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Shelby Oaks Director Chris Stuckmann on Its Ending, YouTube Origins
TV & Streaming

Shelby Oaks Director Chris Stuckmann on Its Ending, YouTube Origins

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

SPOILER ALERT: This article contains spoilers for the ending of “Shelby Oaks,” now playing in theaters.

So, who took Riley Brennan?

Director Chris Stuckmann makes his directorial debut with Neon’s horror “Shelby Oaks,” which follows the disappearance of a YouTuber and amateur ghost hunter Riley Brennan (Sarah Durn). Having started his career as a film critic and essayist on YouTube, Stuckmann makes the transition to director with a horror movie that expertly blends media and feels at times like a mockumentary ripped right from the video platform.

Camille Sullivan stars as Mia Brennan, who has been searching for her younger sister Riley after she vanished 12 years ago in the remote town of Shelby Oaks with her YouTube group, the Paranormal Paranoids. The film starts out like a fictional documentary on Riley’s disappearance, but then transforms into a supernatural horror that uses found footage and scripted scares unlike any recent studio movie. It’s like “Blair Witch Project” for the YouTube generation, and Stuckmann uses his years of experience on the platform to maximum effect.

With Variety, the director discusses his YouTube origins, shooting on old-school camcorders and that shocking ending.

Courtesy Everett Collection

Why was “Shelby Oaks” the story you wanted to tell with your directorial debut?

I didn’t want to give any producers that I met a chance to turn me down, so I wrote probably like six or seven spec scripts and I went to film festivals and met so many different filmmakers and spent a lot of time trying to meet people and network and get to a place where I could make a connection with someone. It finally helped me get a movie off the ground, because I had been trying for so long. I didn’t want to go into these situations with one script and pitch. So I went into a lot of these film festivals hoping to meet producers with a lot of scripts and pitches. When I bumped into Aaron Koontz at Fantastic Fest in 2019, I had two or three different things I could have pitched him at the time, and “Shelby Oaks” was the one that caught his attention. From there, it became a process of developing it.

I’m from the Midwest, but I’d never heard of Darke County in Ohio before. How did you choose that as your setting?

I was trying to think of a general area in Ohio to set it in. Obviously Shelby Oaks is fictional, but as soon as I discovered the name “Darke” and it has an E, which makes it feel more artsy and it’s farm country, it’s literally exactly what I want. I’ve taken a bit of a “Castle Rock” approach because a lot of my spec scripts take place in Darke County, this little mini cinematic universe that may or may not happen one day.

How did you blend the mix of mockumentary footage, YouTube found footage and scripted horror?

Being on YouTube since 2009, there is a phenomena that I have witnessed over the years: People like to watch people watch things. Reacting videos are a very, very popular trend. There is something very inviting about the idea of seeing a person take in information. There’s this sequence with Mia where she watches the tape, and you’re kind of there with her feeling her emotions. She’s your conduit for these emotions. I really love the idea of mixing media, because I feel like that’s how we all live now. We all pop on TikTok, YouTube, TV, movies, audio books, physical books, there’s no set thing for all of us. We all experience media in different ways.

Was there ever a version of this that was a full mockumentary version?

It started out completely mockumentary. The very first pitch that we ever had was that, out of necessity. My first idea for this movie was that I would self-finance it for like $20,000 and put it on YouTube, because I was tired of waiting. Eventually the ideas kept evolving and kept coming. As I was writing, I couldn’t stop it. It was this whole thing, and now I had to figure out where this goes. The way it came to me was that every time you watch a mockumentary that’s fictional, you know it’s fictional. You’re in on the joke. I understand that most of them are made out of a budgetary necessity, but since we’re all in on the joke, why can’t we have some fun with this? We have cameras that the actors are aware of, why can’t we also have cameras they’re not aware of and just play in that world?

Some of the found-footage jump scares feel like throwbacks to the early days of scary YouTube videos, like the “Relaxing Car Drive” video that I’m sure many people have stumbled upon. How did you make these retro, proto-internet scares?

I do think it does have something to do with YouTube, the internet and the creepypasta generation. We all look for ways to describe how art makes us feel through past pieces of art. We always try to find a way to connect. But we’re in this generational shift now where filmmakers are starting to come out of the early YouTube years. Not all the inspiration is coming from film or TV anymore. A lot of it is coming from the internet. Like you mentioned that relaxing car video, I remember watching that back in the day and the thing pops up at the end and I’m falling back in my seat. We weren’t used to being scared by the internet yet. The internet was still kind of a remotely safe place. There wasn’t social media yet. When things on the internet started to scare us, it’s a whole new world of potential horror that can be mined. The mixed media element was very important to me to present different types of scares. The found-footage scare is very different from the traditional narrative scare, not just in visual presentation, but in sound. In the traditional narrative portion of the film, we really opened up the sound channels and explored so many more possibilities of what we could do with sound. In the the earlier portions of the movie, we tried to restrict ourselves a little bit more to the types of sounds that would come from an old-school camcorder. In those Paranormal Paranoids episodes, I shot all those myself with gear from pre-2008. The camcorder was from 2006. The microphone we used was from 2007. We didn’t allow ourselves to have things they wouldn’t have had.

Did you always imagine the ending as a bleak punch to the gut? How much of it did you want to leave open to interpretation for fans?

Yes, there was never any question for me. All of my favorite horror films tend to have an ending that sticks with you. Obviously, when you’re trying to get your script seen, there are going to be people who make requests, especially some of the less risk-taking producers. I was always very adamant that this has got to be the way it is. When I think about all my favorite horrors, they’re very rarely warm and fuzzy at the end.

If you want to look at just the emotion of it, when something happens to you when you’re younger that leaves a scar or some kind of trauma that it sticks with you, you could view that literally as a crack in a window. If you don’t fix it or get and try to better your life, you just let it sit there and fester and grow and spider-web into something worse, eventually it will probably eat you alive. That’s been the emotional idea behind this thing that has always been looming in the background of Riley and Mia’s life that is also literally represented by this window in the conclusion of the movie. It’s all in there, and there’s a lot of hidden stuff too in various shots.

There are so many filmmakers, like Danny and Michael Philippou and Curry Barker, who are getting Hollywood deals after starting out on YouTube. How does it feel to see them grow after starting out online?

I think it’s absolutely wonderful. I’ve talked with Danny and Mike, and I had Danny and Curry on my podcast. When I started my YouTube channel in 2009, it took about six years before I even was able to get press tickets to movies at advanced screenings. That’s because at that time, YouTube as a platform was not taken seriously by Hollywood. If you said you were a YouTube film critic, they’d be like, ‘Cool. Have a nice day.’ Now, when you go to a premiere, what do you see everywhere? YouTubers and TikTokers. Hollywood has had to take the platforms seriously. I think it’s the same with film. There is a new generation of people in their 30s or late 20s who are coming up and started on Vine, TikTok and YouTube. Now they’re getting a chance to make movies, because that is the progression of time that we’re in. If YouTube existed in the ’70s or ’80s, I guarantee Scorsese, Spielberg, Robert Rodriguez, all those guys, would have been uploading.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Whitney Leavitt, Mark Ballas Forced To Cancel 'DWTS' Giveaway
TV & Streaming

Whitney Leavitt, Mark Ballas Forced To Cancel ‘DWTS’ Giveaway

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

As the Season 34 finale approaches, Dancing with the Stars fans rooting for Whitney Leavitt and Mark Ballas were met with some unfortunate news

One day after announcing they would give away tickets to the live show, the pair shared an update that ABC and BBC have pulled the plug on their giveaway, but they are working on another opportunity.

“So, we have some bad news,” said Leavitt in a TikTok video. “We just got out of rehearsal, and we were both informed that we actually can’t do a giveaway for the Dancing with the Stars live show.”

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Ballas noted that the decision “has come directly from ABC and BBC, and is completely out of our hands.”

Leavitt added, “It just really sucks because Mark and I just want to do something really special for you guys that have shown us so much support and love, for us and the show. We’re gonna get creative and we’re gonna think of something else to give away.”

The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives star and her dancing partner have impressed during their Season 34 run, most recently stomping out the competition with a combined score of 72 for Weeks 5 and 6.

Airing Tuesdays at 8/7c on ABC, the Dancing with the Stars live show scheduled for Nov. 25.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Justine Lupe as Morgan in episode 202 of Nobody Wants This.
TV & Streaming

Justine Lupe on Morgan and Sasha

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains MAJOR spoilers from Nobody Wants This season two.]

Justine Lupe returned for Nobody Wants This season two with a love story of her own. But it came with a twist.

The return of the hit Netflix rom-com saw Morgan (Lupe) bringing home her therapist, Dr. Andy (Arian Moayed), and they embark on a whirlwind romance that seems too good to be true — and, by the finale, she learns that it was. Morgan rushing into her new relationship was a reaction to feeling left behind after seeing her sister, Joanne (Kristen Bell), fall in love with Noah (Adam Brody, which creates friction between her and Joanne.

“That’s an intense thing to feel, that the person you love and align with is not in their authentic self,” Lupe tells The Hollywood Reporter.

In the end, Morgan breaks it off at their engagement party. “Doing it at a party is no bueno,” Lupe tells THR. However, she admits that Morgan, “just wants to grab her confidence by the horn and take care of business by breaking up with him.”

Also ending up single at the end of the season is Sasha (Timothy Simons) — and Noah and Joanne, briefly, before they ultimately get back together, like the season one finale — after Esther (Jackie Tohn) has a change of heart and says she needs time to find herself and what she wants. As Sasha and Morgan’s friendship continued to grow throughout this season, the question remains: Will Sasha and Morgan ever date?

Below, Lupe tells THR what’s next for Morgan as she reflects on her growth throughout this season, working with guest star Leighton Meester (who is married to Brody) and unpacks Morgan’s possible romance with Sasha.

***

What was your reaction to reading the script and finding out that Morgan was going to have a love interest this season? And then, what was your reaction to finding out that love interest was going to be her therapist?!

Excitement on both counts — glee and a little bit of nervousness about hoping I could do the character justice, and that the writers would not regret that they gave me this much real estate to play with as the character. (Laughs.) But the thing that I felt most was just pure excitement.

Why did it feel important for Morgan to break up with Dr. Andy at the engagement party?

She just was so down to the wire. We’re getting really close to the moment, and, I mean, doing it at a party is no bueno. It’s no good. (Laughs.) It’s painful, and that’s what makes it kind of fun. These people are all very reactive and very impulsive. But in the moment, her mom gives her this strength she didn’t previously have. Her mom is one person most of the time. In his circumstance, she’s so desperate to protect her child from making a mistake that she steps into being a real mama bear and says, “Hey, listen, get your shit together. You don’t want to make this a mistake. This is a big thing that I did, and I don’t want you to do this, too.” It means a lot to Morgan in that moment. Seeing her mom rise into this different version of herself is really impactful, and there’s something incredibly motivating about it, so she just wants to grab her confidence by the horn and take care of business by breaking up with him. That being said, I don’t think that an engagement party is the way to go with a breakup. (Laughs.)

The tension is higher this season between Morgan and Joanne. What’s deep at the heart of their relationship that’s driving this friction?

For Morgan, it’s the threat of losing her relationship with her sister to this new relationship. This whole season for Morgan is a reaction to her sister finding love and her feeling left behind, and her feeling a bit of an identity crisis and going, “What is my life and who am I and where am I going to end up and where’s my husband and where’s my love?” Because of that, she rushes into something that’s not real, not authentic — and Joanne can feel that. That’s an intense thing to feel that the person you love and align with is not being their authentic self, and I think Morgan is fighting so hard to feel OK and Joanne is fighting so hard to prove to Morgan that what she’s doing is not authentic that it creates a lot of tension between them. The whole thing is about caring about each other. Morgan caring about her relationship with Joanne changing, and Joanne caring about Morgan ruining her life because she’s jumping into something that is not gonna be good for her in the end.

Justine Lupe as Morgan, Kristen Bell as Joanne and Leighton Meester as Abby in Nobody Wants This season two.

Erin Simkin/Netflix

Leighton Meester came in as a guest star this season and brought so much fun energy to episode five. How did you, Kristen and Leighton approach those comedic moments together? 

You know, we didn’t talk about them. We all kind of know what that energy is. It was so well written. Leighton had built such a specific and fun character that we were like, “OK, let’s just play the circumstances of what’s going on and who this woman is and how we would honestly react with this kind of energy.” We all love Leighton. She’s so awesome and fun and talented that it was a very easy fit. She just slipped right into the whole thing and it was a blast. We really leaned into what was on the page and what Leighton had created as a character. It was a lot of fun.

Now that you and Sasha are both single, would you want Morgan to explore that relationship romantically?  

I think Morgan knows — and I know — that Sasha is going through something deeply upsetting and deeply life-changing, and that there’s something really substantial to what he’s going through right now. At the end when she says, “Sasha, you’re a good guy.” After, he says, “Hey, if she thinks I’m going to wait around for her, then she’s right.” I think Morgan is earnestly saying you’re a good guy in that moment and their friendship has evolved into something that’s very supportive and platonic. They’re each other’s partners in a specific way that’s not romantic in that moment. So I don’t know where it’s gonna go, but right now he’s got some healing to do and so does Morgan. I don’t have any hopes because I think no matter what happens, it will be fun between them. Instinctively, I’m like, “You guys just support each other as friends because I actually think that you could be very healing presences for each other.”

Do you think, though, that sometimes the best relationships can start from friendships? You guys do have an undeniable chemistry.

Totally. And if it ends up there, I get it and I can see that. But I also think in this moment, she just broke up with someone where she rushed into a chaotic [relationship], she’s clearly not in her right mind in this season. She has soul searching to do and some self-confidence to gain and stabilizing to do as a human. He has to really process what’s just happened with his wife and mother of his child. So I think rushing into a romantic thing…. I mean, this is just my opinion as an audience member. As an actor, I would be thrilled to do anything. Tim is my favorite person. He’s really one of my best friends now, and I would truly love to sit on a block with him and say nothing for like 15 hours in a scene. I’d be happy just to read the phone book with Tim. So whatever happens, I’m down. But as an audience member, I appreciate that they’re in this moment and that it could, down the line, evolve into something else, but right now, they’re just being really good friends to each other.

The ending very much insinuated that Joanne will finally convert, as we see her and Noah get back together. What is your take on the ending and what do you hope to see for their future?

I felt relief. This has been the friction that’s underneath all of the idiosyncrasy. There’s a lot of compromise. A lot of negotiating. There’s a lot of friction between the two of them in these moments post deciding to get into this relationship. That’s really interesting and we all can relate to once you agree to be in a relationship and you’re off the honeymoon high that you’re like, “Oh, and now we have to navigate these little things.” And this is the big underlying question underneath all that: Is this gonna happen? Can we do this? Are you interested in doing this? I just thought it was beautiful.

Jackie Tohn’s monologue as Esther about what Judaism is and what the feeling behind Judaism is and what the essence of what it means to be Jewish, I found it so compelling. I loved that monologue and I loved that there’s a moment that Joanne clicks into understanding that this is something that feels right to her. I felt that she honestly understood, [that] I actually want to do this and I actually want to convert. So, for me, the ending was incredibly satisfying and romantic. It didn’t feel muscled because of the tracks that they laid throughout the season. I was really excited that they both came together at the end.

Timothy Simons as Sasha, Jackie Tohn as Esther and Lupe as Morgan in Nobody Wants This season two.

Erin Simkin/Netflix

In addition to Leighton, this season saw some great guest stars, including Seth Rogen. But who are some other dream guest stars you’d like to see in a potential season three? 

Lynn (Stephanie Faracy), my mom’s best friend on the show is named Goldie, and every time they say Goldie, like, “Oh, she’s doing shrooms with Goldie. This is what she does on her birthday.” I think of Goldie Hawn and so, I would just love to have Goldie Hawn on the show. I think she’s brilliant and fun and there’s something about her playing Lynn’s best friend that very much works.

Since the show has filmed, you’ve gotten married and become a parent. Has that changed your perspective on how you view the relationships in the show at all, and in what ways?

No, to be honest, it hasn’t changed. I have an incredible partner who is an incredible person to date. So, if anything, it’s fun to watch this thing that feels very aspirational and inspirational. People are like, “But does it exist?” And to be cheering on the sidelines, “It does exist!” My husband’s taught me a lot about healthy partnership and the ability to support one another and help each other evolve. These are all things that are valuable about the show. This show really explores two fully realized adults trying their best in a non-toxic way to date each other, even with all their flaws. They’re really working on being the best versions of themselves and trying to show up for the relationship. It’s something that I feel like my partner is incredibly good at. I have a lot of girlfriends who are single and they’re in their late 30s and they’re like, “Will I find the person? And are there nice guys out there? Do these people exist that treat each other well?” The thing that my life brings to this whole narrative is me feeling like, “Yeah, there are good guys out there and they can behave nicely and it can go well and it can be smooth.” So, I like that the show has a relationship that’s representative of that.

***

Nobody Wants This season two is now streaming all episodes on Netflix. Read THR’s cover story on season two.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained
TV & Streaming

How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained

by jummy84 October 25, 2025
written by jummy84

There tends to be two distinct approaches a director can take when making a music biopic: a career-spanning story that touches on every aspect of the musician’s life or a more focused tale honing in on one particular chapter in extra detail.

Scott Cooper’s new film Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere – which stars Jeremy Allen White – opts for the latter option, chronicling the recording of Bruce Springsteen’s 1982 album Nebraska and exploring some of the personal issues he was facing at that time, some of which were rooted in childhood trauma.

“I wanted to keep the timeframe as tight and narrow as possible,” Cooper explained during an exclusive interview with RadioTimes.com. “It’s really only a few months of Bruce’s life.

“But I felt if I told the story well, then people would get a better understanding of Bruce Springsteen, paradoxically, then if I had told a cradle to kind of present day narrative.”

Read on to find out just how accurate the portrayal of this period is.

How accurate is Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere? True story explained

Cooper based his script on the non-fiction book of the same name by Warren Zanes, and so the film largely sticks to true events as they happened – albeit with the usual condensing (and a couple of fictional additions) that we usually see in films of this time.

The bulk of the narrative presents events truthfully: it is true that Springsteen recorded Nebraska in cassette tapes in his home and wanted to keep this stripped back sound for the finished record, while it’s also true that the record label – Columbia – had some reservations about the album and had to be persuaded of its merits by Springsteen’s manager Jon Landau (Jeremy Strong).

Meanwhile a number of other small details are true. For example, Springsteen really did get the title of his landmark hit Born in the USA from a Paul Schrader script and recorded the song in the middle of the Nebraska sessions before initially shelving it.

Furthermore, the scene in which Bruce breaks down in a therapist’s office after being told by Landau he needed to seek professional help is based on a story Springsteen himself told in his 2016 memoir Born to Run.

Jeremy Allen White as Bruce Springsteen and Jeremy Strong as Jon Landau in Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere 20th Century Studios

Springsteen also at times had a difficult relationship with his father – who was an alcoholic and bipolar – and he has gone on the record to praise Stephen Graham’s performance in the film, telling BBC Radio 2: “Stephen’s such an incredible actor and he just immediately inhabited my father’s physicality and inner emotion. He captured my dad’s struggles and spirit really well.”

Indeed, Springsteen has generally been very enthusiastic in his praise for the film, suggesting that it is – on the whole – a fairly accurate portrayal of his life.

However. one fictional aspect is the character of Faye Romano (Odessa Young), Springsteen’s lover in the film who is not based on any one real person but is rather a composite character inspired by various women in the singer’s life.

“I kind of just approached her like any fictitious character,” Young explained of Faye during an exclusive interview with RadioTimes.com. “There were some references in Deliver Me from Nowhere – in Warren Zanes’s book – and there were some references in Bruce’s memoir to people that he dated, or women that he knew – no one specific but just like little mentions.

“So I kind of mined that for some information, and also just Scott’s script. You know, Scott had a vision of Faye, and that was very real on the page. So I got really lucky that I just got a good script and a well-written character.”

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere is now showing in UK cinemas.

Check out more of our Film coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 25, 2025 0 comments
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Kristina Pohribni, Tom Devlin, and Shaan Mishra
TV & Streaming

Did ‘Jeopardy!’ Champion Tom Devlin Make It Four in a Row?

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • Tom Devlin, a three-day Jeopardy! champion with $73,199 in winnings, competed for his fourth consecutive win against Shaan Mishra and Kristina Pohribnij.
  • Despite leading throughout most of the game and making bold wagers on Daily Doubles, Mishra and Pohribnij each held their own against the champ.
  • The Final Jeopardy was a nail-biter as it was anyone’s game.

Would returning Jeopardy! champion Tom Devlin, an attorney from Washington, D.C., keep his hot streak alive for a fourth straight game? Ahead of Friday’s (October 24) new game, he’d racked up an impressive three-day total of $73,199 in winnings, but Friday’s cutthroat game stood to put his reign to the test. If he won, Devlin only needed one more to make it to the Tournament of Champions.

In the game, Devlin went up against management consultant Shaan Mishra from Carmel, Indiana, and stay-at-home mom Kristina Pohribnij from Palatine, Illinois, both determined to dethrone the reigning Jeopardy! champ.

Devlin began the first round by picking “The National Toy Hall of Fame” for $800, which yielded the clue: “Josefina Montoya & Addy Walker are part of the historical characters series of these dolls inducted in 2021.” Pohribnij buzzed in with the correct answer, “What are the American Girl dolls?”

The round’s Daily Double was discovered by Devlin in “Movie Last Lines” for $1,600. Wagering $1,600 on the clue “1987: ‘Grandpa? Maybe you could come over & read it again to me tomorrow’; ‘As you wish,’” Devlin answered correctly with “What is The Princess Bride?,” doubling his score to $3,200.

Before the first ad break, Devlin was in the lead with $7,400, while Pohribnij came in second with $2,600 and Mishra in third place with $600. By the end of the round, Devlin maintained his lead with a total of $9,000, as Pohribnij earned $4,400 and Mishra nabbed $2,600.

In Double Jeopardy, the first Daily Double was discovered by Devlin under “Acronyms” for $1,000. Devil wagered a hefty $5,000 on the answer, “What is ANZAC?,” lifting him to $16,000.

The third Daily Double of the game was found by Mishra under “You “SC” & You “CLA” for $2,000. He bet $5,000 on the clue: “If you don’t fire ’til you see the whites of their eyes, you’re waiting to see this, which covers 5/6 of the eyeball.” With the correct answer of “What is the sclera?” bringing with total to $5,800.

During Double Jeopardy, Devlin answered nine clues correctly, but Pohribnij and Mishra gave him a run for his money, holding their own with several strong responses. By the end of the round, however, it still wasn’t enough to overtake the reigning Jeopardy! champ, as they entered Final Jeopardy with totals of $22,800 for Devlin, $15,600 for Mishra — which moved him to second place — and $10,800 for Pohribnij.

The Final Jeopardy category was “Relics,” with the clue “Missionary William Ellis reported in 1825 that his ‘bones were preserved…& were considered sacred by the people’ of Hawaii.” The answer was “Who was Captain James Cook?” Pohribnij answered incorrectly with “Who is Father Damien?,” to which host Ken Jennings responded, “That makes sense, but I’m afraid it’s not Father Damien, Kristina.” She wagered $5,000, bringing her total to $5,800.

Devlin also incorrectly wrote, “Who is Father Damien?” With his wager of $8,401, his new total was then $14,399, losing the lead. But will he lose the game to Mishra?

Mishra wrote, “Who is Cook???,” the correct answer. With a wager of $0, Mishra kept his total at $15,600, enough to steal the title of “Jeopardy! champ” from Devlin as he won the game.

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

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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How the Monster Was Made to Fit Jacob Elordi
TV & Streaming

How the Monster Was Made to Fit Jacob Elordi

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Guillermo del Toro’s well-reviewed “Frankenstein” is now in limited theaters from Netflix, on its way to a shoo-in surfeit of Oscar nominations, especially for its crafts. (It’s also moving up in the Metacritic rankings.) Before the film heads to streaming on November 7, IndieWire’s “Screen Talk” caught up with one of the film’s producers, J. Miles Dale, who joins this week’s episode as a special guest. Dale won the Best Picture Oscar in 2018 for producing “The Shape of Water” and also oversaw del Toro’s noir remake of “Nightmare Alley” (2021) as well as the del Toro-produced “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” (2019).

On this week’s episode, Anne Thompson is fresh back from the Middleburg Film Festival in Virginia, which showed the importance of regional festivals as a building block to Oscar nominations. (Many of the awards-prognosticating cabal, including IndieWire’s Marcus Jones, were on the ground also.) Audience prizes went to Focus Features’ “Hamnet” from Chloé Zhao and Searchlight’s “Rental Family” from HIKARI, both Oscar contenders as we head deeper into the season.

Charles Chaplin and his daughter Victoria in a 'wing test' for 'The Freak'

Co-host Ryan Lattanzio previews AFI Fest, now underway in Los Angeles through the weekend and featuring films from “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” (which brought The Boss himself for a performance at Hollywood and Highland) to the world premiere of “Song Sung Blue” and beloved indies like Israeli filmmaker Nadav Lapid’s audacious “Yes” and Max Silverman-Walker’s plaintive Josh O’Connor vehicle “Rebuilding.”

Recently, IndieWire tapped the AFI Fest programming team to share their picks for the best films to see.

Our special guest, producer Dale, has been working with Guillermo del Toro since he produced “Mama” (2013), which marked the directing debut of Andy Muschietti. He produced the FX series “The Strain” for four years, as well. Two period films, Best Picture Oscar winner “The Shape of Water” and Best Picture nominee “Nightmare Alley,” prepared Dale and his team for the daunting task of delivering del Toro’s two white whale movies: “Pinocchio” and “Frankenstein,” with a budget of $120 million, both backed by Netflix.

Del Toro saw James Whale’s “Frankenstein” when he was seven and read Mary Shelley’s classic when he was 11, said Dale. They discussed the film for years, as many potential backers passed on it. “When we realized we were going to do it,” said Dale, “we knew it was a hill to climb.” That’s because the project was weighted with expectations. Del Toro had been thinking about it for a long time, and the bar was high. 

FRANKENSTEIN. (L to R) Cinematographer Dan Laustsen, Mia Goth as Elizabeth and Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein on the set of Frankenstein. Cr. Ken Woroner/Netflix © 2025.
Cinematographer Dan Laustsen, Mia Goth as Elizabeth, and Oscar Isaac as Victor Frankenstein on the set of ‘Frankenstein’Ken Woroner/Netflix

Luckily, it was not Dale’s first go-round. “My muscles and our collaborators’ stretched nicely to be ready for it,” he said. Del Toro’s philosophy of filmmaking: There are four legs. Costume design, production design, cinematography, and hair and makeup all work together, from color coding and contrasts to lighting.

The ball got rolling with Guy Davis, Del Toro’s longtime concept designer, as well as Bernie Wrightson’s “Frankenstein” book illustrations. As always, Del Toro gave his team “lots to look at,” said Dale. “Everyone comes together. Del Toro is a craft junkie. We made fabrics, the paint department was meticulous, the moss squad was laying moss. It got granular in terms of design.”

The biggest glitch came nine weeks out when Andrew Garfield fell out of availability. All the creature designs were customized to his face and body. Replacement Jacob Elordi was 6-feet-6-inches tall, which was a challenge for body sculptor Mike Hill, who had sculpted 42 pieces for Garfield. Elordi had wanted to play the creature, and here brings enormous empathy to him. But he had been playing a World War II prisoner in Justin Kurzel’s series “The Narrow Road to the Deep North” and had lost tons of weight. Now, he had “to stuff his face with pizzas to be a big strong monster,” said Dale. “It was something different every day.”

At the start of the movie, Elordi as the black-caped creature is convincingly large and terrifying. The production set up on a frozen lake a few hours north of Toronto, where Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) arrives on a sled, facing driving snow (blown by giant Volkswagen engines). The 19th-century sailing ship with authentic rigging was built in a parking lot outside their Toronto studio, with an ice esplanade to get up to it. “It was 130 feet long and had to hold 100 or more people, sailors and crew,” said Dale. When you see the creature fall into the lake, it’s a tank. And when he pushes the ship, “it’s for real. The ship is on a giant gimbal. It was a major engineering project. It makes your brain hurt some days.”

'Frankenstein'
‘Frankenstein’Netflix

The film’s other design feat was Frankenstein’s lab. They built a water tower comprised of eight different sets. “The giant exterior was built on the fairground, where we made the carnival for ‘Nightmare Alley,’” said Dale. “The foyer lobby set, the lab, in its various evolutions, visitors’ quarters, the top of the tower, and where he climbs to the top, the monster lair, and the escape water chute, which is not such a subtle metaphor for a birth canal. The exterior, which took four months to build and we shot for three days, provided the base for the tower.” Finally, there were also handmade miniatures. Del Toro tries to minimize the use of CG in order to emphasize the craft.

The final cut is two and a half hours, whittled down from over three hours. There was talk of two movies, but they decided to stick to one. It was important to del Toro to be faithful to the original Shelley. “He does identify with monsters,” said Dale. “He wanted to make sure to get the creature’s point of view. That’s unique about our film. He speaks and articulates.”

Listen to this week’s episode below or on your favorite podcast platform.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Morena Baccarin on Nicholas Galitzine's He-Man
TV & Streaming

Morena Baccarin on Nicholas Galitzine’s He-Man

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Morena Baccarin has done her crimefighting homework.

The actress stars in CBS’s new “Fire Country” spinoff “Sheriff Country” as Sheriff Mickey Fox. The procedural follows Mickey as she heads up her small hometown police force while grappling with her daughter’s battle with addiction.

“It’s been so fun to understand law enforcement, to train in that way,” Baccarin tells me on Zoom video during a lunch break on the Ontario, Canada set. “We always have somebody on set with us, helping us with things like if I’m suspecting somebody’s going to come at me and they’re potentially armed and I’m walking out of my car and I’m parking, how do I do it? Do I pull my gun out?”

Removing her gun from a holster takes a lot of practice. “Matt Lauria [he co-stars as deputy Nathan Boone]  and I joke around a lot because half of our time on set is spent practicing pulling the gun out, putting it back in, pulling it out and putting it back in,” Baccarin says. “You want it to be second nature because when you put that gun back in you don’t want to look down to see where it is.”

Not that Baccarin will ever get completely comfortable handling a firearm. “I’ve aways been very scared of guns. I don’t own a gun. I believe if we didn’t have guns at all, then a lot of the stuff that we deal with would not be happening,” she says. “But I have a new respect for it. Everybody who has been teaching us has been incredibly respectful about the weapon and when you use it, when you touch it, what you do with it and how to handle it.”

Baccarin says she was sure she wouldn’t be cast on the show when she told producers she would only sign on if production moved from its planned West Coast location to the East Coast because she wanted to be closer to her family, husband Ben McKenzie and their three kids, in New York. “I 100% thought the job was going away once I said that,” she says, adding, “I think that was a big moment for me to realize that I am valuable enough for them to make that concession. It also sets up a really nice work relationship, not just that they want me, but that we are partners in this.”

Baccarin reflects on being a working mom in Hollywood. “You’re definitely letting somebody down sometimes, at all times, whenever,” she says. “You come to work without having done enough work at home. You miss a birthday, so you make up for something by having a day off and doing more than you should. It’s a mess. But I try to remind them that even if we’re not together, I’m thinking of them, that they’re a part of me, and that it makes me a better mom if I can do what I love, and that one day they’ll understand that.”

Baccarin is a familiar face in the superhero world. Her voicework for animated projects is prolific, but her most prominent role is that of Vanessa Carlysle in the “Deadpool” movies. “It’s been such a long journey. I can’t it’s almost 10 years since we shot the first one,” she says. “I never would have imagined in my wildest dreams that that’s what it would have turned out to be. We had so much fun shooting it. It was such a fun world. I hope that I get to do more of it and participate a little bit more than the last one [“Deadpool & Wolverine”]. But I understood that it was the bro comedy.”

Her superhero resume expands with her role as The Sorceress in the upcoming live-action “Masters of the Universe” opposite Nicholas Galitzine as He-Man.

She says of Galitzine’s muscled-up transformation for the role, “It’s insane. I saw him on set and he’d been training for months and months and months, I was like, ‘Oh, my god, how did you do that?’”

Joining the film was a no-brainer for Baccarin. “I grew up watching He-Man, my brother and I, so it was a really big part of my childhood,” she says, smiling. “It was really cool once I got there and saw the costume and what they had in mind for me — the whole get-up and the wig and contacts and all of it. I’m so excited to see what they make of it because I feel like my part of it was just such a small element to what it’s going to actually be in the end.”

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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CBS Evening News Says Nothing About Trump Pardon Of Crypto CEO
TV & Streaming

CBS Evening News Says Nothing About Trump Pardon Of Crypto CEO

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Alone among the broadcast networks, the CBS Evening News on Thursday had not a single mention of Donald Trump’s sudden pardon of money-laundering convicted cryptocurrency billionaire Changpeng Zhao.

While ABC and CBS, as well as PBS, all covered the somewhat surprising legal break delivered to the Canadian-born Binance founder, it was crickets on the Bari Weiss controlled former home of Walter Cronkite. Fox doesn’t have a nightly news show, but the pardon was also covered by the likes of the Rupert Murdoch-owned Wall Street Journal and Fox News as well CNN, New York Times, AP, Reuters, Axios and many more.

With the pardon unveiled on Thursday, morning, the absence of any story on Zhao which was one of the biggest stories of the day, is all the more noticeable as questions over the deep and blatant entwinement the Binance boss has had in recent months with the Trump family’s lucrative crypto companies. Add to that the fact that one of the major elements of the Biden administration’s prosecution of Binance and its four months imprisoned ex-CEO was the lack of oversight the crypto exchange provided to crack down on widespread criminal and terrorist use of the platform.

Specifically that terrorist use saw the likes of Hamas using Binance for their finances. As well, global gangs moved around funds around that came out of child sex trafficking, prosecutors said.

Entering a guilty plea in 2023 and stepping down from the Binance top job, Zhao got out of prison after four months in September 2024. Even with that punishment, the exec lost none of his controlling shares in the 2017-formed company, and with this week’s pardon, could well moving right back in to the crypto C-Suite.

At the regular White House briefing on Thursday, press secretary Karoline Leavitt offered that Trump had “exercised his constitutional authority by issuing a pardon for Mr. Zhao, who was prosecuted by the Biden Administration in their war on cryptocurrency.” In case, you didn’t pick up what Leavitt and Trump were putting down, the press secretary then added: “The Biden Administration’s war on crypto is over.”

In that context, last night’s CBS Evening News led with the NBA gambling scandal arrests, the administration’s “expanding military campaign against drug trafficking in South America,” and interviews with Customs and Border Patrol’s Greg Bovino and Illinois Governor JB Pritzker over harsh ICE crackdowns in Chicago.

Halfway through the broadcast, a segment on the much-criticized destruction of the White House’s East Wing for Trump’s new donor paid for ballroom took centerstage. In a follow-up, Thursday’s broadcast also took a look at the ongoing shutdown of the federal government and the fallout and delays being experienced at major USA airports. Towards the end of the October 23 CBS Evening News, Gayle King previewed a October 24 CBS Mornings segment on the final performance of Misty Copeland at the American Ballet Theatre.

Still, from top to bottom, nowhere on the John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois anchored show was there even a mention of Zhao’s pardon or his business relationships with the Trump family.

It is worth noting the pardon was covered in a written piece on the CBS News website, with an update at 6:33 pm ET on October 23. As well, CBS Evening News‘ official X feed sent out a post as recently on pardon as 7:30 am PT today.

However, reps for CBS News, which Free Press founder Weiss has been running for Paramount chief David Ellison since earlier this month, did not respond to Deadline’s request for comment on the lack of coverage of the Zhao pardon.

While Ellison has publicly offered a neutral political stance as his vision for CBS News, his appointment of Weiss as well as former Trump officials throughout CBS News and his inner circle has raised eyebrows. Brows that have gone even higher with Paramount’s ongoing vigorous multi-billion-dollar pursuit of Warner Bros Discovery – a pursuit partial fueled by the implied promise that the well-connected Paramount can get the whole deal approved by the feds faster than anyone else.

On the other hand, probably cause ulcers down at the Melrose lot, Trump has repeatedly referred to Ellison, who received quick regulatory approval of his Paramount purchase, and his Oracle founding/world’s second richest man father Larry as “friends of mine and “big supporters of mine.” Trump also said of the Ellisons that “they’ll do the right thing” and will unlock the “great potential” of CBS News, which hasn’t always been POTUS’ most admiring outlet, if you know what I mean?

No friend of the Trumps, Sen, Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) on Thursday pillaried the pardon.

“First, Changpeng Zhao pleaded guilty to a criminal money laundering charge,” the former presidential candidate said. ‘Then he boosted one of Donald Trump’s crypto ventures and lobbied for a pardon. Today, Donald Trump did his part and pardoned him. If Congress does not stop this kind of corruption in pending market structure legislation, it owns this lawlessness.”

As for current UAE resident Zhao, who goes by CZ online and elsewhere, and Binance …he said it all. “Deeply grateful for today’s pardon and to President Trump for upholding America’s commitment to fairness, innovation and justice,” Zhao wrote on X.

Deeply grateful for today’s pardon and to President Trump for upholding America’s commitment to fairness, innovation, and justice.
🙏🙏🙏🙏

Will do everything we can to help make America the Capital of Crypto and advance web3 worldwide.

(Still in flight, more posts to come.)…

— CZ 🔶 BNB (@cz_binance) October 23, 2025

“We thank President Trump for his leadership and for his commitment to make the US the crypto capital of the world,’ a Binance spokesperson stated after the pardon was made public. “CZ’s vision not only made Binance the world’s largest crypto exchange but shaped the broader crypto movement. Binance remains focused on building a secure, transparent, and user-first platform that reduces fees and increases access to the financial system for all.”

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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How to watch 'Sunday Night Football' online, livestream Green Bay Packers vs. Pittsburgh Steelers
TV & Streaming

How To Watch Online, Start Time

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, The Hollywood Reporter may receive an affiliate commission.

After a long day of watching the NFL all afternoon, the best way to cap off your evening is with for even more football action on the field.

For Week 8, the Green Bay Packers (4-1) take on the Pittsburgh Steelers (4-2) at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on Sunday, Oct. 26, with kickoff at 5:20 p.m. PT/8:20 p.m. ET on NBC.

At a Glance: How to Watch Sunday Night Football Online

Keep reading below for more details on how to watch the Packers-Steelers game, including with and without cable, and how to buy tickets online.

How to Watch Sunday Night Football Without Cable

Since Sunday Night Football: Packers-Steelers airs on NBC, it’s also streamable on web-based streaming cable services, some of which even offer free trials — including DirecTV and Hulu + Live TV. You can livestream the game on Peacock too.

NBCUniversal

Editors’ Choice

Peacock

Peacock is the home of the NFL on NBC, including Sunday Night Football with Green Bay Packers vs. Pittsburgh Steelers.

Not a Peacock subscriber? The streamer has an ad-free Peacock Premium package for $10.99 monthly (or $109.99 yearly). Otherwise, the ad-supported plan is $16.99 monthly (or $169.99 yearly). Aside from the NFL, you’ll get access to originals such as Those About To Die, Love Island USA, The Traitors, Ted and others; hit movies like Back to Black, Abigail, Oppenheimer, Lisa Frankenstein and others; live sports and entertainment from NBC Sports and WWE; and more than 50 “always-on” streaming channels.

Related: The Best Peacock Streaming Deals

'Sunday Night Football' on NBC: How To Watch Online, Start Time

DirecTV

Watch the Packers-Steelers game on NBC with DirecTV. All of the cable alternative’s packages offer NBC, along with more than 90 other channels — such as CBS, ABC, AMC, Bravo, CNBC, Disney Channel, ESPN and much more.

The streamer has a free trial available, which only lasts for five days, but that’s more than enough time to watch the NFL game. You can cancel or keep the service after the free trial is over, with prices starting as low as $49.99 for the first month of service ($84.99 per month afterward) for the Entertainment package with the streamer’s current deals.

'Sunday Night Football' on NBC: How To Watch Online, Start Time

Fubo

Watch the Packers-Steelers game on NBC as well as more than 235 other news, entertainment and sports channels with a subscription to Fubo, starting at $54.99 for the first month and $84.99 per month afterward with the streamer’s current deals.

Hulu - Live TV's logo.

Hulu

Best streaming bundle

Hulu + Live TV

To livestream the Packers-Steelers online on NBC, a subscription to Hulu + Live TV is another fantastic option. The streaming service has access to more than 95 other live channels — including BET, CNN, Food Network and more — starting at $82.99 monthly and comes with Hulu’s entire streaming library, as well as Disney+ and ESPN Unlimited. Hulu is currently offering a three-day free trial to try before you commit.

'Sunday Night Football' on NBC: How To Watch Online, Start Time

Sling

Sling might be a good fit to watch the Packers-Steelers on NBC — and the live TV streaming service is on sale for half off your first month of service. With Sling Blue, which includes NBC. The streaming plan comes with other news, entertainment and sports channels, such as Fox, Discovery Channel, FS1, MSNBC, NFL Network, SYFY, National Geographic and others.

Please note: Pricing and channel availability varies from location-to-location.

'Sunday Night Football' on NBC: How To Watch Online, Start Time

NFL

Best For Die-Hard NFL Fans

NFL+

NFL+ is the football league’s own streaming service. It gets you the most comprehensive coverage online. Starting at $6.99 per month (or $49.99 per year), the service offers live out-of-market preseason games, local and primetime regular season and postseason games — including playoff games, the Pro Bowl and the Super Bowl — local and national radio game broadcasts, the NFL Network and the NFL Films archive.

If you want more NFL action, NFL+ Premium has everything NFL+ offers, including full game replays, condensed game replays, coaches’ films and NFL Red Zone for $14.99 per month (or $99.99 per year).

How to Watch Sunday Night Football With Cable

The Packers-Steelers game airs on NBC. You can watch by tuning in through your cable TV provider, on NBCSports.com or the NBC Sports mobile app with your cable TV account login — including streaming and traditional services such as DirecTV, Fubo, Hulu + Live TV, Sling, Verizon, Xfinity and others.

Where to Buy Sunday Night Football Tickets Online

Want to watch the game in person? Tickets are available for the Packers-Steelers game at StubHub, Ticket Liquidator, Ticketmaster and GameTime — prices depend on seat location. For more info, visit NFL.com.

One of the best deals on last-minute tickets right now is at TicketNetwork, which offers The Hollywood Reporter readers $150 off orders of $500 with promo code THR150 or $300 off orders that are $1,000 and up with code THR300.

Meanwhile, other deals on tickets can be found at Vivid Seats, where you can save $20 with code THR30; or at SeatGeek where you can use promo code HOLLYWOOD10 to save $10 on eligible purchases of $250 and up.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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Monster: The Ed Gein Story slammed by Anthony Perkins's son
TV & Streaming

Monster: The Ed Gein Story slammed by Anthony Perkins’s son

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Osgood Perkins, the son of Psycho star Anthony Perkins, has criticised the latest season of Ryan Murphy’s true crime series Monster.

Speaking to TMZ, the Longlegs and The Monkey director admitted he hasn’t seen Monster: The Ed Gein Story but “wouldn’t watch it with a 10-foot pole”.

He also condemned streaming platforms for taking the true crime genre and attempting to give it “glamorous and meaningful content”, adding that he worries about contemporary culture being “reshaped in real time by overlords”.

One of the show’s subplots centres around Osgood’s late father Anthony (played by Joey Pollari) and depicts the actor being cast as the Gein-inspired character Norman Bates in Sir Alfred Hitchcock’s 1960 movie Psycho.

Following its debut, Monster season 3 received backlash for hinting at a link between Perkins and Gein, because of the actor’s decision to keep his sexuality private during his lifetime.

Perkins added that the genre as a whole is “increasingly devoid of context and that the Netflix-isation of real pain is playing for the wrong team”.

While the star’s sexuality was an open secret among Hollywood, he remained married to Osgood’s mother Berry Berenson until his death from AIDS aged 60 in 1992.

Osgood Perkins. Leon Bennett / Getty Images.

The inclusion of Anthony Perkins isn’t the only storyline strand to have received backlash following Monster season 3’s debut, with its portrayal of Gein’s connection with Ted Bundy, his relationship to Adeline Watkins, and the show’s version of Evelyn Hartley’s disappearance also having come under fire from some viewers.

Gein star Charlie Hunnam previously defended the show’s divisive depiction of the titular serial killer, telling The Hollywood Reporter that he doesn’t agree the series sensationalises the killer’s crimes.

“I never felt on set that we did anything gratuitous or for shock impact,” he said. “It was all in order to try to tell this story as honestly as we could.”

He also questioned whether Gein is the real monster of the show, or whether it’s the audience for watching the series.

“Is it Ed Gein who was abused and left in isolation and suffering from undiagnosed mental illness and that manifested in some pretty horrendous ways? Or was the monster the legion of filmmakers that took inspiration from his life and sensationalised it to make entertainment and darken the American psyche in the process?” he asked.

“Is Ed Gein the monster of this show, or is Hitchcock the monster of the show? Or are we the monster of the show because we’re watching it?”

Monster: The Ed Gein Story is now streaming on Netflix – sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Check out more of our Drama 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.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
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