsetting reasons, like the ousting of Stephen Colbert, the suspension of Jimmy Kimmel or the indefinite postponement of Apple TV’s The Savant. 

    There were some thrilling high points — thank you, Major League Baseball, for giving us one of the year’s most unforgettable plot arcs — but at least from my perch on my living room couch, Hollywood in 2025 has felt defined more by anxiety and uncertainty than optimistic confidence. Nor is it obvious that the immediate future’s going to be much brighter, seeing as two of the big storylines at the moment are industry consolidation and the rise of generative AI. 

    And yet. Just because TV as a whole isn’t doing amazing doesn’t mean there haven’t been amazing TV shows. I fell in love over and over this year with series that spoke to the moment with shocking lucidity, series that comforted me in their sturdy familiarity, series that did the exact opposite and delighted me with their originality. The TV business will have its ups and downs. But as long as our species is capable of producing creative minds and brilliant talents, there will always be something to watch. 

  • 1. Andor (Disney+)

    Diego Luna in Lucasfilm's 'Andor'.Diego Luna in Lucasfilm's 'Andor'.
    Image Credit: Des Willie/Disney+/Lucasfilm/Everett Collection

    How bleakly appropriate that in a year when too much of mainstream media seemed loathe to call American authoritarianism what it was, it should take a Star Wars spinoff (of all things!) to reflect the moment with clarity and purpose. Tony Gilroy’s Disney+ drama leveled up in its second season with a searing examination of the means through which fascism is spread and the heavy toll paid to fight it — and with a rousing call about the necessity of doing so anyway.

  • 2. The Pitt (HBO Max)

    Noah Wyle in The PittNoah Wyle in The Pitt
    Image Credit: Courtesy of HBO

    Medical shows were a dime a dozen in 2025. Still, none were doing it quite like R. Scott Gemmill’s don’t-call-it-an-ER-clone HBO Max series. Though Noah Wyle’s sturdy and empathetic Dr. Robby served as the anchor, it was the vast ensemble that truly brought the Pittsburgh hospital setting to life, from seasoned vets like Katherine LaNasa’s weary charge nurse to fresh-faced newbies like Gerran Howell’s beleaguered intern — rooting the real-time drama in an immediacy that was occasionally devastating, frequently thrilling and always marvelously human.

  • 3. Long Story Short (Netflix)

    'Long Story Short''Long Story Short'
    Image Credit: Netflix ©2025

    The latest animated dramedy from Bojack Horseman creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg may not have seemed like anything terribly unique to start, following as it does the mundane lives of an ordinary Jewish family. But first impressions can be deceiving. Jumping between characters and across decades, the Netflix series painted a portrait of a family in all its strengths and flaws and minor traumas, so richly specific that their memories became our own and so brimming with love that their joys and losses did too.

  • 4. Common Side Effects (Adult Swim)

    'Common Side Effects''Common Side Effects'
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Adult Swim

    Only combining the minds behind one of the most thoughtful sci-fi shows in recent memory and some of the best-loved workplace comedies of the past several decades could yield a brew as intoxicatingly original as this Adult Swim animated series, about the destructive battle for a magical mushroom capable of curing death itself. I never knew where this show, darkly hilarious and frequently thrilling, with disarming moments of tenderness and surreal beauty, was headed next — just that I couldn’t wait for my next dose.

  • 5. The Studio (Apple TV)

    From left: Ike Barinholtz alongside Kathryn Hahn and Chase Sui Wonders in Apple TV+’s The Studio.From left: Ike Barinholtz alongside Kathryn Hahn and Chase Sui Wonders in Apple TV+’s The Studio.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Apple TV+

    Can a showbiz send-up be simultaneously an indictment of an industry in crisis, a tribute to a rosier past and a love letter to a storied medium and the people who keep it running? Starring and co-created by Seth Rogen, Apple TV’s exhilarating comedy mined gasps, giggles and surprising heart from the conflict between a studio chief’s passion for the craft and his professional obligation to the bottom line. (Try not to think too hard about the fact that from the back end of 2025, an exec who actually gives a shit about cinema sounds increasingly like a cryptid.)

  • 6. Pluribus (Apple TV)

    Rhea Seehorn in PluribusRhea Seehorn in Pluribus
    Image Credit: Apple TV+

    You could read Vince Gilligan’s gorgeously shot Apple TV sci-fi apocalypse as being about any number of things, from AI to the loneliness epidemic. But at its heart lay the more fundamental question of what it means to be human at all. Rhea Seehorn’s Carol may have been a misanthrope, but in her quest to save a world that insists it doesn’t want to be saved, she forced us to consider what makes us who we are and why we might be worth fighting for in all our ugly, messy glory.

  • 7. The Chair Company (HBO)

    Tim Robinson in 'The Chair Company.'Tim Robinson in 'The Chair Company.'
    Image Credit: Sarah Shatz/HBO

    There is no one like Tim Robinson. Except, of course, what makes his comedy so brilliant is that all of us feel a little like him sometimes. His latest painfully awkward creation was Ron Trosper, a businessman who spirals into conspiracy theory after a minor humiliation at work. His journey was surreal in its unpredictable detours and bizarre characters — and yet, in its overarching sense of discomfort with a world that’s ceased to make sense, also strangely relatable. 

  • 8. North of North (Netflix)

    Anna Lambe as Siaja in episode 106 of North of North.Anna Lambe as Siaja in episode 106 of North of North.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

    Who’d have thought one of the year’s warmest shows would spring from one of the world’s harshest climes? The series, following the daily rhythms of a primarily Inuit village deep in the Canadian Arctic, might not have reinvented the small-town comedy. But it certain gave the genre a fresh spin with its unusual-for-TV setting, its vibrant cultural specificity (bet you’ve never heard the phrase “walrus dick baseball” before) and its breakout lead actor, the absolutely radiant Anna Lambe. 

  • 9. Mr. Loverman (BritBox)

    Mr LovermanMr Loverman
    Image Credit: BBC

    It would not be inaccurate to describe this BBC drama, which made hardly a splash in the U.S., as a triumph for underrepresented voices, chronicling the fallout when a septuagenarian Antiguan Londoner (an incredible Lennie James) leaves his long-alienated wife (Sharon D. Clarke) for his lover of several decades (Ariyon Bakare). But that would be selling short the wryness of its humor, the awesome complexity of its characters, the exquisite beauty of its costumes and sets and the palpable, even sexy chemistry between its trio of leads.

  • 10. Adolescence (Netflix)

    (L to R) Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller, Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller, in Adolescence.(L to R) Stephen Graham as Eddie Miller, Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller, in Adolescence.
    Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix

    There was no wrapping your head around the shocking crime at the heart of this Netflix drama, of a sweet-faced teenager (Owen Cooper) murdering a classmate in cold blood. There could only be attempts to understand the culture that produced him, and the shockwaves his actions sent through his family and his community. Creators Jack Thorne and Stephen Graham found the humanity underneath the inhumanity, yielding a series of both breathtaking technical accomplishment (those seemingly impossible long takes!) and devastating emotional effect.

    ***

    Honorable mentions (in alphabetical order): Alien: Earth (FX), Forever (Netflix), Hacks (HBO), The Hunting Wives (Netflix), The Lowdown (FX), Overcompensating (Prime Video), Pee-Wee as Himself (HBO), Platonic (Apple TV), The Rehearsal (HBO), Severance (Apple TV)

December 12, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel
TV & Streaming

‘He Appears To Be Deeply Unwell’

by jummy84 December 11, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Jimmy Kimmel questioned Donald Trump’s repeated claims of excellent health, highlighting the President’s lengthy social media posts and visible physical issues.
  • Kimmel mocked Trump’s boasts about acing cognitive exams, noting that the tests are basic and suggesting repeated testing indicates concern over his mental state.
  • The comedian also criticized Trump’s economic messaging, pointing out he’s making the ‘same mistake as Joe Biden.’

Donald Trump continues to boast of his excellent physical and mental health, but Jimmy Kimmel isn’t buying it, especially after the President’s latest lengthy rant on the issue.

On Wednesday’s (December 10) Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the late-night host touched on a ridiculously long Truth Social post Trump shared on Tuesday night (December 9) to “let us know he’s doing fine.”

“Our President appears to be deeply unwell, even for him,” Kimmel said in his opening monologe before flashing up a screenshot of Trump’s post, which was so long it covered Kimmel’s entire body.

“This post about his health is twice as long as the Gettysburg Address, and that’s not a joke,” the comedian quipped. He then looked at Trump’s claims that he “aced” three separate cognitive exams.

“Let me tell you what that means,” Kimmel told his audience. “That means he passed the first two, and they were like ‘This can’t be right. Let’s give him one more.’”

Kimmel noted these are “not the SAT tests he’s taking,” adding, “It’s a one-page exam to see if you know the difference between a camel and a goat. It’s basically the test paramedics give you when you hit your head in a jet-ski accident.”

He then addressed Trump’s hands, which have continued to draw attention over the past year due to the bruising on his skin. On Tuesday, the President appeared in Pennsylvania with a band-aid over his hand and make-up covering part of it.

Jimmy Kimmel Live! YouTube

“Something is wrong here,” Kimmel said. “The guy who is running our country is being given unscheduled dementia tests. He’s been given MRIs. He has mystery bruises he’s covering with Maybelline. And we’re supposed to accept this idea that he’s some cross between Chris Hemsworth and Albert Einstein?”

Elsewhere in Tuesday’s monologue, Kimmel addressed Trump’s speech on the economy at the Mount Airy Casino Resort in Pennsylvania. In the speech, Trump boasted of a thriving economy, while at the same time suggesting families “give up certain products,” saying, “You can give up pencils… You don’t need 37 dolls for your daughter. Two or three is nice, but you don’t need 37 dolls.”

“The guy who bedazzled this room in gold thinks your child has too many pencils at school,” Kimmel joked, adding, “His strategy, it seems, is to just keep saying things are great, which is the same mistake Joe Biden made, by the way.”

He added, “You can’t just tell people the economy is good when they’re paying more for everything. We know how much things cost. People are looking at the price of apples with our eyes, and you’re telling us to not see it.”

“He wants us to be a bunch of ‘not-sees,’” Kimmel concluded, using the pronunciation to make it sound like “Nazis.”

You can watch Kimmel’s full opening monologue in the video above and let us know your thoughts below.

Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Weeknights, 11:35/10:35c, ABC

December 11, 2025 0 comments
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Five Out of Five Baguettes
TV & Streaming

Five Out of Five Baguettes

by jummy84 December 11, 2025
written by jummy84


Top of the Line Newsletter 2: Five Out of Five Baguettes




























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Week 2 of IndieWire’s Top of the Line Craft newsletter deals with doom by enjoying a show about the end of the world.

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December 11, 2025 0 comments
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Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz Series About Their Lives In Development
TV & Streaming

Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz Series About Their Lives In Development

by jummy84 December 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Everybody knows Lucille Ball, Desi Arnaz and the legend of “I Love Lucy.” But do they really?

There have been several movies over the years about the two icons, including Aaron Sorkin’s recent “Being the Ricardos.” But the story of “Lucy and Desi” goes far beyond the smash success of “I Love Lucy,” and that’s what got Lucie Arnaz — the daughter of the late Hollywood icons — thinking about doing something bigger. Arnaz has partnered with former NBC Entertainment and WarnerMedia Entertainment chairman Bob Greenblatt to develop what they envision as a three-season deep dive into the lives of Ball and Arnaz, from the couple’s separate tumultuous upbringings to making TV history with “I Love Lucy” — and then the clashes that led to their eventual divorce.

Arnaz and Greenblatt have recruited Oscar nominee and Emmy winner Richard LaGravenese (“The Fisher King,” “Behind the Candelabra”) to create the series, which will rely on source material including autobiographies written by Ball and Arnaz, the rights of which have reverted to Arnaz. Greenblatt’s The Green Room and Arnaz’s Desilu Productions are behind the project, which will also be produced by Green Room content head Jon Wu.

“If you’re really willing to look at the whole thing, there’s quite a story there, and a lot to be learned,” Arnaz said. “It’s very emotional, and it’s not what people think. It’s not just all about ‘I Love Lucy.’”

Arnaz and Greenblatt have put together a pitch deck for the series, with the working title “Lucy and Desi: The Greatest Story Never Told,” and plan to start meeting with networks and streamers in the coming months. The timing of the pitch comes as “I Love Lucy” celebrates its 75th anniversary in 2026 (the show debuted in October 1951) and on the heels of two new books exploring the couple: “Desi Arnaz, The Man Who Invented Television,” by Todd S. Purdum, and Arnaz’s own new look at her parents’ relationship, “Lucy & Desi: The Love Letters,” which she edited.

“As we take it to buyers, there’s a version of this that could be 10 hours and done, if somebody wants to jump in with that,” Greenblatt said. “But we want to present it as a multi-season show. We think it’s three seasons of eight episodes. Obviously, we have to find the right buyer and cater to what they want to do. But it needs to have time to breathe. It really is an extraordinary story, from when they’re each teenagers in their separate worlds — one being Cuba as it’s coming apart at the seams, and one being very WASPy New York. They were both thrust out on their own, quickly at a young age, to try to figure out who they were and find their way in the business. Then they converge in 1940 on a soundstage at RKO, doing a movie together. ‘I Love Lucy’ is 11 years later, but that’s 11 years when they’re together in a marriage that’s up and down and complex.”

Arnaz and Greenblatt were inspired by the timeline of Netflix’s “The Crown” to similarly divide “Lucy and Desi” into different eras. In their pitch, Season 1, “From Cuba and Jamestown to New York and Hollywood,” would focus on 1930 to 1940; Season 2, “Family Life, B-Movies and Radio,” would span from 1940 to 1951; and Season 3, “The Ricardos Catch Fire, and Beyond,” would look at the “I Love Lucy” era, from 1951 to 1960 and more.

In partnering with LaGravenese (who most recently penned Paramount+’s upcoming “Unspeakable: The Murder of JonBenét Ramsey”) and not a comedy writer, Arnaz said it was important to explore some of the darker aspects of her parents’ relationship in addition to the good times.

“The story is not all ha-ha. There’s a lot of sadness, there’s addiction, and there’s cheating, and there’s lots of fights for no reason,” she said. “There’s something to be learned from what they went through and how it’s not that easy to have it all… They had this wonderful legacy, which just happens to be the funniest show ever. But they’re more than that show. Their lives, individually and collectively, were very exciting and amazing and deep. Finding the right writer was hard because most people might think that, because we’re doing the story of Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz that it’s going to be really funny. And it’s going to have great kinds of humor in it. But it’s not ‘I Love Lucy.’ It’s not a sitcom. Everybody says, ‘your father invented television,’ but in reality, that’s not at all what he was trying to do. They were just trying to stay together, and do a show.”

Arnaz and Greenblatt first collaborated when he produced a 40th anniversary reunion concert benefit for “They’re Playing Our Song,” the musical that served as her Broadway debut. Around the same time, Arnaz was an executive producer on “Being the Ricardos,” but ultimately that film focused mostly on one moment in time in the Lucy/Desi relationship — and so, Arnaz brought the idea of a much broader look at her parents to Greenblatt, and they started collaborating on what would become this series pitch.

“Lucie has this ability to separate herself from being in the middle of it and really see it from an objective point of view,” Greenblatt said. “She’s the first person to say, ‘we want to do it warts and all, and we don’t want to just whitewash it and protect everybody.’ It really is complex. Can we get underneath the causes and the reasons for the way they were. We all think they’re the Ricardos. There’s a part of them that’s who they were, but that’s so little of the full picture.”

LeGravenese entered the picture when Arnaz and Greenblatt went looking for somebody who could balance the comedy of “I Love Lucy” with the drama of what happened behind the scenes.

“Richard came to mind, as he’s got this great background in writing feature films prominently for most of his life and more recently television,” Greenblatt said. “I love his ‘Behind the Candelabra’ movie, for which he won the Emmy. When we presented the idea to him, he just lit up. He’s like, ‘Oh my God, I’ve loved these two people as a fan, and I’ve gone down the rabbit hole on the internet many times.’ He just knew a lot about the story already. Then we all met, and Lucie met him, and he just felt like the right guy.”

Added Arnaz: “There’s been now two TV movies and a feature film and my documentary, but none of those other films ever looked at, ‘OK, that happened and that happened, but why? Why did he do that? Why did she respond that way?’ I wanted to correct that. If nothing else, I wanted to be able to look at them as people and say, ‘aren’t they interesting? Imagine, even with all that sorrow and all that loss, he was able to do this. And then he had to drink. Well, why did he have hookers? Why did that happen?’ And so if we can show the early and go all the way to the end, in some way, we might be able to help people understand them even more.”

December 10, 2025 0 comments
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