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Issa Rae Among Names Set For Lauren Miller Rogen’s Comedy ‘Babies’ 
TV & Streaming

Issa Rae Among Names Set For Lauren Miller Rogen’s Comedy ‘Babies’ 

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Lauren Miller Rogen has added Issa Rae (Insecure), Dan Stevens (Godzilla X Kong: The New Empire), Zach Cherry (Severance), and Kate Berlant (Maddie’s Secret) to the cast of her sophomore feature Babies. 

Miller Rogen is directing from a screenplay she also wrote for AGC Studios and Monarch Media. Anna Kendrick (Woman of the Hour) and Seth Rogen (The Studio) signed on to star earlier this year. 

The film will shoot on location in Los Angeles with the support of the California Tax Credit. Producers include LYLAS Pictures’ Lauren Miller Rogen and Jen W. Ray, AGC’s Stuart Ford, and Monarch’s Steve Barnett, with AGC’s Miguel A. Palos, Jr. and Zach Garrett, Monarch’s Alan Powell and Vicky Patel, and LYLAS’ Sophie Høegh serving as Executive Producers. AGC and CAA Media Finance are co-repping worldwide rights. 

The film’s synopsis reads: Struggling with the decision of whether or not to bring a child into the world, Annie (Kendrick) and her husband Aaron (Rogen) become instant co-parents when their newly-divorced friend moves into their home with her 4-year-old. 

Miller Rogen’s credits include writing, directing, and producing the Netflix original film Like Father, starring Kristen Bell and Kelsey Grammer, and writing, starring in, and producing the indie comedy For a Good Time, Call…, which was released by Focus Features. She is also attached to direct the horror comedy Be Mine with Project X/Radio Silence for MRC and the action comedy Sky Dancers for Original Film.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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John Oliver Defends Jimmy Kimmel in Wake of Suspension
TV & Streaming

John Oliver Mocks Trump for Posting Photos of Remodeled Bathroom

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Amid the government shutdown, President Donald Trump posted photos of a newly remodeled bathroom.

On Friday, Trump shared a couple dozen photos of a renovated bathroom that is connected to the Lincoln Bedroom.

“I renovated the Lincoln Bathroom in the White House,” he wrote on Truth Social. “It was renovated in the 1940s in an art deco green tile style, which was totally inappropriate for the Lincoln Era. I did it in black and white polished Statuary marble. This was very appropriate for the time of Abraham Lincoln and, in fact, could be the marble that was originally there!”

On Sunday’s Last Week Tonight, host John Oliver echoed critics of the president, noting: “That is pretty tone-deaf. And you know what? I will say to Trump what I said while watching David Harbour’s Architectural Digest video: ‘You are vastly overestimating how much I care about where you take a shit.’”

Added Oliver: “It is odd to be posting bathroom remodel photos when so many are legitimately concerned about getting the government open again.” The government shutdown, which started Oct. 1, will break a record for the longest shutdown if it continues until Tuesday.

The bathroom isn’t the only remodel Trump has ordered in the White House. He’s also overseeing a demolition project on the East Wing so that he can construct a $250 million ballroom.

Oliver previously weighed in on that project after photos surfaced of the construction: “Those images are distressing, especially when you know it’s all to build a giant ballroom in a style best described as ‘Med Spa Versailles.’ ” He added that “the demolition of the White House [is] a metaphor that, if anything, is too on the nose” for Trump’s presidency.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Dr Seuss's The Grinch makes iconic return to TV for sparkly new Christmas advert
TV & Streaming

Dr Seuss’s The Grinch makes iconic return to TV for sparkly new Christmas advert

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

With Halloween now in the rear view mirror, the countdown to Christmas is on – and we’re already seeing the first batch of festive adverts appearing on TV.

Asda’s 2025 offering launched over the weekend and sees one of the most iconic Christmas characters of all time make a return to the screen: The Grinch.

In the advert, the Yuletide-hating character is seen accompanied by two children for a Christmas shopping trip, but true to form, he doesn’t appear to be enjoying the experience – singing a humorous song to the tone of festive staple Let it Snow.

“Oh the prices this year are frightful, spenny gifts I’ve seen a sight full,” he sings. “We’re getting quite low on dough, it’s a no, it’s a no, it’s a no.”

However, he soon sees a bright and shiny Asda sign in the distance, which makes him think twice about his previous negativity – especially impressed by the fact that it matches his green colour.

Pushing a shopping trolley through the aisles, he then sings: “Oh the worries show signs of stopping. Wait – am I enjoying shopping? With prices rolled back down low, here we go, here we go, here we go.”

With his trolley full of festive foods and Christmas crackers – and his mood now bordering on euphoric – The Grinch continues: “When we get it all home tonight, oh it’s all going to go down a treat. And to you lot who called me tight, look what we’ve brought you to eat!”

One final verse sees him hosting a party in his house, complete with gift-giving, a roast turkey and all sorts of other festive fun – you can watch the spot in full below:

The advert coincides with the 25th anniversary of the live-action film adaptation of Dr Seuss’s iconic kids book, which famously saw Jim Carrey take on the title character.

It was first shown on the supermarket’s social channels on Saturday 1st November, before a shorter 60 second version aired on TV for the first time on ITV 1 at 8.30pm during an ad break for the 1% Club.

And we can probably expect to see it on screen an awful lot more in the next couple of months!

“We’re so excited to launch this year’s Christmas campaign,” Asda’s Chief Customer Officer Rachel Eyre said in a statement. “We all love Christmas, but we also know it can come with financial pressures. That’s why this year, we’re focused on helping everyone enjoy the festive season we all deserve, filled with joy, celebration, and the reassurance of Asda Price.

“If we can win over the Grinch, the biggest cynic of all, then we know that with our unmatchable mix – amazing products at unbeatable value – we can all have a truly fabulous Christmas together at Asda.”

Looking for something to watch? Visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Wes Brown and Ginna Claire Mason in
TV & Streaming

‘A Newport Christmas’ Stars on Hallmark Movie’s Surprise Ending

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for A Newport Christmas.]

Hallmark movies are known for happy endings, but the road to get there can be unexpected. That’s exactly the case with A Newport Christmas, starring Ginna Claire Mason and Wes Brown.

Ella is an ambitious socialite in 1905 who wants to use her wealth to help her community, but her father seeks to marry her to Everett Thornton, a man she’s never even met. To clear her head, Ella goes sailing on her boat and wishes for a different life. Because of the Christmas comet passing by, she winds up in 2025 and face-to-face with Nick, a sailor and Newport historian.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald Take on Their Family in Doc 'Newville'
TV & Streaming

Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald Take on Their Family in Doc ‘Newville’

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

In the upcoming doc “Newville,” Pisie Hochheim and Tony Oswald follow 10 siblings who “cover the entire American political spectrum.” 

“They have many different spiritual beliefs and lifestyles. We’ve watched over the years as they’ve managed to ‘leave their swords at the door’ when they gather, as one aunt says,” says Hochheim, who is also a part of the family. 

Now, they return to their childhood home in Newville, NY, for the first time in 35 years. They attempt to repair it, but tensions arise. 

“Many people in the U.S. feel completely at odds with their families politically, and it’s understandable to choose to shut out or cut off and move on. But for Tony and me, living with difference and trying to find common ground is a belief we desperately try to hang onto.”

“Newville” won the Ji.hlava New Visions Award for the most promising U.S. project in partnership with AmDocs and the Jacob Burns Film Center Award. 

“Europe has an appetite for supporting daring, bold work,” notes Hochheim. The awards will be useful, as resources for U.S. filmmakers are dwindling and they’ve self-funded the project, working as a two-person team. 

Oswald says: “In the U.S., specifically lately, government-backed funding bodies have been cut, existing grants have been slashed and some are closing completely. Private equity or streamers look to a familiar slate of celebrity profiles or true crime docs. Everyone else has to fight over the scraps.”

Hochheim used to go to the house depicted in the doc for family events and holidays. She later married Oswald on the premises. 

“We still visit at least once a year, but for most of the year it sits empty. It’s beautiful, but it’s also 250 years old, and my family doesn’t have the money or time to address all of its problems, although my mother tries.”

“Some days, we feel so connected to it we can’t imagine a world where it doesn’t exist. My mum and I have nightmares about it catching on fire or a tree falling on it. But then we hear one of the siblings speaking about it without sentiment, and we remember we haven’t chosen to move back there either. As much as we love it, the house resists us, and we’ve begun to wonder what it wants as much as what we want from it.” 

In “Newville,” the house becomes a “container” to showcase the vibrant siblings who grew up there. 

“They’re hilarious, warm and unique, and have completely different worldviews. We’re very interested in how these worldviews shape their approach to the house, and why some have stayed involved while others think it’s time to let it go.”

This isn’t the first time the filmmaking duo has talked about family. 

“All of the films Tony and I have directed together so far are either about, or feature, our families. Even our narrative fiction work,” says Hochheim. “Our goal is to see how these small stories can be stretched through art and playful collaboration into more cinematic, universal narratives. We wouldn’t live long enough to make all the films that could spring from our family, but that doesn’t mean they’re biographical.”

Oswald, whose sister Alicia was featured in their short doc “Cycles,” adds: “We think it’s part of the reason our body of work is so diverse. We try to discover the films through our relationships with them. This has created a mini cinematic universe in which the same faces and locations appear across our very different films.” 

Though personal, “Newville” has already resonated with its Ji.hlava audience. 

“We’ve been so heartened to hear how universal this story is. People have come up to us to share their experiences: the sadness of losing a childhood home in Sudan, a house being sold and the discord it caused in Bosnia, or one whose future is unsure in Finland. This very specific story about Newville resonates with people across cultures,” he says, also recalling his experience on “Cycles.” 

“It’s a perfect example of how we work: Alicia [who used to anonymously donate eggs] wanted to document the experience and we wanted to tell a story about the wider context of egg donation in America by focusing solely on her,” observes Oswald. But working with family “isn’t without its challenges.” 

“We can’t wait for the day when we can be at a reunion without considering how it will fit into our movie, or actually help them fix the house instead of just filming them do it!” 

They’ve been filming for almost seven years and really got to know the siblings, notes Hochheim.  

“Because they’ve spread out across the country and are mostly in their 70s and 80s, filming was honestly the first time I’d had an in-depth conversation with some of them as an adult. We are also interested in what they are finding out about each other. We’ve taken to asking them: ‘What’s the one thing you wish your siblings knew about you’?”

Based in Nashville, Hochheim and Oswald are also co-producing and editing “Kinfolk” by Nicole Craine, executive produced by Jesse Plemons and Kirsten Dunst. 

“It’s a great joy and privilege, and every dinner is a write-off because we live and breathe our movies,” says Hochheim of their creative partnership. Oswald adds: “Our production company is called Same Person Productions. Having someone who can fill in your gaps, someone you trust more than anything, is the greatest gift.”

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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John Oliver Slams Trump's 'Great Gatsby' Party Amid SNAP Freeze
TV & Streaming

John Oliver Slams Trump’s ‘Great Gatsby’ Party Amid SNAP Freeze

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

As many celebrated Halloween, the end of the month also marked the suspension of SNAP benefits for many Americans amid the government shutdown.

On Sunday’s episode of Last Week Tonight, John Oliver called out Donald Trump for continuing to blame the shutdown on Democrats as he went to a Great Gatsby-themed Halloween party at Mar-a-Lago before his administration froze the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) on Nov. 1.

“Yeah, not only is that pretty insulting,” he said. “I’m guessing it’s also pretty infuriating to whatever exhausted high school freshman just wrote a 4,000-word essay about Great Gatsby as a grim meditation on the disillusionment of the American Dream, only for CNN to tell them, ‘You know what? It’s really just a book about rich people partying.’”

Oliver continued, “And for what it’s worth, the actual theme of that event was, and I quote, ‘A Little Party Never Killed Nobody.’ And I guess that is true. Although, it is also true, that as we are all finding out right now, a ‘grand old party’ is capable of killing a whole lot of people, and unfortunately, they don’t seem to give a single marble and gold-encased shit about that.”

The suspension of SNAP benefits to over 42 million Americans by the Trump administration on Nov. 1 has proved to be a political lightning rod during a pretty low-key shutdown. In some of the ugliest examples of the MAGA mindset, the Department of Agriculture has determined in October it can’t use the billions in contingency funds long set aside for SNAP, due to legal considerations.

That decision has led to a series of court challenges by states, cities and others amidst an expected surge at food banks.

Two federal judges this week ruled the administration has to tap into the $6 billion available. However, despite Trump posting late Friday it would be his “honor to provide the funding, just like I did with military and law enforcement pay,” the administration is demanding the courts provide guidance on how to pay out — a process that will still delay SNAP recipients from receiving benefits for weeks in the very best case scenario.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Cincinnati Bengals Player, NBC Broadcaster Was 80
TV & Streaming

Cincinnati Bengals Player, NBC Broadcaster Was 80

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Bob Trumpy, who was an original member of the Cincinnati Bengals for 10 years before enjoying a career as a network radio and television analyst, has died. He was 80.

The Bengals announced that Trumpy died peacefully Sunday and was surrounded by family at home in the Cincinnati area. The team had a moment of silence before its game against the Chicago Bears.

“I’ve known Bob since we started here and he had an extraordinary career as both a player and a broadcaster,” Bengals president Mike Brown said in a statement. “He was an exceptional and rare tight end who could get downfield and split zone coverages. Speed was his hallmark. He was as fast as any wide receiver and was a deep threat. That was rare for a tight end then and it’s rare now.

“As a broadcaster, he made his mark both locally and nationally and excelled at sports other than football in a career that was as successful as what he accomplished on the field.”

Trumpy played collegiately at the University of Utah before being drafted by the AFL expansion Bengals in the 12th round of the 1968 common draft. He scored the franchise’s first receiving touchdown on a 58-yard reception against Denver on Sept. 15, 1968.

Trumpy’s 4,600 receiving yards, 35 receiving touchdowns and 15.4 yards per catch remain the most by a tight end in team history.

After retiring, Trumpy went on to have a distinguished career in radio and television. He joined NBC Sports as an NFL analyst in 1978 and called games through 1997, when it lost the AFC package to CBS.

Trumpy was NBC’s lead analyst with Dick Enberg from 1992-94 and he called two Super Bowls. He also called and two Super Bowls with Don Criqui on radio and would be a part of three Summer Olympics and three Ryder Cups for NBC.

The Pro Football Hall of Fame gave Trumpy the Pete Rozelle Radio-Television Award in 2014 for lifetime achievement in NFL broadcasting.

“Every town has someone that’s the heartbeat and Bob was that for Cincinnati,” NBC analyst Cris Collinsworth said by phone before calling Sunday night’s game between the Seattle Seahawks and Washington Commanders. “He was the most brutally honest person I’ve heard and the first person I knew to make the jump to network television. He was also the carrot in front of me and someone who I aspired to be.”

Trumpy also was a sports talk show host in Cincinnati from 1980-89. In 1983, while hosting Sportstalk on WLW, he received a call from a despondent woman who said she was going to commit suicide.

Trumpy spent the next 2 1/2 hours on the phone with the woman — who identified herself as “Sugar” — until police located her.

“I don’t know why she called a sports talk show,” Trumpy told the Los Angeles Times in 1993. “It probably was just the first phone number she heard on the radio and decided to call it.

“I sure didn’t feel like a hero after that. I hated that woman. She wasn’t the only one who had to go to a crisis center for therapy. So did I, since I couldn’t figure out why I hated her. They convinced me I hated her because of what she put me through.”

Collinsworth took over from Trumpy on Sportstalk in 1989 and called it a great training ground for his eventual rise at NBC and Fox.

“I don’t know anything harder than talk radio. You get over your fear of anyone being upset at you,” Collinsworth said. “I had fun going on his show over the years. He was a good friend.”

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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EastEnders' Zoe suffers setback in search for son as Sharon deals big blow
TV & Streaming

EastEnders’ Zoe suffers setback in search for son as Sharon deals big blow

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

She may be on the other side of the world in Florida, but Sharon Watts’s (Letitia Dean) decisions have left Zoe Slater (Michelle Ryan) with another cause for concern in EastEnders.

Last week it was revealed that Sharon was taking a trip to the States to see her old pal Michelle Fowler (Susan Tully), devastated that Zoe had lied about the father of her twins who were born in 2006.

As viewers will recall, Zo’ claimed that she’d conceived the children with Dennis Rickman (Nigel Harman) – Sharon’s adoptive brother turned hubby – two decades ago. She quickly fled the hospital after giving birth and didn’t wait to learn the fate of her daughter, who wasn’t breathing.

She later took handouts from Max Branning (Jake Wood) to find her missing son, but when they fell out, told the fib to Sharon in the hope she would cough up the cash.

Sharon was desperate to have some form of connection to Dennis again, and hired a private investigator to work on the case.

However, in today’s episode, they had some bad news.

Zoe was still recovering from an eventful Halloween, where she was left fearing for her life, trapped in the Queen Vic barrel store after hearing a disturbance. We’re still none the wiser as to whether she imagined the ordeal or whether there was actually someone in there, but whatever happened, it was still enough to seriously spook her.

To make matters worse, her cat has now gone missing and she believes this is just another vile act from her tormenter.

Sharon delivered some news via the private investigator. BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron

Amid the worry, the PI summoned her to the caff, as they had an update on the case. They revealed that Sharon had withdrawn funding and the case was considered closed.

A mortified Zoe begged her to reconsider, hoping that she’d be able to give her some tidbits of information that would lead her on the right path to locate her child. Unfortunately, the PI wanted another £3k before they divulged.

Mum Kat Moon (Jessie Wallace) wanted to help but couldn’t justify selling one of her business assets, while step-dad Alfie (Shane Richie) wondered whether to trust her claims that she was being targeted.

Could Zoe be making it up to gain sympathy?

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 Guideto find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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Blake SHelton, Keith Urban, Gretchen Wilson
TV & Streaming

Jon Wood Is Eliminated in Episode 3 as Cassidy Daniels Shines

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Episode 3 of The Road featured five artists hitting the stage as Keith Urban’s openers in Dallas, Teaxs.
  • They each sang one original song and one cover song, with the audience rating their performances.
  • Urban and Blake Shelton eliminated one contestant from the bottom two at the end of the episode.

After six artists took the stage in Dallas, Texas, on last week’s episode of The Road, it was time for the remaining five to have their turn on the Sunday, November 2, installment of the show. They all opened for Keith Urban with one original song and one cover song.

The audience rated the performances, leaving Urban and Blake Shelton tasked with making another elimination from the bottom two. Scroll down for a recap of the night and to find out who went home.

Jon Wood

Jon Wood performed “Should’ve Been a Cowboy” by Toby Keith for his cover, which Urban said was a “smart choice.” Meanwhile, Shelton noted, “I love when he gets into his Ronnie Dunn sound.”

Lauren “Lo” Smith/CBS

His original song, “Go Out Like That,” was dedicated to his late grandfather who died from COVID-19. Urban said he picked the right cover song, but Shelton was worried that his vocal on the original wasn’t strong enough.

“I couldn’t tell if he was just emotional or if that wasn’t the right key,” he admitted. “I didn’t feel like he had a grip on it.” Urban agreed that it “felt like an unstable pitch through nerves.” Gretchen Wilson also noticed Jon’s nerves and pointed out that he doesn’t “seem to have the confidence that some of the others do.”

Cassidy Daniels

After she landed in Week 1’s Top 3, Cassidy Daniels knew she had a lot to prove in order to stay on top. Her cover song choice was “Angel From Montgomery,” since her dad had a dream that she performed that song on the show.

Cassidy Daniels

Lauren “Lo” Smith/CBS

“At least in country, I can’t think of anyone to compare her to,” Shelton said, with Urban adding, in agreement, “Not with that thick, creamy tone like that.”

Cassidy’s original was a song called “Heart Shaped Necklace,” which she wrote after an ex gave her a heart shaped necklace on their third Valentine’s Day together and she realized he didn’t know her at all.

“I love her. I swear, there is nobody like her,” Shelton raved. “She writes melodies that she knows she can dig into vocally.” Urban said that Cassidy is the “one to watch right now.”

Forrest McCurren

On the opposite side of that spectrum was Forrest McCurren, who was in the bottom three during Week 1. Since he’s used to performing original songs, Forrest struggled a bit while rehearsing his cover of Jim Croce’s “Bad, Bad Leroy Brown.”

Forrest McCurren

Lauren “Lo” Smith/CBS

He proved he knew how to work the audience from the very beginning of his set, but Urban noted, “He’s pretty good. As a singer, he has a limited voice. He’s a storyteller, he’s not a singer.”

Wilson said that Forrest would really have to “rely on his wittiness and personality” to win people over, and he did just that. Before performing “Get Lucky Tonight,” he threw out some jokes that had the crowd, as well as Urban and Shelton, cracking up.

“I’d be shocked if he’s in the bottom tonight,” Shelton said, with Urban adding, “Yeah, he’s just so likable.”

Briana Adams

Briana Adams was admittedly a bit out of her league in front of Urban’s crowd, as she’s used to performing acoustically to smaller audiences. Urban and Shelton were a bit perplexed by her decision to sing “Goodbye Time” by Conway Twitty for her cover.

Briana Adams

Lauren “Lo” Smith/CBS

“I’m always fascinated by how people choose a cover,” Urban admitted. “Some people choose them, like, ‘Oh, this is the kind of music I’m going to play,’ but for me, I’d be like, ‘This is how I can get the audience on my side, so then I can do my own song.”

After Briana sang her original song, “Honky Tonk Romance,” the guys were a bit underwhelmed. “The audience knows if you’re not giving it your all,” Urban pointed out. “It’s the approach of, ‘I do this in other bars and they seem to like it…’”

Shelton agreed. “Maybe that’s what it was,” he said. “‘I do this a lot and I sound good on it,’ or whatever, but it’s not always about that, you know?” On the other hand, Wilson thought Briana was “great.”

Billie Jo Jones

Billie Jo Jones was the final performer of the night, but she was still feeling a bit under the weather. It was an emotional night for her, too, as her grandparents, who raised her, were in the audience.

Billie Jo Jones

Lauren “Lo” Smith/CBS

After performing her cover, “Why Haven’t I Heard From You” by Reba McEntire, Billie Jo introduced her grandparents to the crowd and explained that they raised her because her mom is a drug addict who she’s only seen twice in her life. She dedicated her original song, “She Did,” to the duo who stepped up when her own mother didn’t.

“I like the emotion of the second one,” Urban said. Shelton admitted, “I think her original song went over better than her cover. I just think she struggled a bit to get to some of those notes.”

Urban also noticed the hoarseness, but said, “She knows how to lift those choruses up. I think it’s really good.” Billie Jo got emotional after getting off stage and said it was “one of [her] worst vocal performances,” but she got some love from her grandparents, who met her backstage after the set.

Who was eliminated on The Road Episode 3?

After the show, Shelton and Urban told the singers that Cassidy once again got the highest rating from the audience. “You just continue to blow people away with your connection to the audience,” he assured her.

Jon and Forrest were the bottom two. “I think you both had really good moments,” Urban told them. “As far as getting that crowd going, it was hard for you, Jon, because you were the first out of the gate, but I think you held your own. Forrest, I think you’re such a good storyteller. Your original tonight, particularly, with the opening lyrics … any crowd is going to be in.”

In the end, Urban said he felt like Forrest “had the edge” in Dallas, so Jon was eliminated. He kept his head held high, telling Urban and Shelton, “I don’t feel like I necessarily lost at all. I had a good time out here.”

Now, just nine artists are left, and their next stop on the road is Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

The Road, Season 1, Sundays, Check Local Listings, CBS

November 3, 2025 0 comments
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A Rich, Derivative Appalachian Revenge Thriller
TV & Streaming

A Rich, Derivative Appalachian Revenge Thriller

by jummy84 November 3, 2025
written by jummy84

Some movies are so derivative that it seems like their characters must be the only people on Earth who haven’t seen them before. Few of those movies, however, are as muscular and red-blooded as John-Michael Powell’s “Violent Ends,” a chewy — if not downright overcooked — feast of an Ozark anti-Western that claims to be inspired by true events (specifically, the unraveling of Arkansas’ most powerful crime family), but feels significantly more indebted to the stuff of “Unforgiven,” “Blue Ruin,” and Jeff Nichols’ “Shotgun Stories.” While too labored to live up to its self-evident inspirations, this fatalistic revenge saga is so unrepentant towards its own movie-ness that its canned dialogue and clichéd story beats often present an engrossing counterpoint to its vividly authentic sense of time and place. 

'Bugonia'

Powell’s tragic hero is doomed from the moment he dares to do something “original” with his life, an ambition that could never be realized within the world of the film into which he was born, and so he soon finds himself with no choice but to declare an open war against his own bloodline; to so violently confront the Southern-fried tropes that have always defined his family that future generations might have a chance to exist within the pages of a less predictable script. One that isn’t slurred together from such a familiar combination of backwater lawlessness, faux-polite menace, and profoundly sweaty animal metaphors. 

But in order to enjoy “Violent Ends” on those terms, you first have to accept the premise that Lucas Frost (the elastic Billy Magnussen, making a solid case for himself as a genuine leading man) doesn’t know he’s been cast as the main character of a contrived thriller about how an eye for an eye leaves the whole world blind. At least not at first. You have to believe that his incarcerated coke kingpin of a father always talks in quasi-religious parables, and that his bank teller fiancée — Alexandra Shipp as the appropriately named Emma Darling, a beaming angel of a woman who coerces Lucas into a rom-com worthy grand gesture by the end of her first scene — might credibly exist within the desolate Appalachian context of a film whose average character is just a couple of face tattoos away from going full “Winter’s Bone.” 

It’s a context that Lucas is keen to escape while he can: It’s the fall of 1992, George Bush the elder is about to lose his bid for another presidency, and the Arkansas police are enjoying a brief detente in the drug war between the two rival sides of the Frost clan. But nobody is enjoying it more than Lucas’ slick-talking but clearly sociopathic cousin Sid (the ever-watchable James Badge Dale, even less restrained than usual in a role so slathered with extra sauce that the actor literally has to lick his fingers clean between some of his lines), who sees this as a golden opportunity to seize the whole cartel operation for himself. 

“Violent Ends” does a poor job of laying out the Frost family tree (its wall of opening text fails to establish the who’s who we need to fully understand the dynamics at work), but it’s clear enough that Sid embodies everything that Lucas is desperate to reject within himself. If only it were that easy to cast aside one’s inheritance. As his father told him at the end of a long-winded story about a pentecostal preacher, and as Lucas will soon learn the hard way for himself after a robbery-gone-wrong rocks his world apart: “You’re a rattlesnake, son. Just like me.”  

Lucas doesn’t get to witness said robbery first-hand, which is a shame, as the sight of someone getting shot in the chest and just standing perfectly still and wide-eyed as their shirt bleeds red would be his biggest clue so far that he’s in an overbroad — albeit geographically specific — movie about how violence begets nothing but violence. Alas, he sees just enough to abandon his plans for a better life and try to exact vengeance on the responsible party, whomever that might be. We see the killer’s face and have no doubt as to what happened, but Powell’s script — so obvious about the rest of its plotting —  insists on treating the murder with a veneer of mystery, which contributes to a torpid second that’s too saturated with numbing synths and genre posturing to seize on the film’s most interesting tensions. 

Specifically: that between Lucas and his half-brother Tuck (a wounded Nick Stahl, drawing on his own history with addiction to create an achingly lived-in portrait of a decent man who’s struggling to resist the gravity of his own weakness). For all of the sullied virtue that Magnussen commands in the lead role, “Violent Ends” wouldn’t really spark to life or feel like it had any meaningful stakes to it if not for how Tuck’s soul hangs in the balance. As someone with one foot in the Frost mishegoss and one foot in the normal family life that Lucas aspires to, Tuck is the only person in this story whose fate doesn’t feel like a foregone conclusion, and the handful of scenes where Powell centers him are by far the richest things here. The writer/director clearly adores his characters, and is eager to highlight the humanity that surges beneath their circumstances, but Tuck alone allows him to do that to meaningfully stirring effect. 

By contrast, Sid spends most of his time preening like a supervillain, while the film never seriously explores what it means for Lucas’ mom (Kate Burton) to work as a cop — her role seems reverse-engineered from the wonderful shot that all of the film’s drama builds towards after Lucas is able to bend the cycle of violence into something of a straight line. It’s a striking image, typical of Powell’s smart and visceral approach to staging rich action on a budget (the movie looks great in all respects, with Elijah Guess’ cinematography finding vivid streaks of natural beauty atop a bedrock of dour Appalachian gray), and palpably freighted with all of the emotion that percolates too far under the surface during much of the story. 

Powell is an exceptionally promising filmmaker, but by the time he arranges all of his ducks in a row for the finale, he’s lost track as to whether Lucas is continuing the cycle of vengeance that has poisoned so much of his family, or if he’s breaking it. While “Violent Ends” asks you to reckon with the futility of violence, it (violently) delights in its bloodshed too much to pull that off, as Lucas — a natural rattlesnake — is left with no other choice but to bite his own tail. Alas, this was the movie into which he was born; the great tragedy of Lucas’ life is that he wasn’t born into a better one.

Grade: C+

“Violent Ends” is now playing in theaters.

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November 3, 2025 0 comments
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