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Who left Big Brother 2025? All evicted housemates
TV & Streaming

Who left Big Brother 2025? All evicted housemates

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Big Brother is in full swing, and there’s been plenty of drama so far.

During Friday’s (17th October) episode of the hit ITV series, it was time for the usual live eviction, with housemates Sam and Nancy chosen to face the public vote after their conversation about Jenny was revealed to the house.

But in a huge twist, no one was actually sent home.

While everyone thought that Sam had been sent home, he was actually sent to a secret room alongside two former housemates.

Sam was shocked to see Farida, 2023’s first evictee, as well as Emily, who was eliminated on the first night of the current series.

Earlier in October, contestant George Gilbert was removed from the Big Brother house earlier due to “repeated use of unacceptable language and behaviour.”

But which housemates have been evicted so far? Read on to find out who has left the Big Brother 2025 house.

Who left Big Brother 2025?

Cameron B – Episode 12

Cameron. Initial

The second live eviction of the season saw Cameron B leave the Big Brother house. He faced the vote alongside housemates Elsa and Richard, while George was originally set to be part of that line-up before being removed from the house ahead of the live show.

Receiving the fewest votes from the public, Cameron B became the first evictee to depart through the front door. On being evicted, he said: “I’m feeling good. It’s good to be out. If you stay in, you’re with everyone again, like your adoptive family. If not, you’re seeing everyone, seeing different faces.”

George – removed ahead of episode 10

George wearing a white suit, smiling ahead.

George. Initial

On Wednesday 8th October, ITV confirmed that George Gilbert had been removed from the Big Brother house.

A spokesperson for Big Brother said in a statement: “Following repeated use of unacceptable language and behaviour, George has been removed from the Big Brother house with immediate effect and will no longer participate in the programme.”

Prior to his removal, George had been issued a formal warning after making comments about fellow housemate Sam Ashby. It is understood he had also received several additional warnings for unacceptable language. His comments were not aired as they were deemed contrary to broadcast standards, ITV added.

While George was one of the housemates due to face eviction, his removal from the house came before the live eviction could take place.

Gani – Episode 6

Gani wearing a black shirt and trousers, smiling ahead.

Gani. Initial

Gani became the second housemate to be evicted from the Big Brother house after receiving the fewest votes from the public.

While only being in the house a matter of days, Gani shocked viewers when he revealed he married his cousin in an arranged marriage.

“I was so open-minded, even though I was from a religious background. I was always like, ‘Why not try everything?’, he told fellow housemate Jenny.

“From 2022 to 2024, I was literally enjoying and exploring bisexuality. And then at the end of 2023, December 2023, my dad all of a sudden was like, ‘Gani, how long are you not gonna be married. Come on, please marry, why are you doing this?’

“And I was like, ‘No, I don’t want to get married, blah, blah, blah.’ Then my dad asked me [to get married] and I couldn’t say no.

“That is how I got married in January 2024 with my cousin.”

Emily – Episode 2

Emily wearing a black dress and boots, smiling ahead.

Emily. Initial

In a new twist, Big Brother revealed on launch night that one housemate would be sent packing in a backdoor eviction.

Emily, along with housemates Sam and Caroline, had to decide among themselves who should leave the Big Brother house, after a public vote during the launch put them at risk of eviction.

With both Sam and Caroline voting for Emily, she was sent home, despite protesting to stay.

Emily is a 25-year-old political events manager from Northampton, who applied for the show because she loves “doing things for the plot.”

Big Brother continues tonight at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX.

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

Check out more of our Entertainment 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 19, 2025 0 comments
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Bowen Yang, Kim Kardashian, Viola Davis
TV & Streaming

Red Carpet Photos of TV Stars

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

The East Coast has the Met Gala, and the West Coast has the Academy Museum Gala, an annual event in which the A-list crowd shows A-tier fashion as they raise funds for Los Angeles’ Academy Museum of Motion Pictures. And at last night’s gala — the fifth edition of the event — stars from broadcast, cable, and streaming TV got all dolled up.

Kim Kardashian, star of the upcoming All’s Fair, didn’t even show her face, however. The reality star-turned-actor wore a Margiela couture gown with a mask that covered her head, though she said she had “full hair and makeup” underneath.

“[Designer] Glenn Martens,” she explained to Variety. “You know, I love Margiela. I flew in my favorite makeup artist, Mario, from New York, and this is kind of a last-minute thing, so I’m sure he’s not so happy with it.”

See photos of other TV luminaries at the event below.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane on Cannes Breakout 'Urchin'
TV & Streaming

Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane on Cannes Breakout ‘Urchin’

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s hard these days to create an original film from scratch, tougher still to launch a first film in the Cannes Selection. Three actors have achieved that feat this year, all playing in Un Certain Regard, where the spotlight tends to be less harsh: Scarlett Johansson’s “Eleanor the Great,” starring American veteran June Squibb; Kristen Stewart’s “The Chronology of Water,” starring British actress Imogen Poots; and from the U.K., Harris Dickinson‘s “Urchin,” which could propel Frank Dillane (son of British actor Stephen Dillane) into acting awards contention. Two months after the festival’s end, rising distribution outfit 1-2 Special stepped in to buy Dickinson’s film for North America, which is in theaters now. 

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - SEPTEMBER 27: Kelly Reichardt attends "The Mastermind" photo call during the 63rd New York Film Festival at Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center on September 27, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images for FLC)

“The applause was lovely,” said Dickinson, sitting with Dillane on the roof of the J.W. Marriott Hotel with stunning views of the Gulf of Napoule. “We soaked it all in. We had all of our crew. We felt the love in the room. That’s a good feeling, to have given so much to somebody.”

Dickinson, who has yet to crack 30, has been a rising star ever since he broke out in Eliza Hittman’s New York indie “Beach Rats” in 2017, followed by Ruben Östlund’s “Triangle of Sadness,” which won the Palme d’Or en route to a Best Picture nomination. The actor has written and directed countless shorts, which gave financiers confidence to back his riveting portrait of a struggling London addict (Dillane) who is by turns charming, manipulative, desperate, angry, violent, loving, joyful, childlike, and needy.

Harris Dickinson and Frank Dillane
Harris Dickinson and Frank DillaneAnne Thompson

It still took six years for “Urchin” to get to Cannes. Dickinson started writing the script after working in Walthamstow on an outreach project “that was focusing on furniture reissue with people that were unhoused,” he said. “It was a way for them to make money. And it was also a commune where they could have a safe haven. There were welfare checks, and people close to me struggled with cyclical behavior. I’ve always tried to be compassionate around that and tried to understand why and how people have ended up in certain positions.”

Dickinson auditioned many actors but offered the role to Dillane early on. “I’d seen him in ‘Fear of the Walking Dead’ years before,” said Dickinson. “I was intrigued about him as a performer. But then we didn’t cross paths, or we never met each other. The script for me was one thing. I knew that it needed an actor to come in and elevate it and change it and turn it upside down as well. Because there’s only so much a script takes you, right? And that’s what he did. He was doing tai chi and breathing exercises whilst he was doing the scene: ‘This is very strange, and it’s perfect for the character.’”

It took a couple of years to get made once Dillane was on board. “Frank attached before we had full finance, which is rare for an actor to do,” said Dickinson. “We were lucky that Frank believed in the project enough to just say, ‘Yeah, I’m game.’ And we already were prepping, even though we didn’t know we were going to make it.”

Frank Dillane in Harris Dickinson's Urchin
‘Urchin’BBC Films

As soon as he read the script, Dillane was eager to jump on board. “I remember I called you because I got the part,” Dillane said to Dickinson, “because I just wanted to say ‘yes’ straight away. I didn’t want there to be any lag, to go through the agents. You were in Berlin, so I was recording ‘Yes, I’ll do it.’ The script lent itself to almost anything. It was a real opportunity to carve out our own narrative, because it was ambiguous as to what the arc was, and it seemed like the arcs completed in each scene. It was almost like Mike had no throughline, and I found that exciting as an actor, to do each scene separate from the next one. He almost lived and breathed now. He was born again, and then he dies again, and then he goes there, and he’s born again. And I loved that about Harris’s script, because it was completely unconventional.”

In one heartbreaking scene, after seven months sober, Mike takes some ketamine with his girlfriend and her parents and is dancing and having a joyous time. He feels like he’s part of the family, everybody’s happy and good, and then he takes too much, and he can’t contain it. He doesn’t know where to stop.

Dillane had played an addict during “Fear the Walking Dead.” “When a character is on drugs at different times,” said Dillane, “I always tend to research the spiritual element of the drug. From researching ‘Fear the Walking Dead,’ the idea about heroin that got me was the idea that your cells are living and dying constantly, so you’re constantly dying and being reborn. That stuck with me a bit with this, the idea of physically continuing to be born and dying.”

The movie works because Dillane makes you care about this deeply flawed yet innocent character. “People that have gone to the brink of behavior,” said Dickinson, “the brink of morality, or brink of themselves, often are also joyous and naïve, because it helps them forget. It’s like an optimism that is in the moment for today.”

“He is innocent,” said Dillane. “That was the core of it. In order for us to be with him and to empathize with him, we have to just forgive him. And the reason we forgive him is he’s a child, he’s innocent, he’s an orphan. He’s not a bad person, just an open window. Harris kept distilling this thing of hope within me. We talked a lot about dignity in Harris. And that allowed the authenticity. So when he’s making a friend, this friend that he’s making is so important to him. When he relapses, it’s like family, ‘Finally, my people, oh, this is OK. Now, this is what we do. Everyone’s just cool.’ Some of us, we can’t do that. Unfortunately, Mike is one of those. It’s like an open window. Once you open it, you can’t close it again.”

Of course, Mike Leigh and “Naked” came to mind while prepping the film, but also “Career Girls” and “High Hopes,” said Dickinson, “there’s no misses with Mike Leigh. I love his use of humor. He’s so good at humanizing the mundane as well. It’s important, because there’s comedy in the simplicity of things sometimes, he does that so well.”

'Urchin'
‘Urchin’

Another reason why Dillane wanted to work with Dickinson was that he admired his short films. “This was a big reason I did it,” said Dillane. Dickinson had been shooting shorts, including a series of skateboard videos, since he was 10 or 11. “I made loads of short films,” he said. “And then I made a more professional short film with BBC that led to the theatrical film. It was quite a rudimentary short, but it was a way for us to try and prove a little bit.”

As production loomed, Dickinson lost one of his actors in a key role playing a friend of Mike’s and reluctantly took on the role himself. “We auditioned people,” said Dickinson. “We got some tapes in, but I got a bit protective over that role because this is a member of the community. This is someone who is struggling, a vulnerable individual. Frank had months and months of research and time spent with advisors to understand this world and these issues. I couldn’t just expect an actor to pop in a week before and get that kind of person, whereas I’d been doing that work.”

It may have been the right decision, but it wasn’t easy, said Dickinson. “It was hard to direct myself and also be in a scene with someone you’re directing, because I started to lose track of the background and what things were happening. And you get even more neurotic; acting is neurotic.”

The film deploys long lens cinematography to capture Dillane on crowded streets. “We always knew we wanted to enter into Mike’s world in a pragmatic and simplistic way, unromantic and not trying to do trickery around life on the streets,” said Dickinson. “We wanted to be observational and simplistic, and that was also to avoid any romanticism around it, but also just to ground it in that community. That was always important to us, and the story that we enter into as well. We believe it and we understand it, and we get a real sense of it. And then we allow ourselves to introduce surrealism, a slightly different language. We earned that.”

Next up: Dillane is back in London doing auditions. (His stock is going to rise considerably after “Urchin.”) And Dickinson is following up “Babygirl” and “Blitz” as John Lennon in Sam Mendes’ series of four Beatles films. Dickinson swears he’ll have time to do other things as well. “I wrote this script whilst I was working,” he said, “I didn’t take time out to write the script. I was always writing. I write when I’m on a plane. I’ll be able to write and direct still. I’ll have to finish the films first.”

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Lucrecia Martel's 'Landmarks' Wins Best Film
TV & Streaming

Lucrecia Martel’s ‘Landmarks’ Wins Best Film

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Lucrecia Martel‘s documentary “Landmarks” (“Nuestra Tierra”) was awarded best film in the official competition of this year’s London Film Festival.

“Landmarks” explores the murder of Indigenous leader Javier Chocobar and the legacy of colonialism in Latin America. Of selecting the film, the competition jury — which was led by president Elizabeth Karlsen — said: “With deep empathy and extraordinary journalistic and cinematic rigor, the director Lucrecia Martel dives deep into the events surrounding the 2009 murder of the Chuschagasta leader Javier Chocobar, in Argentina’s Tucumán Province. In foregrounding present-day voices and neglected histories, Martel emerges with a portrait of — and for — an Indigenous community, and grants them a measure of the justice the courts have long denied them. Within a remarkably strong competition, our jury is proud to honor this singular achievement.”

Elsewhere, Vincho Nchogu’s “One Woman One Bra” — a humorous account of one woman’s fight to keep her ancestral land — was awarded the Sutherland Award for best first feature. David Bingong’s “The Travelers,” an intimate and hopeful account of the dangerous journey taken by a group of migrants from Cameroon to Europe, won the documentary competition. The short film competition winner was Said Zagha’s “Coyotes,” which follows a Palestinian doctor’s journey after Israeli soldiers interrupt her commute home.

London Film Festival comes to a close on Sunday night with the U.K. premiere of Julia Jackman’s fantasy fairytale “100 Nights of Hero.” Meanwhile, voting for the LFF Audience Awards will continue through Monday and the winners of best feature film and British feature film will be announced soon.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Bowen Yang Present On Sabrina Carpenter-Hosted 'SNL' Despite Missing Live Taping
TV & Streaming

Bowen Yang Present On Sabrina Carpenter-Hosted ‘SNL’ Despite Missing Live Taping

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Bowen Yang was still featured on Saturday Night Live on multiple occasions despite missing the live taping of the late-night sketch show.

Earlier today, Deadline reported that Yang was going to miss SNL tonight as he was set to receive the Vantage Award at the Academy Museum Gala in Los Angeles.

Yang’s first mention on the Lorne Michaels-produced show was during Sabrina Carpenter‘s monologue.

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Sabrina Carpenter on 'SNL'

The “Please Please Please” singer addressed the controversy surrounding her album cover, where she is seen kneeling in front of a man who is holding her by the hair. Carpenter joked that the man standing in front of her was actually Yang, showing him in a zoomed-out version of the album cover for Man’s Best Friend.

RELATED: Sabrina Carpenter On Controversial ‘Man’s Best Friend’ Album Cover Art: “The Reaction Is Fascinating To Me”

Bowen Yang and Sabrina Carpenter

Bowen Yang and Sabrina Carpenter

NBC

Yang’s bigger role on this week’s SNL was during a pre-taped sketch for the music video “Middle School Lovin’.” In the pop video, Yang and Carpenter play middle schoolers going to a school-sponsored dance where they “break the rules” and “grind” on each other.

“You know it girl, it’s finally time. I see you eyeing me at school. It’s been on both of our minds, and I’m feelin’ grown, twelve sprays of my dad’s cologne,” Yang sings in the pop video.

As the duo arrives at school, they sing, “We’re breaking the rules and I know that it’s wrong, but it’s feeling so right. We’re thirteen, but tonight is the night — we’re going to grind.”

Watch the full music video above.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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'Saturday Night Live' season 51
TV & Streaming

‘SNL’ Domingo Skit Returns While Sabrina Carpenter Hosts

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter‘s Saturday Night Live hosting debut kicked off with a fun callback to none other than the viral Domingo skit — with a modern pop twist.

The “Manchild” singer returned to the late night show on Saturday, where she doubled up as the night’s host and musical guest. The cold open kicked off with another homecoming of Chloe Fineman‘s Kelsey character and her group of best friends, including Carpenter.

True to the original skit, Kelsey’s girl squad recounted their Nashville night out in front of her husband Matt (Andrew Dismukes) in full song form, set to the tune of some of the most popular modern tracks. They recalled their festivities by singing along to the backtrack of Taylor Swift’s “The Fate of Ophelia” and Lady Gaga’s “Abracadabra,” before Marcello Hernández‘s beloved Domingo character made his grand entrance (and return) to profess his love to Fineman’s Kelsey, set to Alex Warren’s track “Ordinary.”

The original Domingo skit instantly went viral, originally featuring Carpenter’s “Espresso” as Kelsey’s bridesmaids confessed that she had cheated on her husband-to-be with Domingo. The Grammy winner wasn’t actually featured in the original bit, though fellow pop star Ariana Grande was. (Carpenter did star in the SNL 50 Domingo sequel, though.)

Later in Carpenter’s opening monologue, she lightly addressed the controversy surrounding the cover art for her latest album, Man’s Best Friend. Pointing back to her last appearance on the show during SNL 50, she noted that “since then, my new album Man’s Best Friend came out, which I’m so excited about. But some people got a little freaked out by the cover.”

“I’m not sure why. It was just this: me on all fours with an unseen figure pulling my hair. But what people don’t realize is, that’s just how they cropped it. If you zoom out, it’s clearly a picture from the 50th anniversary special of Bowen helping me up by the hair,” she said, as the shot of the album cover zoomed out, continuing, “After Martin Short shoved me out of the buffet line.”

The “Bed Chem” singer used the rest of her monologue to “clear up some misconceptions people have about me,” joking that “everyone thinks of me as this horndog pop star, but there’s really so much more to me.”

“I’m not just horny, I’m also turned on, and I’m sexually charged. And I love to read. My favorite book is the encyclopedia. It’s so big and it’s hard…” she said, before continuing, “There is a real person underneath all the sparkles and the wigs and the corsets, and another thing you might not know about me is that I love to interact with the audience during my show, so I’d like to do that right now.”

She went on to touch base with a few audience members before returning to the stage, where she continued another one of her concert traditions: “The last fun thing I like to do at my concerts is arrest someone for being hot. So, who here can I arrest tonight?”

Kenan Thompson then hit the stage, where he joked that he was arresting the singer “for falsely impersonating an officer 200 times at your concerts. And you’re arresting innocent hot people.”

Saturday night marked Carpenter’s first SNL hosting gig, while it was the second time she served as the night’s musical guest. She, too, notably performed a rendition of Simon & Garfunkel’s “Homeward Bound” alongside Paul Simon at the 50th anniversary special.

Ahead of the show, Bowen Yang took to his Instagram Stories to note that he was missing the taping. The Wicked star skipped episode three to attend the 2025 Academy Museum Gala, where he was honored with the Vantage Award.

The “Espresso” singer served as the third overall host of season 51, following in the footsteps of Bad Bunny and Amy Poehler. Earlier this week, the next wave of SNL guests were announced. Miles Teller will host on Nov. 1, while Nikki Glaser and Glen Powell are set to make their hosting debuts on the Nov. 8 and Nov. 15 shows, respectively.

Last Saturday’s show was full of star-studded cameos, as former cast member Poehler brought back fellow SNL alumni Tina Fey and Seth Meyers throughout the episode. Fey also made a cameo to impersonate Kristi Noem in the cold open, while Poehler portrayed Pam Bondi.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Liverpool v Man Utd Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Liverpool v Man Utd Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Familiar foes Liverpool and Manchester United do battle at Anfield in the Premier League on Sunday.

A month or so ago, the hosts would’ve been heavy favourites but their wobble ahead of the international break – losing three times in a week – has given Man Utd hope.

Arne Slot has called for a reaction from his players ahead of Sunday’s derby clash and backed record signing Alexander Isak to make his mark.

Man Utd’s 2-0 win over Sunderland ahead of the international break has eased the pressure on Ruben Amorim and shown his system can work in the Premier League.

If they can follow that up with a result at Anfield against Liverpool, it could be the turning point that Amorim and the Red Devils need.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Liverpool v Man Utd on TV and online.

Read more football features: Best players in the world | Best players of all time | Live football on TV today

When is Liverpool v Man Utd?

Liverpool v Man Utd will take place on Sunday 19th October 2025.

Check out our live football on TV guide for the latest times and information.

Liverpool v Man Utd kick-off time

Liverpool v Man Utd will kick off at 4:30pm.

What TV channel is Liverpool v Man Utd on?

You can watch the game live on Sky Sports Premier League and Main Event from 4pm.

Sky Sports can be added to any Sky TV package for just £22 per month for all nine sports channels, or you can pick up the complete sports package plus Netflix for £43 per month.

Sky Sports + will feature more than 1,000 EFL games throughout the season and is included as part of Sky Sports packages.

How to live stream Liverpool v Man Utd online

Sky Sports customers can live stream the game via the Sky Go app on a variety of devices including most smartphones and tablets as part of their subscription.

You can also watch the match via NOW with a day membership (£14.99) or month membership (£34.99).

NOW can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones and consoles. NOW is also available via TNT Sports.

Listen to Liverpool v Man Utd on radio

You can listen to the match on BBC Radio 5 Live.

BBC Radio 5 Live is available on DAB radio, MW 693 kHz, 909 kHz and 990 kHz, or you can tune into the station via most TV packages. You can also listen to Radio 5 Live online via the BBC website or BBC Sounds app.

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Liverpool v Man Utd odds

In working partnership with the Radio Times, bet365 has provided the following betting odds for this event:

bet365 odds: Liverpool (4/7) Draw (10/3) Man Utd (15/4)*

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*Odds subject to change. 18+. T&Cs apply. GambleAware.org. Note – The bonus code RT365 does not change the offer amount in any way.

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

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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SARAH JESSICA PARKER, BETTE MIDLER, KATHY NAJIMY
TV & Streaming

What Did Critics Think of ‘Hocus Pocus’ When It Was First Released? Read the 1993 Reviews

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

For many Disney fans, a viewing of 1993’s Hocus Pocus is an annual Halloween tradition. The fantasy comedy film — starring Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy as the villainous Sanderson family of witches — has become a staple of October TV programming. But when it hit theaters in 1993, it fared poorly at the box office and even worse in the court of critical opinion.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Josh O'Connor on Difficulty of an American Accent: Interview
TV & Streaming

Josh O’Connor on Difficulty of an American Accent: Interview

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Josh O’Connor and Paul Mescal had been wanting to make “The History of Sound” (September 12, Mubi) for five years. But the two actors were both in such demand that it kept being pushed back until they finally became available at the same time.

Now, O’Connor finds himself in the odd position of having to promote four movies coming out this fall. Is he tired? “Yeah, I am,” he said on Zoom just after the Telluride Film Festival. “I’ve maxed out a little bit.”

The two actors met during the pandemic, on Zoom, after O’Connor watched “Normal People” and like many of us, believed he was discovering an exciting young talent. He emailed his American agent: “You have to see this kid. He’s amazing.” His agent had already signed him. It turns out Mescal had been watching O’Connor, as well. The two got on famously, and have been chums ever since. (Check out their hilarious recent appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”)

'No Other Land'

“The History of Sound” director Oliver Hermanus went ahead with essentially the first draft of the script about two folk music collectors in love, Lionel (Mescal) and David (O’Connor) who travel the South trawling for cool songs to record for posterity. “It’s the first script that Ben Shattuck had ever written,” said O’Connor. “We all loved the short story. He delivered a script about a month later, and it was perfect, miraculous. Paul and I were constantly unavailable, and we both refused to make it with anyone else. So we would get a date in, and then we kick it down the road, and then someone else would get another job. So we kick it down the road. And in the end, there was this three week gap between me going off to do ‘Challengers’ press and ‘La Chimera’ press. And so we shot all my stuff first in three weeks, and then I left Paul and Oliver to do it. The script was so good; it felt like one of those projects where you could lead with instinct, in the knowledge that I was playing opposite Paul, who’s so gifted. It felt like a breeze.”

The two men reunited at Telluride over Labor Day. It was O’Connor’s second time at the festival, after “La Chimera” two years ago. Then he was able to attend because he had been shooting Max Walker-Silverman’s “Rebuilding” (Bleecker Street, November 7) nearby. The micro-budget indie (Sundance 2025) about a farm community recovering from wildfires had wangled a permit to shoot during the Actors Strike. “‘Rebuilding‘ was one of the most moving filmmaking experiences I’ve ever had,” said O’Connor. “There’s a hopefulness to it. It’s a small crew, and we were pitched up in the middle of nowhere in a town called Alamosa in Colorado. I went out there to work on a ranch for a little bit before we started.”

'The History of Sound'
Josh O’Connor and Paul Mescal in ‘The History of Sound’Gwen Capistran

“The History of Sound,” while it involves a romance, is not overtly sexy. The two men fall in love for a time, but it’s an intellectual relationship, a shared love of music. Mescal’s Lionel is more comfortable with his sexuality than O’Connor’s David. “At one point David says, ‘Do you worry about this?’” said O’Connor. “It’s’s obviously something he’s considered. We later find out that he’s married. He’s contending with his sexuality at times. David feels shame for a number of reasons. I was drawn to the story because I found the immediate intellectual attraction exciting and refreshing. I also loved the idea of exploring synesthesia and music being associated to memory, but mostly my attraction to that character and to this story was to do with grief, in all its forms.”

O’Connor had lost someone he cared deeply about the year before. “The last few years, ‘La Chimera,’ a lot of the work I’ve been doing, has been trying to compute that. What ‘History of Sound’ grabbed for me was the idea of our memories of someone. Paul and I would often talk about the scenes we were doing. Were these factual scenes, or are these, through Lionel’s eyes, his memories of that summer? And are they therefore influenced by what he knows now? That plays into the moments of sadness that David feels, or the moment of joy and fun and playfulness that they have.”

In both “The History of Sound” and “The Mastermind” (October 17, Mubi) O’Connor, who grew up in the West of England, had to maneuver his mouth around an American accent, “with great difficulty,” he said. “I’ve lost the accent now. But the letter R is swallowed. You do some gymnastics in your mouth to say the letter R. It’s drawn out, whereas the American accent is a relaxed R, and so it’s difficult for me to move my mouth in the way that it’s supposed to for an American accent. It takes me a long time to get it right.”

After he shot “The History of Sound” in January and February of 2024, O’Connor went off and did the “Challengers” and “La Chimera” press tour, and then joined Rian Johnson’s ensemble for “Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery,” followed by Massachusetts heist caper “The Mastermind” at the end of the year.

Clearly, O’Connor is a Kelly Reichardt fan. “She makes the movies I want to watch,” he said. “I find them so funny. And there’s often tragedy, and there’s often mundane elements and sometimes, even, like in our movie, when I’m putting the pictures up in that barn, that shot is completely ridiculous. I like sitting with something. I don’t like to be rushed when I watch things. And Kelly does that so beautifully. To do that kind of a role is bliss to me.”

'The Mastermind'
‘The Mastermind’ MUBI

“The Mastermind” was filmed on 35mm in long takes and immersed O’Connor, who was born in 1990, into the ’70s. His character, Mooney, wears checkered shirts and brown corduroy and drives a gold ’64 Chevy Nova. “Those cars are chaotic,” he said. “They’re so hard to drive, they’re beautiful machines. But the wheel, it takes about three full turns to take a slight right turn. Kelly and I spent a long time watching documentaries and sharing photographs and artwork from the period.”

Mooney is the father of young boys dealing (poorly) with male responsibility, as he’s not fulfilling his role as breadwinner nor is he going off to war. “There’s this post-60s political, problematic idea about our responsibility to peace and the Vietnam War,” said O’Connor. “He’s too old to be called up. He’s unemployed. He’s an artist. And men who are artists, who are not working, there’s shame to that. He’s got a huge ego and low self esteem. That period did something to someone like Mooney.”

Reichardt and O’Connor took a long time to figure out which artworks Mooney was going to steal. “Arthur Dove is a great artist, but at the time, his work wasn’t worth anything,” said O’Connor. “You’re not going to get rich quick from some Arthur Doves, particularly at that time. They’re of a particular taste. Mooney wouldn’t steal a Picasso, because that’s mainstream, he’s full of ego. Yes, the grand heist fulfills the ego. But also, ‘if I’m going to steal art, I want people to know that I’m an art lover, I know art.’ So Arthur Dove fulfills that. I didn’t steal any old artist. I stole the up-and-coming artist that the regular Joe doesn’t know about. So it’s a point of pride for him. How it goes so wrong? He’s deluded. He has no idea how much he screwed up. He’s completely in denial throughout.”

Screenshot
‘The Mastermind’ director Kelly Reichardt and Josh O’Connor at Telluride

As if there wasn’t enough going on, O’Connor plays a priest in “Wake Up Dead Man” (November 26, Netflix), the third installment of Rian Johnson’s “Knives Out” series, alongside Daniel Craig, Kerry Washington, Glenn Close, Josh Brolin, and Andrew Scott. “It’s an amazing stacked up cast,” he said, “and I was just a part of it.”

Next up: The cast for the untitled Steven Spielberg science-fiction movie (Universal, June 12, 2026) written by David Koepp includes Henry Lloyd-Hughes, Emily Blunt and Colman Domingo, as well as O’Connor. “It’s Spielberg at his best,” said O’Connor. “There couldn’t be a more Spielberg movie. On my first day on set with him, I stood in a nondescript place, and there was rain, drips coming off the ceiling of this place, and a big beam of light from a car headlight. And some smoke. I thought, ‘This is so Spielberg.’ I had a brilliant experience. He is everything that you dream him to be.”

Joel Coen’s second solo outing “Jack of Spades” is halfway through shooting in Scotland with Lesley Manville, Damian Lewis, and Frances McDormand. “The energy on set is focused,” said O’Connor. “The experience of being directed by him might be one of the greatest ones I’ve had.”

There is a world where O’Connor would run away and go missing, get back to his garden in the West of England, make pots, and not do any acting for a long time. But that is an alternate universe. “I started in the theater, with a good number of years of auditioning and auditioning and getting turned down and turned down, being at the Royal Shakespeare Company, or in the Donmar and balancing that with working in pubs and restaurants,” said O’Connor. “What that does to you is, whenever a job finishes, you genuinely think this could be the last, and if you have imposter syndrome, like I do, and like most actors do, you’re going, this next one will be the one where they go ‘Ah, we were wrong. He’s rubbish.’ So, you’ve always got that needling away in the back of your mind, which makes it difficult.”

He admits he may have overextended himself in one sense: “there’s an element of mystery, which maybe we’ve lost, and that idea of an event movie coming out feels like a distant thing,” he said. He is going back to theater in Clifford Odets’ “Golden Boy” on the West End. “You won’t be seeing four films come out at the same time for a little while. That’s all I say.”

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Sings 'Fucked Me Up' Uncensored
TV & Streaming

Sings ‘Fucked Me Up’ Uncensored

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Sabrina Carpenter delivered an NSFW performance on the Oct. 18 episode of “Saturday Night Live,” when she sang her “Man’s Best Friend” track “Nobody’s Song” and didn’t self-censor the lyrics “He sure fucked me up” on two occasions.

There was likely some miscommunication with NBC censors, as the profanity wasn’t muted or bleeped either time, causing it to go live uncensored on both the East Coast network broadcast and the Peacock simulcast. Some viewers on the West Coast noted that the broadcast seemed to be on a slight delay and had the audio go silent in their feed during the two F-words.

Carpenter served as both the host and musical guest of the show, and the “Nobody’s Song” performance, with a martial arts stage setup, happened near the end of the show. Earlier in the evening, she sang “Manchild” as her first musical number.

Carpenter recently used some surprise profanity on television during the 2025 VMAs while accepting the Best Album Award, where she said, “This world, as we all know, can be so full of criticism and discrimination and negativity. So to get to be a part of something so often, more than not, that is something that can bring you light, make you smile, make you dance and make you feel like the world is your fucking oyster, I am so grateful, so grateful to do that.”

Off-the-cuff profanity has been much-discussed during “Saturday Night Live” history, with it being an open secret that NBC and creator Lorne Michaels don’t appreciate the show being opened up to potential FCC fines. Hosts like Kristen Stewart, Sam Rockwell and Ariana Grande have all dropped uncensored profanity during their monologues or sketches. Cast members such as Norm Macdonald and Jenny Slate have as well. The rock band the Replacements also dropped an F-bomb while performing in 1986.

Meanwhile, the show has hosted plenty of controversial musical performances, such as NBC removing upside-down American flags from Rage Against the Machine’s amps in 1996 to Ashlee Simpson’s botched vocal performance in 2004.

Carpenter was not the only one to stir controversy by dropping the F-word in a high-profile setting in the last week. President Donald J. Trump used the word on Friday during a live news conference, saying that Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro “doesn’t want to fuck around with the United States.” Rather than shrink back from the rough language, the official White House X account and the administration’s rapid response team account both posted video of the president’s tough talk.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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