celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 58
Category:

TV & Streaming

Isabelle Tate
TV & Streaming

911 Nashville Actor, 23, Had Neuromuscular Disease

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Isabelle “Izzy” Tate, who appeared in the pilot episode of 9-1-1: Nashville, has died. She was 23.

She died peacefully Sunday after facing a rare form of Charcot-Marie-Tooth, a neuromuscular disease, the McCray Agency, which represented the Nashville native, told The Hollywood Reporter.

This week, Kim McCray, owner of the talent agency, said on social media: “We are deeply saddened and completely heartbroken to share that Isabelle Tate passed away … I’ve known Izzy since she was a teenager and she recently returned to acting. She booked the first series she auditioned for, 9-1-1: Nashville. She had a wonderful time.”

The post included Tate’s family calling the actress “full of fire, a fighter, never once making excuses for the fact that she might have a disability relative to others. She was also quite musically inclined, often spending hours writing and recording songs with friends and even publishing a few. What she loved the most though was spending time with family and friends, always the life of the party.”

After acting and modeling as a child, Tate graduated from Middle Tennessee State University with a business degree. Her return to acting with 9-1-1: Nashville was her first booking for an adult role. The pilot episode was shot in June and debuted Oct. 6.

ABC’s 911: Nashville, starring Jessica Capshaw and Chris O’Donnell, is produced by ABC and 20th Television. The series marks the third show in the first-responder franchise from Ryan Murphy Television.

Tate is survived by her mother, Katerina Tate, stepfather Vishnu Jayamohan, father John Daniel Tate and her sister, Daniella. In lieu of flowers, the family asks that donations in Tate’s memory be made to the Charcot-Marie-Tooth Association, which has information on the disease.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
All Creatures Great and Small's Anna Madeley on Siegfried speculation
TV & Streaming

All Creatures Great and Small’s Anna Madeley on Siegfried speculation

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Anna Madeley visibly bristles when I suggest that Mrs Hall, her much beloved housekeeper from All Creatures Great and Small, might be repressed.

“It’s funny,” she begins in a tone that does not indicate amusement, “putting labels on characters when one of the things I love about this show, one of the things we’ve set out to do from the get-go, is avoid tropes and archetypes”.

Mrs Hall, Madeley is adamant, is not your typical busybody, buttoned-up housekeeper.

“We could have very easily come out with the old trope of the bossy woman telling everyone what to do, which a lot of people expect, and instead what’s really refreshing is having a character who has proper story behind her, history that informs who she is.”

And who is she?

“She is a woman of her time with expectations of her life that fit where she’s from. She had a difficult time with her husband and she’s come through something there. She’s had a difficult time with her son and she’s come through something there. Her life’s been tough.”

Madeley is, of course, quite right to challenge my broad brush strokes’ characterisation of her character. Younger than she is in the novels and altogether warmer a character, Madeley’s Mrs Hall is a woman with hinterland, and hidden talents. Just tonight, we discovered her heretofore unknown adeptness at darts.

Anna Madeley as Mrs Hall. 5

Played with delicacy and nuance by Madeley, Mrs Hall isn’t just Skeldale House’s beacon of decency, stoicism and quiet resilience – without whom the house could not function, on a very practical level – she is also its moral centre and beating heart. Yes, there is a fortitude befitting the period and Mrs Hall’s class and position, but there is also extraordinary tenderness. As the vets of All Creatures deal with wounded animals, Mrs Hall, in her own way, heals wounded souls – including her own.

“She’s someone who speaks her mind, gently,” Madeley says. “She’s the person in the house who does say there’s an elephant in the room and we need to talk about it.”

Read more:

So far, it has just been metaphorical elephants that Mrs Hall’s had to deal with but anything is possible where Siegfried is concerned. Given the chemistry between the curmudgeonly eccentric vet played by Samuel West and Mrs Hall, might that include romance?

“Oh my God, no,” Madeley exclaims, half-laughing, half-aghast. “A real friendship has blossomed between the two of them and they are of a generation so there’s lots of things they can share and understand about one another from their lived experiences. But we just have a lot of fun with these two characters who butt heads a bit.”

Seeming to put paid to any Sieg-drey entanglement, Madeley concedes that “They do get on and they do have a lot of affection for each other,” before adding, somewhat tantalisingly, “Where that will lead, you don’t know.”

Certainly, in the post-war years, the times they were a-changing. And now that Mrs Hall has settled matters with her ex-husband and with her son…

“It will be interesting to see where freedom from those concerns will now take her as a person,” Madeley muses. “And whether it will allow her to be a little bit… freer.”

All Creatures Great and Small continues on Thursday at 9pm on 5.

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

Add All Creatures Great and Small to your watchlist on the Radio Times: What to Watch app – download now for daily TV recommendations, features and more.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Justina Machado as Eva in
TV & Streaming

Matty & Olympia Gain a Powerful New Ally Against Senior

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Matlock Season 2 Episode 3, “Tomorrow Is Still Tomorrow.”]

Justina Machado made a memorable debut in Matlock Season 2 Episode 3, an episode that should put fan concerns about Matty (Kathy Bates) and Olympia’s (Skye P. Marshall) bitter feud in the first two episodes to bed. Senior (Beau Bridges) battened down the hatches at Jacobson Moore after a reporter contacted the firm about the Wellbrexa case, leading to one honorable person stepping up to take responsibility as the whistleblower. Elsewhere, Eva sensed a shared enemy between her and Olympia. With that, there’s a new board member at Jacobson Moore who may be able to help take Senior down.

“Tomorrow Is Still Tomorrow” began with the firm’s board members gathering in New York for an emergency meeting after a reporter contacted the office about the Wellbrexa case. Matty missed her meeting with the New York Times reporter because of Olympia’s trickery in Episode 2, which made the journalist contact the law firm. The company’s security started interviewing staff to try and find out who leaked information about that high-profile opioids case from years ago. Only Matty, Olympia, Julian (Jason Ritter), and Senior know what really happened with the Wellbrexa study, but Emmalyn Belvin (Patricia Belcher) knew that something was awry with that case. Season 1 revealed that she was the Redditor. Her actions led to Matty and Edwin (Sam Anderson) beginning their secret mission in the first place.

Mrs. Belvin was one of the employees interviewed by security. She still has no idea that Matty was the one who blackmailed her last season, and that Matty has been getting close to her for her investigation (she does really like the woman as well, just like with Olympia). Olympia made a big snafu in her security interview when saying that when times get tough at work, she doesn’t go to The New York Times, she puts her head down and works harder. The issue is, no one ever said that it was a Times reporter who reached out. This was an immediate red flag, leading to another interview for Olympia.

Robert Voets / CBS

Matty and Olympia needed a plan to protect her, and they thought Emmalyn was a good way out. They didn’t like the idea of pinning the leak on her, but it was the only viable option. But Emmalyn took it upon herself to take responsibility for the leak after Matty said that if a reporter is looking into Wellbrexa, then that means someone out there is trying to get justice for the families affected by the opioid crisis that the Wellbrexa case helped usher in. Emmalyn lost her job, but maintained her integrity, and Matty planned an exit party for her at a nearby bar. It wasn’t the retirement party she deserved after decades of working at the firm, but it was touching nonetheless. Matty and Edwin also gave her $500,000 in cash anonymously to pay for her every need while she figures out her next steps.

Eva was part of the board meeting and noticed that Olympia may have a similar dislike of Senior. Eva is Senior’s fourth ex-wife, and she keeps a celebratory widget on her phone that tracks the years and days that she has been divorced from the man. Clearly, they’re not amicable exes.

Eva approached Olympia about wanting to stage a “coup” against Senior. She doesn’t know that her desires align perfectly with Olympia’s, but for now, the fact that someone else on the Jacobson Moore board wants Senior gone makes Eva a powerful ally for Matty and Olympia’s cause.

This week’s reveal of Matty’s tricks showed her using Mrs. Belvin’s security credentials to get the Wellbrexa expense reports from the archives. This information details where Senior and one of his former lovers went to Australia during the heat of the Wellbrexa case. Before that reveal, Matty and Olympia met for a drink and reconciled their disagreement over Julian.

Olympia apologized for tricking her, and they struck a deal that will keep Julian out of the legal line of fire and focus on the bigger villain, Senior, instead. Olympia happily agreed not to “hijack” the investigation and to make Julian apologize to Matty’s family for his cowardly capitulation to his father’s orders all those years ago.

“I want Julian to face what his decision cost our family,” Matty said. From this point forward, Matty and Olympia are a united front once again.

Matlock, Thursdays, 9/8c, CBS

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
A Tribute to the White House Movie Theater, Now Demolished
TV & Streaming

A Tribute to the White House Movie Theater, Now Demolished

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

The history of movie screenings in the White House did not begin auspiciously.

On February 18, 1915, D.W. Griffith unspooled his three-hour “The Birth of a Nation” in the East Room of the White House to a rhapsodic response. The then-president, Woodrow Wilson, was a defender of the Confederacy and peddled “Lost Cause” propaganda, and he was literally quoted three times in the film itself, including a remark in which he praised the Ku Klux Klan.

It’s generally accepted that after that screening Wilson said of Griffith’s film, immediately controversial upon release as it has been ever since, that it was “like writing history with lightning.” If this choice as the first movie ever projected inside the White House is lamentable, take heart in knowing that there was a previous screening outside on the lawn of the 1914 Italian silent masterpiece “Cabiria” that was the very first movie shown on the grounds full-stop.

Johnny Depp, Ti West, and Andrea Riseborough

These screenings kicked off a history of moviegoing at the White House that has continued ever since, culminating with the conversion of an East Wing cloakroom into the White House Family Theater, an on-site cinema, in 1942.

Well, it was a history that lasted until October 2025. The movie theater was razed this week as part of the Trump administration’s demolition of the entire East Wing to make way for a proposed $300 million ballroom. A lot of history was lost this week, but the movie theater was part of it — and it shouldn’t be forgotten.

Capable of seating 42, the White House Family Theater came about at a moment when the Franklin Roosevelt administration recognized the unique power movies held over the public. This was a time when the average moviegoer went to the cinema twice per week. And as America lurched ever closer to entering World War II, despite national polls showing the American public was extremely isolationist and that Charles Lindbergh’s “America First” rhetoric had taken root, Roosevelt recognized that closer ties with the American movie industry might be in the government’s best interest. When the U.S. finally entered the war, Roosevelt said, “Entertainment is always a national asset. Invaluable in time of peace, it is indispensable in wartime.”

Creating a Bureau of Motion Pictures, Roosevelt also transformed part of the White House’s East Wing in order to screen films as a way of gauging the national mood. As the White House Historical Association puts it, “In 1942, Roosevelt ordered an East Terrace cloakroom called the ‘Hat Box’ converted into a movie theater. Here the president enjoyed watching newsreels and took special interest in the battles fought in Europe and Asia.”

Since then, films screened in the White House Family Theater have been a matter of public record. The Washington D.C. rare books store Second Story Books has a handwritten log of many of the movies screened during the FDR, Truman, and Eisenhower administrations, and it’s an eclectic list. FDR watched Paul Robeson in “The Emperor Jones” along with many Marie Dressler comedies. Many Disney films were screened for younger members of the Roosevelt family. And he even took movies on the road, including the 1943 version of “The Phantom of the Opera” to that year’s Cairo Summit, and Howard Hawks’ masterpiece “To Have and Have Not” to Yalta. The final film FDR watched before his death was the Charles Laughton noir “The Suspect,” screened in March 1945 and with Crown Princess Juliana of Holland in attendance.

Decades before President Obama made the reveal of his favorite movies each year an annual event, a kind of White House to Oscars pipeline took hold, starting with a White House screening of 1948’s eventual best picture winner “Hamlet.” Eisenhower’s screening of “High Noon,” which he later declared a personal favorite, established that movie as a go-to answer for presidents or aspiring presidents when asked their favorite movie.

The D.C.-Hollywood connection was then forever set during the Kennedy Administration. On November 20, 1963, two days before his assassination, JFK watched the last movie he’d ever see, the second James Bond entry, “From Russia with Love” — he had declared Fleming’s original novel one of his top 10 favorite books.

Subsequent administrations would go so far as to keep official screening records of all the movies watched at the White House Family Theater in their respective presidential libraries (though the University of Chicago Press compiled all of Nixon’s screenings, which featured some contemporary titles but veered more toward Old Hollywood throwbacks). There are publicly accessible archives online through these libraries where you can see what exactly was screened for POTUS during the Reagan administration, Bill Clinton’s, and George W. Bush’s.

Jimmy Carter saw about 480 movies at the White House during his four-years in office, including a pre-Cannes screening of “Apocalypse Now” in May 1979 with Francis Ford Coppola in attendance. One screening of Ingmar Bergman’s “Autuma Sonata” apparently drew 48 White House staffers, beyond the Family Theater’s capacity. Carter’s moviegoing even extended to Camp David, where he arranged a screening for Egyptian leader Anwar Sadat of “Star Wars” that they watched together in the leadup to the historic summit that led to peace between Egypt and Israel. Paul Schrader’s “Hardcore”? Screened at the White House.

Moviegoing at the White House Family Theater arguably hit an all-time high during the Reagan years, not surprising given that the White House’s occupant was a former Hollywood movie star himself. But Reagan went a step further than his predecessors by leaving mini reviews of the movies he screened, as recalled in the memoir of his press secretary Mark Weinberg, titled “Movie Nights with the Reagans.” Reagan’s taste could be pretty wide-ranging, and for as much as he was a staunch anti-communist Reagan told Warren Beatty he wished his movie “Reds” had a happy ending.

Later on, Gwyneth Paltrow says that Bill Clinton dozed off and snored loudly during a screening of “Emma,” while Roland Emmerich recalled to THR how Bill Clinton watched the White House get blown up for a screening of “Independence Day.” George W. Bush took the White House Family Theater so seriously that he actually had the whole thing redecorated in movie theater red to look like an old movie palace. Barack Obama screened “La La Land,” and Donald Trump‘s first movie he watched there was “Finding Dory.”

Now, the White House Family Theater is no more.

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'Hamnet' Wins Big at San Diego International Film Festival
TV & Streaming

‘Hamnet’ Wins Big at San Diego International Film Festival

by jummy84 October 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Chloé Zhao’s “Hamnet” was the big winner at the San Diego International Film Festival, winning both the best Gala Film (jury award) and the Audience Choice Gala Award. Eddie Vedder-starring documentary “Matter of Time,” which blends concert performances with an intimate look at the fight to cure a rare childhood disease, earned the Artistic Director’s Award.


“Hamnet,” adapted by Maggie O’Farrell’s novel, stars Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal as Agnes and William Shakespeare in a drama that captures the grief and enduring love that inspired one of literature’s greatest works.


Other winners at the fest, which ran from Oct. 15-19, includes:

Best Feature: “Aontas,” Ireland


Artistic Director’s Award: “Matter of Time”


Best Documentary: “Standout: The Ben Kjar Story”


Best International Feature: “Hello Mother,” Mongolia


Best Ensemble: “Fantasy Life”


Best Comedy: “For Worse”


Best Women Film Series: “The Fisherman,” Ghana


Best Shorts Track: “Charmingly Short”


Best Short Documentary: “The Opening Address”


Best Short Narrative: “Sally, Get the Potatoes”


Best International Short Film: “Kong Kong”


Best Animation: “Forevergreen”


Best Student Film: “Echoes of the Wild”

Audience Choice Feature: “Obraz,” Montenegro. Film is also repping Montenegro in the international feature film Oscar race.


Audience Choice Documentary: “Standout: Ben Kjar” and “A Quiet Love”


Audience Choice Short: “Rise”


“We’re so proud to honor such a diverse and exciting group of filmmakers,” said Tonya Mantooth, CEO & artistic director, San Diego International Film Festival, in a statement. “From powerhouse performances to emerging new voices, this year’s lineup reminded us of the power of cinema to move and unite us.”

October 24, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Palisades Fire Suspect Gets December Trial Start
TV & Streaming

Palisades Fire Suspect Gets December Trial Start

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATE, 3:49 PM: A week after being indicted on charges of starting what became the devastating Palisades fire earlier this year, Jonathan Rinderknecht has a trial date.

Facing decades in prison if found guilty, the a 29-year-old ex-Uber driver’s trial in federal court is set to begin on December 16 in DTLA, the Department of Justice announced Thursday.

The trial start date reveal comes after Rinderknecht appeared in court in the City of Angeles today to enter a plea of not guilty. The feds had no comment Thursday on the arraignment or the upcoming trial. However, we do know that United States District Judge Anne Hwang will be overseeing the proceedings in the high profile case.

The subject of an intense investigation by various branches of government both national and state, Rinderknecht was arrested in Florida on October 8. Rampaging through the Westside neighborhood of Pacific Palisades in January, the “hold over” fire  that Rinderknecht is accused of starting a week before killed over a dozen people and decimated over 5,400 homes.

The Palisades was, of course, one of several blazes that hit LA County earlier this year. In Altadena, over 30 people were killed and more than 16,000 buildings left as little more than ash.

PREVIOUSLY, OCT 15 PM: A federal grand jury today indicted a 29-year-old former Uber driver who is charged with intentionally sparking what eventually became the Palisades Fire. The blaze, when coupled with the Eaton Fire, caused by one early estimate between $28 billion and $53.8 billion in property damage. That makes them — together or separately — likely the two most costly wildfires in U.S. history.

Jonathan Rinderknecht, a onetime Palisades resident who most recently lived in Florida, is charged in the three-count indictment with one count of destruction of property by means of fire, one count of arson affecting property used in interstate commerce, and one count of timber set afire, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

If convicted as charged, Rinderknecht would face a sentence of between five and 45 years in federal prison, prosecutors said.

Rinderknecht has been in federal custody since his arrest on Oct. 7. His next court appearance will be his arraignment, which is expected to occur in the coming weeks in U.S. District Court in downtown Los Angeles.

“A multi-agency investigation into the origin and cause of the massive Palisades Fire in Los Angeles, California, on January 7, 2025, has determined that it was a ‘holdover’ fire, i.e., a continuation of the Lachman Fire that began nearby early in the morning on January 1, 2025,” the complaint against Rinderknecht. It goes on to detail how an “agitated” Rinderknecht walked up Skull Rock Trailhead on NYE after dropping off Uber passengers just before midnight.

The Lachman Fire was an eight-acre blaze in the early morning near Via La Costa in the Palisades. First responders believed they had completely cleaned it up that same day, a supposition which is now in doubt.

“The investigative team determined that the cause of the Lachman Fire was incendiary, i.e., an intentional ignition of a fire in an area or under circumstances where or when there should not be a fire,” the filing adds. “The cause of the fire was determined to be the introduction of an open flame (likely a lighter) to a combustible material such as vegetation or paper.”

On Jan. 7, heavy winds caused the underground fire to surface and spread above ground in what became known as the Palisades Fire, which caused widespread damage in the Palisades. The fire burned 23,448 acres, destroyed about 6,800 structures and killed 12 people.

Using witness statements, video surveillance, cell data and analysis of fire dynamics and patterns at the scene, among other things, law enforcement determined that Rinderknecht “maliciously” set the Lachman Fire just after midnight on Jan. 1 on federal land, prosecutors said. The complaint notes that Rinderknecht at one point asked ChatGPT if “you at fault if a fire is lift [sic] because of your cigarettes.” 

Jonathan Rinderknecht

Acting U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California

The suspect allegedly called 9-1-1 several times, but failed to get through due to bad reception on the trail. Later that early early New Year’s morning, Rinderknecht drove away from the area as LAFD started arriving on the scene, making a gesture to assist the firefighters, the complaint says.

A week later the same fire, which had likely smoldered underground, reemerged and became known as the Palisades Fire.

On the evening of Dec. 31, 2024, Rinderknecht was working as an Uber driver. Two passengers that he drove on separate trips between 10:15 p.m. and 11:15 p.m. that night later told law enforcement that they remembered Rinderknecht appeared agitated and angry, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

After dropping off a passenger in Pacific Palisades, Rinderknecht — who once lived in the neighborhood — drove toward Skull Rock Trailhead, parked his car, attempted to contact a former friend and walked up the trail, court papers show.

He then used his iPhone to take videos at a nearby hilltop area and listened to a rap song — to which he had listened repeatedly in previous days — whose music video included things being lit on fire, federal prosecutors allege.

At 12:12 a.m. on Jan. 1, 2025, environmental sensing platforms indicated the Lachman Fire had begun. Prosecutors contend that during the next five minutes, Rinderknecht called 911 several times, but didn’t get through because his iPhone was out of range. When he finally connected with 911, he was at the bottom of the hiking trail and reported the fire, according to cell data. By that point, a nearby resident already had reported the fire to authorities.

Rinderknecht then allegedly fled in his car, passing fire engines driving in the opposite direction. He then turned around and followed the fire engines to the scene, driving at a high rate of speed, prosecutors said.

He walked up the same trail from earlier that night to watch the fire and the firefighters, federal prosecutors allege, and at approximately 1:02 a.m., he allegedly used his iPhone to take more videos of the scene.

During a Jan. 24 interview with law enforcement in Florida, where he relocated after the fire, Rinderknecht allegedly lied about where he was when he first saw the Lachman Fire. He claimed he was near the bottom of a hiking trail when he first saw the fire and called 911, but geolocation data from his iPhone carrier showed that he was standing in a clearing 30 feet from the fire as it rapidly grew, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
'It: Welcome to Derry' Review: HBO's Warmed-Over 'It' Prequel
TV & Streaming

‘It: Welcome to Derry’ Review: HBO’s Warmed-Over ‘It’ Prequel

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

If you appreciate a good understatement, Kimberly Guerrero’s Rose utters a real doozy partway through the fourth episode of HBO’s It: Welcome to Derry.

Rose, local small businesswoman and member of the Indigenous tribe protecting secrets about the titular Maine town, explains to newcomer Charlotte Hanlon (Taylour Paige), “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time. Never a bad idea to keep the people you love close.”

It: Welcome to Derry

The Bottom Line

Pennywise but pound foolish.

Airdate: 9 p.m. Sunday, October 26 (HBO)
Cast: Jovan Adepo, Taylour Paige, Chris Chalk, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Madeleine Stowe, Rudy Mancuso and Bill Skarsgård
Creators: Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs

That’s about as close as any Derry resident can get to saying, “Come for our open-minded New England values, stay because you were butchered by a killer clown.” Forgetting Derry’s communal traumas is as much a part of the town’s firmament as the scenic canals, the nearby Air Force base where Charlotte’s hubby Leroy (Jovan Adepo) has been newly posted, and the dilapidated house at 29 Neibolt Street. This forgetfulness, which has a supernatural origin, abets the monstrous tragedies that befall Derry every 27 years and it fuels It: Welcome to Derry, a bluntly effective frightfest that too often gets its scares through repetitiveness rather than creativity.

Developed by Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, It: Welcome to Derry is a companion series/prequel to Muschietti’s two-part film adaptation, which translated Stephen King‘s epic novel by removing all of its structural and thematic complexity. Instead of weaving a nuanced interlocking story built on nostalgia and memory, Muschietti delivered a decent period-set childhood romp that wasn’t bad, and then an autonomous present-day sequel saddled with nearly all the book’s narrative flaws, somehow made even worse.

The book, probably still my pick as King’s scariest novel if not his best, is overpacked with additional flashbacks and interludes that could have been fodder for multiple seasons of television. What’s most peculiar about It: Welcomes to Derry, then, is that the creators have opted to basically replicate the core plot of the movie/book and fill in the gaps with what feel like third-tier King devices and clichés.

I sometimes liked It: Welcome to Derry, but mostly because it reminded me of a thing I love, not because of much that it actually does.

The body of the series begins in April of 1962, four months after one of those “things” that happen in Derry from time to time. The “thing” is shown in a deliciously gory prologue that relies heavily on the film version of The Music Man, a movie released in June 1962, one of many things about the timeline that you don’t want to think too hard about. Suffice it to say, without spoiling, that children aren’t safe in Derry.

It’s a less-than-ideal place, then, for Charlotte and Leroy, a Korean War hero (another temporal detail that doesn’t entirely work) with a unique condition, to bring their son Will (Blake Cameron James). Leroy soon meets the base’s commanding officer, General Shaw (James Remar), and fellow airman Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), who has his own unique condition that’s already well known to fans of The Shining. A Black family’s move into a traditionally white space made for an effective set-up in the intriguing, if slightly heavy-handed Amazon horror anthology Them, but here the racial undertones are limited to some tossed-off dialogue, playing second fiddle to what’s happening on the base and in surrounding environs.

The main story is a straight-up rehash of the Losers Club from the book, the juvenile adventures that so thoroughly inspired Stranger Things. Mike gets to Derry High School and soon meets an assortment of outcasts, including Lilly (Clara Stack), who spent time at the Juniper Hill Asylum after the untimely death of her father; Ronnie (Amanda Christine), whose father is the projectionist at the local movie theater; Lilly’s bestie Margie (Matilda Lawler), desperate to be popular and prone to saying things like “ginchy.” 

Awful things are transpiring in Derry and some of the outcasts soon begin poking around and, because kids have open imaginations, they’re relatively chill when voices start coming out of the sewers and fingers start poking up from the bathroom drains.

“It sounds impossible, but maybe it’s just improbable,” observes Teddy (Mikkal Karim Fidler), another outcast with a very familiar last name.

Get ready for ill-fated kids, eerily floating red balloons and a familiar clown named Pennywise. (Though Bill Skarsgard is prominent in the cast and even a credited executive producer, Pennywise doesn’t play a huge role in the five episodes sent to critics.)

But mostly, get ready for references and Easter eggs aplenty. It takes little Stephen King literacy to know that a character named “Hanlon” will someday be connected to Mike or to understand what it means to have Dick Hallorann as part of the story, and even less to point knowingly at a prison bus labeled “Shawshank.” If you’re the sort of Stephen King fan who sees the name “Bowers” — the local police chief — and instantly thinks “Henry” or hears a mention of Juniper Hill and is reminded of a half-dozen novels and stories, you’re on the series’ general wavelength.

(Except if you’re able to make those mid-grade Stephen King leaps, you’re probably the sort of fan who’s frustrated that the Muschietti timeline has to be treated as “definitive,” and for whom the original Losers Club storyline will always take place in 1957-58 and not 1988-1989 like in the film. That makes it even more confusing and, honestly, annoying that Welcome to Derry reboots the Losers Club story here in 1962. Will Hanlon having gone through a near-identical adventure to the one his son goes through 27 years later fits with King’s symmetry, but if you prefer the timeline from the books, the son’s adventure actually comes five years before the father’s adventure and everything becomes a mess.)

Say what you will about the payoffs delivered by Hulu’s Castle Rock — I thought both seasons set things up intriguingly, but couldn’t match their early aspirations — but that attempt to build an original series around a fictionalized Maine town honored the obsession of Stephen King fans and tried to carve new pathways through his work. I found myself frequently scratching my head about why the Welcome to Derry creators thought the only way to approach this story anew was to do the same thing over again, or to pipe in a folkloric Indigenous backdrop that deserved to be treated with far more commitment and authenticity.

The book is about primal insecurities and relatable fears, explored through the lens of classic horror tropes. The series says it’s about those things, but the lip-service references to the Civil Rights Movement and the Cold War fail to approach the depth necessary to push past frightening-in-a-somewhat-silly-way to actually terrifying.

If you can ignore the familiarity, it’s easy to enjoy the Losers Club story, which has at least been extremely well-cast. James has an earnest charm, Christine a solid fierceness and Fidler a relatable fragility. Lawler, the best known of the young actors thanks to her breakout work in Station Eleven, brings welcome awkward humor, while Stack, with the series’ most complex character, conveys an uneasy grasp on sanity that the rest of the show isn’t really prepared to deal with.

From the adult cast, only Chalk, haunted in a way that’s instantly recognizable if you know the character’s origins and destination in the King-verse, has the gravity necessary to make up for how anemic the military story is. 

I can’t quite tell you, for reasons of both uncertainty and secrecy, what Madeleine Stowe is doing here, but even in a small role it’s a pleasure to see this underutilized actress. Paige, Adepo and Remar are among the actors whom I’ve liked in other things, but are so far squandered here.

Muschietti and the series’ subsequent directors may not develop any set pieces of substantive or psychologically rich horror, but there are stretches that are gross or fun or grossly fun — including the opening scene with the Music Man backdrop, a memorably grotesque and paranoid trip to the supermarket and one sequence best avoided by anybody with a phobia related to eyes. A playfully Amblin-esque scene involving bicycles in a cemetery offers an adrenaline rush, even if the effects reminded me of the Haunted Mansion Disney theme park attraction.

It’s telling that my favorite part of It: Welcome to Derry is the opening credit sequence, set against the childishly unsettling chestnut “A Smile and a Ribbon.” A series of Rockwell-esque, deceptively chipper images of small-town perfection are interrupted by subterranean nightmares. The credit sequence points to a satirical exploration of America’s transition from the assimilationist 1950s into the tumult of the 1960s, a piece of the book that the films lost in the fumbled timelines and that the series isn’t, thus far, clever enough to handle.

The message basically seems to be “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time.” You’ve probably heard that wisdom before, just like you’ve seen nearly everything in It: Welcome to Derry before.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Allison McNamara of MARA Is the Real-Life Ariel From 'The Little Mermaid' With an Algae-Powered Beauty Routine
TV & Streaming

Allison McNamara of MARA Is the Real-Life Ariel From ‘The Little Mermaid’ With an Algae-Powered Beauty Routine

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Under the sea! MARA Beauty founder Allison McNamara might as well be the real-life Ariel from The Little Mermaid. Like the beloved Disney princess, McNamara is known for her fiery red hair, ocean-blue eyes, glowing skin, and sea-inspired rituals.

The main difference? Her self-care routine is far more sophisticated than detangling hair with a fork.

Instead, the beauty entrepreneur swears by nutrient-rich marine ingredients, including her brand’s proprietary algae sourced from France and Ireland, to achieve her signature glow from the inside out.

Allison McNamara/Instagram

“Algae is arguably the most resilient plant on Earth. It survives the harshest weather conditions, uses sunlight as its sole energy source, and sits at the center of the marine ecosystem, balancing carbon, absorbing toxins, and serving as the basis of the aquatic food chain,” McNamara explains.

And on land, it does the same for your skin.

“There’s an undeniable radiance you get from using our products,” she says. “Our multi-functional formulas help hydrate, firm, smooth, and brighten.”

Allison McNamara/Instagram

Celebs like Hailey Bieber, Gwyneth Paltrow, Chrissy Teigen, Riley Keough, Hailee Steinfeld, and Olivia Munn seem to agree, al stocking their shelves with the Algae Cleansing Oil, SeaDream Algae Cream, Sea Silk Lip Balm, and Algae Retinol Face Oil.

Beyond consistent use of her product line, McNamara satisfies her algae cravings through her diet as well.

“I never turn down a sushi night, and when cooking, I use the Algae Cooking Club oil because it has a high burn point, which makes it healthier and more effective for stove-top cooking,” she shares.

Allison McNamara/Instagram

Even on the go, she sneaks the super-plant into snacks, smoothies, and water.

“I recently began baking cottage cheese on top of dried nori seaweed and it’s delicious,” she says. “I also love adding spirulina to my smoothies and frequently reach for Juna chlorophyll drops to add into my water, especially when I’m feeling bloated or need a detox.”

But when it’s time to truly unplug, the California native naturally opts for a seaside getaway, and she’s never without her travel-sized treasures.

Allison McNamara/Instagram

“Our Mini MARA Set has everything your skin needs to stay healthy and glowing from the plane to the beach, including our Sea Kale Sunscreen Serum for lazy, no-makeup makeup days.”

As for her mermaid-inspired vacation style: “I pack Toteme sandals, a cute Elce set that can be styled up or down, my favorite white tank and fitted dress from Clyque the Label, and Luv AJ’s new Sunset Stone collection in green,” she spills.

RELATED CONTENT:

 

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
10 Questions with Vicky McClure
TV & Streaming

10 Questions with Vicky McClure

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Add Trigger Point to your watchlist

Since making her debut at the age of 15 in Shane Meadows’s A Room for Romeo Brass, Bafta award-winning Vicky McClure, now 42, has starred in This Is England, Broadchurch and Line of Duty, as the fiery, yet principled, DI Kate Fleming. She returns this week in ITV1’s Trigger Point.

Queen Camilla came to visit the set during the filming of this third series — how was that?

She visited as part of ITV’s 70th-year celebration. I’m told she had the option to go anywhere, but chose us. It gave the entire crew a real buzz. On the day she came we were shooting an explosion, so we talked her through the scene, but unfortunately it was all going to be done by special effects, so all she saw was me running for cover! She did have a go with the clapperboard, though, which she enjoyed.

Where do we find your character Lana Washington at the start of the new series?

We’re exploring the effects of everything that’s happened to her over the previous two series. She’s on a lot of prescription medication to help her deal with what she’s been through. In this series she’s battling a serial killer and we’ve gone all out in terms of production, camera work, design and script to make it better than ever.

She’s dealing with both post-traumatic stress disorder and tinnitus — what research did you do to make it believable?

My dad has tinnitus – he was a joiner for years and used power drills all day long without ear protection, bless him. He described how it is, but it’s a very difficult thing to portray on screen, so I rely on the sound team a lot as it’s not something that you see.

In terms of the PTSD, I read up as much as I could, spoke to people who had it and realised it’s very personal and doesn’t come in only one form.

Queen Camilla on the set of Trigger Point with Vicky McClure. Getty

After making three series, do you know how to defuse a real bomb?

Ha! Don’t get me wrong, I’ve seen so many variations of devices that I’ve got a good understanding of them. I’d know how to approach it and what to check. Joel Snarr [Trigger Point’s bomb disposal adviser] taught me a lot, but if it’s the real thing, call the bomb squad, don’t call me!

Your character has to remain calm under pressure — do you?

Oh no, I’m the complete opposite! I have a wild imagination and can be quite dramatic. Sometimes just crossing a road in London can be a challenge because the traffic is coming from everywhere. Lana definitely has a steadier hand than I do.

Line of Duty gave us our careers – and our friendship

Vicky McClure

How comfortable — or otherwise — is the bomb suit you film in?

I still get quite excited when it comes out. Each series it’s been a slightly different design, but always based on a legit suit. They are unbelievably heavy and hard to manoeuvre in, but I think that makes it look more real on screen.

You’re an executive producer of Trigger Point — do you prefer being in front of the camera or behind it?

In the best way possible I’m a control freak. I like to know everything – and as an actor you tend to know nothing outside of what time you’re being picked up. Being an executive producer you get to have an influence on the running of the show. I can also have an impact on the filming environment and make sure it’s a happy, supportive place to be. I can make the call if we need to get an ice cream van on set to help morale!

Jed Mercurio is also an executive producer. Did you discuss doing a new series of Line of Duty?

I don’t have any updates, I’m afraid. I don’t want to give anyone any false hope. We’ve all been very clear that we’d absolutely love to do another series. Adrian [Dunbar], Martin [Compston] and I have been talking about doing a travel show together, though. If any of us ever has any spare time, we’ll do it. Line of Duty gave us two brilliant things – our careers and our friendship.

Week 44 Vicky McClure

With Trigger Point’s fellow executive producer Jed Mercurio. ITV

In 2018 you formed a dementia choir for a BBC documentary — do you still find time to work with the singers?

Yes, they’re doing brilliantly and I’m for ever proud of what we achieved. Performance wise they’re always busy, whether it’s a care home down the road or singing with Michael Ball – they’re really showcasing that you can live well with dementia and that music truly is medicine.

Looking back on your career, how do you feel about your success?

I’ve just been doing a podcast and talking about the time I worked with Madonna – it was 18 years ago on a film she was directing called Filth and Wisdom. I didn’t even have an agent, so it was a miracle I was cast. One day I was on a private jet with her, then the next I was back in my office job with someone complaining about the vending machines I was looking after. Talk about being bought back down to earth… But the thing is, I prefer real life. I know I’m unusually privileged in many ways, but that wasn’t my upbringing and I never want to lose the values my parents gave me – they are way more important than any award.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Megan Walerius in Season 9 Episode 5 of
TV & Streaming

Does Megan Have a Baby? Updates on Her Life Now

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for Love Is Blind Season 9, Episodes 1-12.]

Sparkle Megan may not have become a stepmom during her time on Love Is Blind, but that doesn’t mean the Season 9 Pod Squader‘s family hasn’t grown since her time on the show.

On October 21, The Sun reported that Love Is Blind Season 9 star Megan Walerius, better known by fans as Sparkle Megan, was spotted with a mystery man and a baby outside of her Denver home. Naturally, the photos, which were taken on October 18 (before the finale aired), caused fans to question the identity of her mystery man and if the newborn baby in the photos is the Love Is Blind star’s child. Spoiler alert: The mystery man is definitely not her now ex-fiancé, Jordan Keltner.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

  • Bollywood (1,929)
  • Celebrity News (2,000)
  • Events (267)
  • Fashion (1,605)
  • Hollywood (1,020)
  • Lifestyle (890)
  • Music (2,002)
  • TV & Streaming (1,857)

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

  • Julietta Is Hiring An Assistant Office Coordinator In Dumbo, Brooklyn, NY (In-Office)

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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