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Cheryl Burke and Emmitt Smith, Kym Johnson and Hines Ward, and Rumer Willis and Valentin Chmerkovskiy of
TV & Streaming

‘Dancing With the Stars’ Pros Who Won the Most Mirrorball Trophies

by jummy84 November 26, 2025
written by jummy84

A new Mirrorball champion was crowned on the Season 34 finale of Dancing With the Stars. After a hard-fought finale, Robert Irwin and Witney Carson were named the season’s winners.

Now, Carson has joined the two-timers club on DWTS, as this was her second win in her 15 seasons as a pro. She previously took home the Mirrorball in her second season as a pro, Season 19, with Alfonso Ribeiro.

There are several pros who have one secured one victory over 20 years of DWTS: Alec Mazo, Karina Smirnoff, Tony Dovolani, Maksim Chmerkovskiy, Emma Slater, Lindsay Arnold, Sharna Burgess, Alan Bersten, Artem Chigvintsev, and Daniella Karagach have all won a single season. But the DWTS pros in the photo gallery below are all repeat winners.

Scroll down for a list of pros from the dance competition show who have won more than once, and to see who’s taken home the most Mirrorballs over the years.

November 26, 2025 0 comments
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Why Two-Part Finales Like 'Wicked: For Good' Don't Work
TV & Streaming

Why Two-Part Finales Like ‘Wicked: For Good’ Don’t Work

by jummy84 November 26, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s not polite to comment when someone takes seconds at the Thanksgiving dinner table. And yet, this holiday season, “Wicked: For Good” is asking the world to watch as Universal double-dips on the magic of Jon M. Chu’s Oscar-winning musical from last year. 

Starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande (again), this paltry sequel adapts and expands on the second half of the beloved Broadway show from 2003. “Wicked: For Good” has already made more than $223 million at the global box office. But with 69 percent on Rotten Tomatoes and 58 percent on Metacritic, it’s a disappointment by most other metrics. 

IndieWire’s Anne Thompson and Ryan Lattanzio projected a tough awards season ahead for the film on their most recent episode of Screen Talk. Lackluster follow-ups are tough to swallow in the best of circumstances, but “Wicked: For Good” feels like extra nasty backwash in 2025. 

NUREMBERG, Russell Crowe as Hermann Goring (left), 2025. ph: Scott Garfield / © Sony Pictures Classics / Courtesy Everett Collection

There’s all that timely political messaging that got fumbled. But the sequel also comes amid one of the worst box office seasons in recent memory. For several weeks, we’ve watched critically acclaimed movies fail to secure the audiences that critics said they deserved. Yorgos Lanthimos’ “Bugonia” has yet to make its money back despite stars Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons (though digital rentals, where the studios take in up to 80 percent of the profits, started today). And even bigger hits like Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another” have inspired analysts like IndieWire’s Brian Welk to ask, “What even is a box-office flop anymore?” 

“Wicked: For Good” will still make oceans of money in ticket sales and buckets more when you account for its pink-and-green Cynthia/Ariana merchandising. But the film industry borrows against itself by insulting hungry audiences with a bad strategy we know doesn’t work. 

Give a Mouse a Cliffhanger, He’ll Make Harry Potter… Jump Off It?

TV shows and books have capitalized on cliffhangers ever since Thomas Hardy’s “A Pair of Blue Eyes” left its hero literally dangling from a rock in 1873. The Wachowskis’ “Matrix” trilogy broke ground by shooting the sequels “Reloaded” and “Revolutions” simultaneously and releasing them just six months apart — a strategy tried on earlier films and sharpened to blockbuster success in 2003. That year, Quentin Tarantino also cut “Kill Bill” in half. Saving the finale for spring, the samurai epic proved auteurs could be series unto themselves. 

That same strategy eventually gave us the most lucrative franchises of the century. From the Star Wars sequels to Peter Jackson’s epic “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, the trend culminated in the $32 billion Marvel Cinematic Universe that analysts agree has helped redefine “success” at the movies today.

J.K. Rowling did the same for books in the late ’90s, introducing young adults to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter and steadily expanding it into a reliable touchstone of global pop culture. “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games” gained massive audiences, too, and even lesser YA best-sellers like “Percy Jackson & the Olympians” ended up on the big screen. 

HARRY POTTER AND THE DEATHLY HALLOWS: PART 2, from left: Rupert Grint, Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Matthew Lewis, 2011. ©2011 Warner Bros. Ent. Harry Potter publishing rights ©J.K.R. Harry Potter characters, names and related indicia are trademarks of and ©Warner Bros. Ent. All rights reserved./Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2’©Warner Bros/Courtesy Everett Collection

When the Harry Potter story concluded on the page, the movie version needed to feel just as big as the ending already on shelves. Running 784 pages in most editions, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows” was a long book, no doubt. But Warner Bros.’ decision to release the finale as two parts between 2010 and 2011 was an international news item. The movies did well for the studio and director David Yates, receiving widespread critical acclaim and a total of five Oscar nominations between them. They fared even better on the financial front, with “Part 1” grossing $960 million worldwide and “Part 2” raking in $1.3 billion. 

“Twilight,” “Hunger Games,” and the Beginning of the End(s)

Other franchises followed suit. Both “Twilight” and “The Hunger Games” bifurcated their finales, and the collective four films still did major blockbuster numbers at the box office. But it soon became clear the strategy that had worked so well for Harry Potter was already turning sour. 

Between 2011 and 2012, the “Twilight: Breaking Dawn” duology earned $967 million internationally, grossing $430 million on “Part 1” and $537 million on “Part 2.” Compare that to “The Hunger Games: Mockingjay,” released between 2014 and 2015, which made $782 million worldwide despite a sharp decline in ticket sales; $418 million for “Part 1” dropped to $364 million for “Part 2.” 

THE HUNGER GAMES: MOCKINGJAY - PART 2, from left: Josh Hutcherson, Jennifer Lawrence, Mahershala Ali, Liam Hemsworth, 2015. ph: Murray Close/©Lionsgate/Courtesy Everett Collection
“The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2”©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection

Where Warner Bros. and Yates delivered cinematic work worthy of a two-movie event, Summit Entertainment and Lionsgate spurred their filmmakers to stumble over the finish line. “Breaking Dawn” director Bill Condon and “Mockingjay” director Francis Lawrence were lambasted for taking hugely popular series and making them feel overly long for the wrong reasons. (Note that Lawrence has since righted that wrong with an excellent “Hunger Games” prequel.)  

“Twilight” was never considered the pinnacle of storytelling, but “Hunger Games” did particularly poorly trying to follow up the fervor of 2013’s “Catching Fire.” The series’ first sequel is still regarded by many as the best installment in the franchise, but the bloated two-part take is brutal to watch. There wasn’t enough source material to work with, and thanks to the novel’s dystopian setting, the second half felt almost too depressing for fantasy fans in packed theaters. 

Why Hollywood May Never Learn This Lesson

Lionsgate doubled down on YA fiction in the early 2010s, pushing its adaptation of the “Divergent” series as another global event. Starring Shailene Woodley, the sci-fi franchise never made it to the finale, effectively imploding mid-story between parts. When 2015’s “Insurgent” underperformed at the same time “Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 2” faltered, that set up 2016’s “Allegiant: Part 1” for a fail. Bad reviews didn’t stop the movie from turning a profit (estimated at $71 million), but “Part 2” died in development as a drawn-out mistake. 

That storied nosedive — or, at the least, the wisdom behind it — has kept the two-part doldrums at bay and out of box offices for most of the last decade. With more story than most filmmakers could handle, Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune” adaptation from 2021 and 2024 needed to be two parts to make sense. And it’ll be up to director Nia DaCosta to stick the landing on Danny Boyle’s original “28 Years” Later trilogy, which doesn’t adapt anything but, like Jon Chu’s new musical, prolongs a metaphor for fascism.

Yet the writing was on the wall when it came to “Wicked: For Good.” Universal turned what could have been one excellent “Wicked” movie into one great one and one really bad one. Exhausting and dark, the second half of this once-excellent adaptation may tarnish Chu’s legacy among fans, critics, and Academy voters. But with its ending left open to spinoffs, and history repeating itself on almost every other global stage, the wicked ways of the two-part finale strategy seem likely to ride again.

November 26, 2025 0 comments
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How 'Dancing With the Stars' Season 34 Became Must-See Live TV
TV & Streaming

How ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Season 34 Became Must-See Live TV

by jummy84 November 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Over the last decade, Ryan O’Dowd has written some of the biggest live moments on television — including those from the past seven years of “Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Year’s Eve With Ryan Seacrest” and awards shows like the CMAs, the Billboard Music Awards and the Emmys. And he’s always loved the rush of live TV.

“I love the immediacy of it,” O’Dowd, president of unscripted at BBC Studios, says. “I loved, as a writer, the ability to have something happen, to react to it, to think of what we could do that would entertain and engage literally within three minutes coming out of a commercial break. We’d come up with the idea to pitch it to the host, have them be behind it, get it into the teleprompter, and have 40,000 people in an arena see it three minutes later.”

This year, the idea that “live TV is back” is bigger than ever, and he sees that every single week. Serving as an executive producer on “Dancing With the Stars,” the largest live entertainment television show of the year, O’Dowd has a front seat to the massive ratings, the millions of votes coming in between 8 and 10 p.m. Eastern every Tuesday night and, more than ever, the engagement on social media.

“Within the last few years in particular, with TikTok, that has become an engagement unlike anything I had ever seen,” says O’Dowd, who is keeping an eye on that engagement during every live show from inside the studio, and watches people join the official “Dancing” account’s TikTok Lives during commercial breaks.

“It’s just an amazing continuation. It’s a whole separate vehicle that, luckily, our pro dancers and the celebrities on the show have embraced, and they’ve seen the power of being able to tell their story and connect comedically with their audience,” he says. “Going into this season, Andy Richter didn’t have much of a social media presence, to be honest, or he wasn’t very active on social media. And then within a few weeks, he saw the power of being able to engage and leverage a devout following. The more he put out, the more he got back in terms of fandom. Next thing you know, you have a fan base with a name ‘The Fandies,’ and Johnny Knoxville was coming to support him in a bedazzled ‘Vote for Andy’ shirt that he bedazzled.”

Ryan O’Dowd, BBC Studios; Carrie Ann Inaba, Derek Hough and Bruno Tonioli

At the time of publishing, Richter has more than 122K followers and 968K likes on TikTok, and he’s on the lower end of the spectrum: His partner, Emma Slater, hit 1 million Instagram followers ahead of the finale. The most popular cast member on social media is Robert Irwin, with 9.7 million TikTok followers and nearly 9 million on Instagram.

One Instagram account, Pop Culture Data, is followed by multiple execs who work on the show and tracks the contestant and pro follower counts by week, with Irwin at the top each time. (After week one, his combined Instagram and TikTok growth was +343,220. Danielle Fishel, Whitney Leavitt, Alix Earle and pro Daniella Karagach gained spots in the top five in the weeks that followed.)

“TikTok has been a great vehicle for the show, and it serves the show, and the show serves TikTok. It’s become a symbiotic relationship, that everybody wins,” O’Dowd says. Luckily, there’s an excellent social media team in place — even though the pros and celebrities seemingly need much help in that arena. “Their talents go beyond what they’re seeing on the dance floor. They come in every week, embracing it, asking, ‘What are the videos and the content that we can put out that will tease what we’re doing this week, that will engage an audience?’ The best example is what Daniella and Dylan did with the air walk. They’re very smart, and it’s going to start a conversation. It’s a viral moment that people are gonna be talking about. I have seen 100 different videos of couples this past week recreating that. It’s just the gift that keeps on giving, where they’re able to choreograph something that gets people talking and then doing user-generated content that then keeps us in the zeitgeist 24/7.”

It helps, O’Dowd notes, that there’s a “healthy competition” among the entire cast. “When you get those viral moments, all of them go back to the drawing board, wanting to choreograph and create their own viral moment.”

As always, with more viewers — Prince week became the most-watched semifinals in seven years — comes more opinions. This season, Carrie Ann Inaba has been getting the brunt of the negative feedback for her judging. Elsewhere, contestants and pros alike have spoken up about online bullying that comes along with being on a competition show.

“To Carrie Ann’s credit, there are times that she’s the last to speak. She has plenty of positive things to say, but she’s looking at the totality of X number of seconds allotted to the judges, and if Bruno Tonioli and Derek Hough have already touched on the positive attributes of the dance they just saw, and she knows that there is one slight misstep, she’s going to — for the good of the show — talk about that,” says O’Dowd. “Everything can’t always be positive across the board. Part of what viewers, I think, want is the ability to understand what each of these dancers needs to do to get better.”

Plus the pros, celebrities and audiences appreciate real feedback, he says — and don’t want to hear only praise week after week. “It diminishes the moments when someone is truly deserving of emphatic praise across the board. So you need a diversity of opinion. You need to point out when something is great and conversely, when something could be better.”

Alfonso Ribeiro, Julianne Hough, Whitney Leavitt and Mark Ballas

Disney

Semifinals saw the most shocking elimination of the season, with Whitney Leavitt being eliminated despite being one of the best celebrity dancers in the group. But, people aren’t just voting on the merits of the dancing, O’Dowd says as a reminder. On Season 3 of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives,” which premiered on Nov. 13, Leavitt admitted she only came back to the Hulu show for a shot at “Dancing With the Stars” — and some viewers didn’t like that type of honesty.

“Obviously, she has ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives‘ that just came out that previous week on Hulu. And I’d be lying if I said that I didn’t think that played a role,” he says. “Our job is to really just give her a platform and an opportunity to display her dance to the best of her abilities, and to allow her to reach an audience that can vote based on what they’ve seen that night.

“She was clear with her intention,” O’Dowd continues. “We should be celebrating someone who’s been very clear with what their intentions and motivations are, and who has, in some ways, realized the dream that she had and the goal that she had. So why see it for anything other than her just chasing her dream — which is something we all should aspire to?”

After such a successful season, the pressure is on for Season 35 next fall, and the conversations around casting have already begun with Deena Katz, who’s been part of the show since day one.

“She is always two steps ahead in terms of people who we not even know today. She has a finger on the pulse, knowing that, come September of next year, these people are going to be big, which is exactly what you did with Robert Irwin,” says O’Dowd. “There’s an admitted pressure to match, if not exceed, the type of cast that we’ve delivered this season. We all have already begun speaking about who those names are and what we can do. We’ve also, very deliberately, held a couple spots until the last few weeks, to be able to book somebody that nobody really knew prior to that exact moment, and to be able to be nimble and act immediately.”

The casting process will likely be a bit different next year, since Season 34 has become such a juggernaut, and has changed the perception of the show.

“Many years ago, when we were in a bit of a lull, it wasn’t as sexy of a proposition to come on ‘Dancing.’ There was this notion that it’s kind of the last chapter of your career. What I’m personally very proud of is that now we’ve built the brand to be a place where this can be a launching pad for so many new opportunities post-‘Dancing,’” says O’Dowd. “I can’t tell you how many talent on the show this season whose reps have said to ABC they are blown away by the amount of opportunities that have presented themselves.”

So, what will change going forward? When Tom Bergeron came back into the ballroom, he mentioned that he’d like to see the return of the results show; “Dancing With the Stars” previously aired two nights a week, one night for dances, the second for the elimination.

“My personal opinion is, while there is one school of thought that when you’re at the height of the brand, you should chase more hours, that actually, you’d be sacrificing the longevity of the series, and you would be diminishing the value of the main show,” O’Dowd says. “I think why we’re getting the viewership and the engagement that we’re getting right now is that on every Tuesday night, from 8-10, you’re going to see multiple performances, you’re able to engage live on social media, and at the conclusion of that two hours, you’re gonna get to see someone, based on the performances you just witnessed, go home. There’s a resolution to everything that just happened in that given episode.”

But there’s still an opportunity for more. “I think what we would prefer to do is to find ‘Dancing With the Stars’-adjacent vehicles to harness the leverage, the interest in the brand, but not diminish the main show. I really believe that the main show being a two-hour show — we get a beginning, middle and end and a resolution — is why we have the engagement that we do.”

From 2006 to 2018, “Dancing” aired two seasons a year — one in the fall, one in the spring. But O’Dowd feels similarly skeptical about the possibility of bringing back a second cycle. “I think the build-up and the intrigue of who we’re gonna cast on the show leading into the fall is so much more heightened when you’ve had a bit of a breathing room,” he says. “I think a second cycle, which we’ve done before, you’re chasing a short-term gain at the expense of the longevity of the series.”

Plus, the “DWTS: Live” tour runs from January to May, giving fans a way to stay in the “Dancing With the Stars” bubble. Not only are fans around the country able to have meet-and-greets with the professional dancers and celebrities, but the word continues to spread on social media from the tour.

“We joke about how 10 years ago, we had to make sure the tour was safe for walkers. Now, we have college students lining up — thousands of them buying merch,” he says. “We have the tour buses come out, and hundreds of people are lining up outside the barricades of people wanting to get a photo with our pros before the tour bus takes off for the next city.”

Previous champions Rumer Willis and Kaitlyn Bristowe returned for the 20th anniversary show.

Disney

Of course, another way to expand the popularity of “DWTS” would be to do an all-stars season, especially because many viewers feel that some runner-ups and third-place celebs should have won the mirrorball.

“We’ve talked about it; we’ll continue to talk about it. We’re not closing the door on it,” he says. “The allure of the show is, who are the people we’re going to cast that you’ve never seen before? We had an element of it in the 20th birthday episode, of course, where we brought back previous winners, and that was great. But I think the beauty of the show is getting to see new people each and every cycle, some of whom you may never have even heard of prior.”

O’Dowd and BBC Studios: Los Angeles produce a great deal of television, working with top talent — from Joel McHale on “1% Club” and Jany Lynch on “Celebrity Weakest Lunch.” They’ve created “Life Before Zero” for Nat Geo and “Outlast” for Netflix,” and are bringing back “Ladies of London” to Bravo.

“I’m proud of what we’ve been able to do to grow the business to a place where we’re having a show in pretty much every genre within unscripted, and that breadth allows us to do much more,” O’Dowd says.

And the success of “Dancing With the Stars” has only taught him how to succeed further in every genre.

“Creating shows that bring people together has never been more important. What we’ve always strived to do, but are making even more conservative efforts to do as a result of this season of ‘Dancing,’ is to create shows that are part of the conversation, that engage an audience on social media and get people talking — that allows for a younger audience without alienating a core older audience, if it’s pre-existing format,” O’Dowd says. “But I think the biggest thing is that live TV community has never been stronger and it’s about doing things that bring people together.”

The finale of “Dancing With the Stars” airs Tuesday, Nov. 25 at 8 p.m. ET. on ABC and Disney+. It will stream the next day on Hulu.

November 25, 2025 0 comments
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Toby Wallace To Star In Netflix Series
TV & Streaming

Toby Wallace To Star In Netflix Series

by jummy84 November 25, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Toby Wallace (Euphoria, Bikeriders) has become the first actor officially set as a series regular in Netflix’s Assassin’s Creed live-action series, based on Ubisoft’s best-selling video game franchise.

Wallace is said to be playing the co-lead in Assassin’s Creed, a high-octane thriller centered on the secret war between two shadowy factions — one set on determining mankind’s future through control and manipulation, while the other fights to preserve free will. The series follows its characters — said to be different from the games — across pivotal historical events as they battle to shape humanity’s destiny.

The series stems from a deal Netflix signed with Ubisoft in 2020. It is expected to start production in 2026 in Italy, which I hear serves as a setting of the series, with the exact time period unclear.

Roberto Patino and David Wiener serve as showrunners. They executive produce with Gerard Guillemot, Margaret Boykin, Austin Dill, Genevieve Jones for Ubisoft Film & Television, and Matt O’Toole.

With more than 230 million units sold, the Assassin’s Creed franchise is one of the best-selling series in video game history.

This marks Wallace’s return to Netflix where he previously starred on the 2019 mystery YA drama series The Society. He recently wrapped shooting HBO’s Euphoria as a new Season 3 series regular.

Wallace’s recent feature credits include Jeff Nichols’ The Bikeriders alongside Tom Hardy, Jodie Comer, and Austin Butler, Ron Howard’s Eden alongside Jude Law and Sydney Sweeney, Charles Williams’ Inside with Guy Pearce, as well as in Jusin Lin’s Last Days. .

On TV, Wallace also starred in Danny Boyle’s FX on Hulu limited series Pistol, in which he portrayed Sex Pistols’ guitarist Steve Jones. Aussie Wallace, winner of the 2020 AACTA Best Lead Actor award and the 2019 Marcello Mastroianni Award for Best New Young Actor at the Venice Film Festival for Babyteeth, is repped by CAA, 3 Arts, CP Artist Management, and Sloane Offer.

November 25, 2025 0 comments
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BAFTA Breakthrough Ellis Howard on 'What It Feels Like for a Girl'
TV & Streaming

BAFTA Breakthrough Ellis Howard on ‘What It Feels Like for a Girl’

by jummy84 November 25, 2025
written by jummy84

A queer teen grappling with their gender identity is at the center of What It Feels Like for a Girl, the BBC drama telling a party- and drug-fueled trans coming-of-age story based on the memoir of journalist Paris Lees. The show’s breakout star is Ellis Howard, a rising talent from Liverpool.

For those who don’t recognize the accent: that is the same city that Adolescence and A Thousand Blows star Stephen Graham is from, and the city that BBC drama crime epic This City Is Ours, starring Sean Bean, is set in.

Writer and actor Howard has turned heads with his performance in What It Feels Like for a Girl, and now Howard is on the U.K. 2025 BAFTA Breakthrough list of rising talent, supported by Netflix, which was unveiled on Tuesday.

Born and raised in Liverpool, actor and writer Ellis Howard trained at The Guildhall School and has since starred in major productions across stage and screen, including the 2022 BBC horror series Red Rose and his West End debut as Dill in Aaron Sorkin’s To Kill a Mockingbird.

What It Feels Like for a Girl has made him more widely recognized. The show, produced by Hera Pictures and directed by Brian Welsh, co-stars Hannah Walters and Laura Haddock.

THR talked to Howard about making a splash, making the BAFTA Breakthrough list, and what’s next.

How exciting is it for you to be part of the newest BAFTA Breakthrough group?

So exciting! I feel BAFTA is such an incredible institution at the very heart of our culture. And to be recognized and to be supported by them is just such an honor, and it’s so gratifying. I feel so proud of What It Feels Like for a Girl, my breakthrough project. It was a tiny BBC Three show. And now that it is getting the stamp of approval from BAFTA, I’m like, “God, this feels mad.”

You’re playing Byron, who is multi-dimensional and goes on an emotional ride. How did you get into that character?

It was a ride, also because those parts are often reserved for people who are incredibly famous. And so I thought, “Whoa, I get to this point in my career, and I go on this odyssey,” which is written by Paris Lees. And I felt this tremendous responsibility, but also this opportunity, to come at this role with all of my trauma and triumph and mess.

I think if there was ever a role to let yourself be uninhibited and go at it with as much pomp and panache as possible, [this is it]. The day I got it, I was terrified. Two seconds later, I was like: “This is it! This is a journey.” But it’s, honestly, a journey that I’ve relished, and it has also got me so, so excited for what is next. It has invigorated my sensibility and my appetite to take risks and to do parts that scare me.

Do you have any plans or hopes for the BAFTA Breakthrough program?

Yes, I want to really just meet like-minded creatives. What was so incredible about What It Feels Like for a Girl was that this was someone’s passion project. Paris Lees is an auteur. She has this unrelenting and working-class voice in the arts, which feels so rarefied. And I want to meet more exciting writers and filmmakers.

The second part is that, I hope, with the support from BAFTA, I now get access to doors that would have otherwise not been opened, and maybe more people will watch What It Feels Like for a Girl. I’m a working-class boy from Liverpool, and so I need all of the accreditation and help that I can get for people to take me and my work and my voice seriously, whether that be as a writer or as an actor. And so I’m really just excited to get this process started.

Tell me a bit about the themes of What It Feels Like for a Girl and themes that you want to explore more in your career…

What What It Feels Like for a Girl did so incredibly well was look at both queerness and class and the intersection of those two things. Queerness and class are incredibly important to me.

But even though I am a working-class gay lad, I also want the opportunity to transform. I want to be in those period pieces. I want to know what it feels like to run a kingdom. It would also be totally exciting to take some of those middle-class parts. What does the version of me look like in a suit? Some of my favorite shows, like Industry and Succession, are about the hot breath of ambition on your neck, and they have incredibly smart players. Those characters are complex and ruthless, and I’m like, God, I really want to get my teeth into parts like that.

Anything else you’d like to share?

Yes. What It Feels Like for a Girl does not have U.S. distribution. We’ve got to get it out in the U.S. We need this anarchic, punk queer show over in the States just to ruffle some feathers, and to give them a slice of British life.

November 25, 2025 0 comments
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Hollister and Taco Bell Serve Up a Nostalgic Collaboration for Fashionable Foodies
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Hollister and Taco Bell Serve Up a Nostalgic Collaboration for Fashionable Foodies

by jummy84 November 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Time to serve!  Hollister and Taco Bell are teaming up for a Y2K-inspired drop for fashionistas and foodies alike. The clothing brand, worn by Emma Watson, Vanessa Hudgens, and Charli D’Amelio, joined forces with the chain, adored by Justin Bieber, Pete Davidson, Doja Cat, and Katy Perry for an exclusive collection that celebrates both.

The 11-piece lineup includes graphic tees splashed with bright Taco Bell menu motifs, fleece hoodies and sweatpants featuring retro-style logos, baggy denim with signature sauce details, cozy embroidered socks, and a hot sauce packet key chain.

Taco Bell

“Both Hollister and Taco Bell have been major players in defining youth culture, so bringing our worlds together is a natural fit,” Carey Collins Krug, chief marketing officer at Abercrombie & Fitch Co., said in a press release.

“This collaboration with Hollister is another bold way we’re bringing the brand to life beyond the menu, giving fans something fresh and unexpected that lets them show their love for Taco Bell in a whole new way,” Luis Restrepo, chief marketing officer at Taco Bell, added.

Taco Bell

The collection launches in stores and online on Monday, Dec. 1. Taco Bell Rewards Members will get first access on Tuesday, Nov. 25, along with the chance to win one of 500 limited-edition sauce packet sweatshirts during the in-app drop from 2 to 3 p.m.PST.

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November 25, 2025 0 comments
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Erika Ishii wants to make a Dropout video game: "The sky's the limit"
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Erika Ishii wants to make a Dropout video game: “The sky’s the limit”

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Unable to choose between their two loves of video games and Dropout TV, Erika Ishii would love to direct their very own Dropout video game.

Ishii, who was nominated for their performance as Atsu in Ghost of Yōtei at last week’s Golden Joystick Awards, has been prolific in games acting since 2017.

Many will likely know them best, however, from web series such as Critical Role, LA by Night, and of course, the likes of Dimension 20, Game Changer and Dirty Laundry – courtesy of Dropout.

At the Golden Joysticks red carpet, we asked Ishii to choose between games acting and their beloved web series – something they were very much not willing to do.

Ishii was nominated for Best Lead Performance at the Golden Joysticks 2025.

“See, the nice part about being fluid in all areas is I don’t have to choose anything,” they exclaimed. “I’m greedy, I get what I want! I can get all the things, all the genders, all the partners, all of the games!

“I don’t have to choose – it’s the best! But I guess that’s kind of like a fence-riding answer for you. Ideally, I would get to make games with Dropout folks.

“I think that the sky’s the limit for the things that they’re doing. They hinted that they’re getting back into scripted and into animation, so why not games?”

Founded in 2018, Dropout is the successor to internet comedy company CollegeHumor, most widely known for its sketches.

Since being acquired by then-CollegeHumor CCO Sam Reich, the company has shifted towards creating original shows including live TTRPG campaigns, improv shows and game shows like Game Changer, and stars a rotating cast of comedians and performers including Ishii.

While the contents of Ishii’s Dropout game are yet to be determined, that did not stop them from issuing their demands of Reich live on the red carpet: “Sam Reich, let me direct a Dropout video game!”

Your move, Sam.

Check out more of our Gaming 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.

November 24, 2025 0 comments
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Macaulay Culkin in
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Macaulay Culkin’s Sons Have ‘No Idea’ He’s Kevin

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Home Alone star Macaulay Culkin‘s sons still don’t realize he’s Kevin despite watching the beloved holiday film “often” with their dad.

In an interview with People published on November 23, the former child star, 45, opened up about the 1990 movie and his two young children, Dakota, born in 2021, and Carson, born in 2022, whom he shares with his fiancée, The Suite Life of Zack & Cody star Brenda Song, 37.

November 24, 2025 0 comments
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For Good' Needed These Two Scenes
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For Good’ Needed These Two Scenes

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

[Editor’s note: This story contains spoilers for the end of “Wicked: For Good.”]

As bad as a scene can get in a movie that would work way better if the conflict was worse, the Underground Yellow Brick Road still seems like some ham-fisted symbolism, don’t you think? From Universal’s “Wicked: For Good,” that ridiculous moment comes midway through the second half of director Jon M. Chu’s epic musical blockbuster. It features a crowd of subjugated animals, so oppressed by their human overlords that they have been magically stripped of the ability to speak and forced to flee Oz on foot (or hoof).

The group uses a subterranean tunnel that’s literally beneath the Yellow Brick Road for the express purpose of evading animal slavery. That adapted American history lesson plays clumsily on the big screen, and even still, “For Good” doesn’t feel dramatic or important enough.

'Wicked: For Good'

In theaters now, Chu’s highly anticipated follow-up to last year’s “Wicked” meets and at times even exceeds expectations when it comes to providing sparkly spectacle. But the sequel plays like a needlessly drawn-out coda, putting a bloated encore where many “Wicked” fans hoped a real fairy tale with a timely message might be.

The creators of “Wicked: For Good” would’ve done well to budget more of the time and energy they spent on the visual design to get better scripts with real stakes. A couple pick-ups could do the trick, too.

C’mon, Jon, You Had the Book Right There

Starring Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande as vivid portraits of the one-dimensional witches we first met back in 1939’s “Wizard of Oz,” the modern “Wicked” duology follows in the imperial footsteps of Star Wars, Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and other major sci-fi and fantasy franchises to present an extraordinary world on the brink. Chu’s two “Wicked” movies are based on Stephen Schwartz and Winnie Holzman’s long-running Broadway musical from 2003, which in turn loosely adapts author Gregory Maguire’s bleak 1995 novel, “Wicked: The Life and Times of the Wicked Witch of the West.”

Across page, stage, and screen, each version feels different from the rest. But the story of Elphaba and Glinda soars highest when its teller chooses to focus on the girls’ unique friendship — a dynamic that’s more sterile but still meaningful in the book. That approach paid off when “Wicked” introduced the beloved characters to the big screen last year, but “For Good” turns the narrative North Star into a tonally frustrating crutch Chu can’t seem to shake in the lesser film. 

WICKED: FOR GOOD, (aka WICKED: ACT II, aka WICKED: PART TWO), from left: Ariana Grande as Glinda, Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba, 2025. ph: Giles Keyte / © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo in ‘Wicked: For Good’©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Presenting a menagerie of beaded costumes and belted solos in lieu of any real perspective on political discourse, the “Wicked” sequel appears aimed at giving movie-goers more of the same song-and-dance they loved in the first half. But the result is far less. “For Good” loses the taut playfulness that made the earlier “Wicked” snap by attempting to pit Elphaba and Glinda against an enemy that’s often unseen and perpetually nondescript.

Both Madame Morrible (Michelle Yeoh) and the Wizard (Jeff Goldblum) leave their scariest moments back in 2024, and even the authoritarian cogs they set in motion then don’t make a significant enough impact on the framing of “For Good” to motivate the story that’s developing in theaters now.

Frequently compared to dystopian touchstones like Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale,” Maguire’s painstaking literary text was right there for Chu’s inspiration. It’s got creepy dolls hiding deep-state surveillance tech; Holocaust-like experiments performed on fluffy victims; the pervasive sense that anything and everything in Oz could be waiting to ensnare Elphaba like its Big Brother in “1984.”

And yet, “For Good” doggedly shies away from the darkness — something these witches needed if Chu wanted their tortured connection to really sing a second time.

Tell Me Cows Can Talk, or Give ‘Em Something to Cry About

In her review, IndieWire’s Kate Erbland explained how the year-long intermission between “Wicked” and “For Good” made the second movie not only more disorienting but harder to connect with emotionally. That disconnect might have been alleviated with a stronger first scene.

This alternate beginning doesn’t have to be seriously “scary” but it should at least show who in Oz is being hurt by the ruling class and why. Opening on a forgettable brick-laying sequence — in which some horned cow-things, who could talk probably at one point but can’t now and are having a bad time working their jobs in construction… or something? — “For Good” needed a harder rock bottom to successfully set up peril and unrest in Emerald City as tangible threats suggesting a hidden dystopia.

WICKED, The Emerald City, 2024.  © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Wicked’ (2024)©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

From the bloody sewers of “Sweeney Todd” to the storybook pages of “Into the Woods,” the overture has given countless musical filmmakers the ideal chance to show-not-tell audiences about the worlds they’re entering from the start. Instead, “For Good” feels like it comes out of nowhere. Chu fails to explain the magic lurking behind those cow-things’ eyes, and Elphaba makes an outsized display of riding in on her broom to save them from what looks like basically a crappy workday sans context. 

Not knowing what the herd’s life was like before they encountered the Wicked Witch or the jerks managing their long haul down the Yellowbrick Road, their gig doesn’t look great, but it’s not even “Office Space” bad. What’s worse, the other Ozians are effectively given a pass for doing nothing in the face of entire of species forced into slavery because the scenario is so weirdly wooden and unclear.

The central conflict is illuminated only marginally better when Elphaba’s sister Nessa (Marissa Bode), now a corrupt governor, passes a law forbidding her Munchkin prisoner, Boq (Ethan Slater), from traveling later in the movie. But even then, “For Good” flinches away from the cruelty at hand — rarely showing Nessa’s angry face (was her acting too good?) and exercising more restraint than they need when Boq becomes the Tin Man. That scaredy-cat ethos carries through a number of other scenes: some that do show animals locked in cages but remain ambiguous and inoffensive enough for the idea to miss most children. 

If You’re Gonna Keep the Goat Alive, Let the Professor Speak!

Through that underwhelming haze, the familiar muzzle of Dr. Dillamond (previously voiced by Peter Dinklage) breaks through — just not enough. In the first half of “Wicked,” the former Shiz University professor lost his ability to speak during a horrifying classroom scene that recalls all those nightmarish Defense Against the Dark Arts lessons we saw go wrong in Harry Potter.

WICKED, from left: Cynthia Erivo, Ariana Grande, 2024. © Universal Pictures / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Wicked’ (2024)©Universal/Courtesy Everett Collection

Dr. Dillamond is even more important in Maguire’s book, and his political assassination (yes, that goat gets straight-up murdered, bro!) serves as an important political symbol and driving force behind Elphaba’s radicalization. The live musical dropped that bit and Chu was probably right to soften the blow for the movies, too. But if you’re going to bother not keeping a recognizable victim around, and routinely use him as a visual reference to explain what Elphaba and Glinda do and don’t know about the plot that’s unfolding, then he deserves his due. 

“For Good” already has a number of celebratory scenes showing what happens as news of Elphaba’s death reverberates throughout Oz. But Chu needed to put a finer point on the societal transformation the Wicked Witch and her best friend gave up their friendship to create. Dr. Dillamond would’ve been the perfect way to do it, even if Dinklage cost the movie extra. 

For whatever reason, “For Good” seems hell-bent on throwing away many of its best reveals. Most painfully, Prince Fiyero (Jonathan Bailey) has his tragic Scarecrow evolution stretched over several scenes, before it concludes  in a romantic beat where body horror doesn’t fit. But Dr. Dillamond doesn’t even get to finish his arc between “Wicked” and “For Good,” as the duology, seemingly desperate to fill time at every other turn, makes the baffling choice to cast out the academic quadruped-like Animal. 

Despite Dinklage warmly promoting his small voice part in Chu’s films, the “Wicked” movies ultimately decide Dr. Dillamond works better as a subplot that’s seen but not heard in the back half. Amid all  the poppies and propaganda, you get a glimpse of his weary enlightened face. Of course, that could never replace the audible triumph he deserved in a scene that should have just let him speak. 

“Wicked: For Good” is in theaters now. 

November 24, 2025 0 comments
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Kiran Rao's Kindling Pictures Backs Bosco Bhandarkar's 'Shadow Hill'
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Kiran Rao’s Kindling Pictures Backs Bosco Bhandarkar’s ‘Shadow Hill’

by jummy84 November 24, 2025
written by jummy84

Kiran Rao‘s production banner Kindling Pictures is backing commercial director Bosco Bhandarkar’s feature directorial debut “Shadow Hill: Of Spirits and Men,” which has been selected for the WAVES Film Bazaar‘s Co-Production Market.

The Bazaar is the market component of the International Film Festival of India (IFFI).

The film follows two men on a treasure hunt in Goa — one seeking closure about a hidden truth and the other looking for an escape from drudgery. A mysterious woman who tells tales of the past helps both men find resolution. Set against the backdrop of Goa’s transformation from a tranquil coastal region to an urban sprawl, the story blends comedic and tragic moments while exploring themes of memory, loss and human connection.

“The idea is to find love as a counterforce to cynicism,” says Bhandarkar, who drew inspiration from childhood summer vacations spent at an ancestral house in a Goan village. “We are living in times when one hopes for some faith in humanity, and I hope our film helps reflect this in some small and beautiful ways.”

The director said he wanted to address the ecological destruction caused by Goa’s booming real estate market and political corruption, noting that “the very concepts of space and time have shifted drastically for the locals in present times, and not for the best.”

Rao, who co-founded Kindling Pictures with producer Tanaji Dasgupta, has known Bhandarkar for over 25 years. “His perspective is unusual, mischievous, and deeply human,” says Rao. “Through humor and irony, he is able to peel back the surface of ordinary life and reveal its hidden layers, often through striking, poetic imagery.”

Bhandarkar has spent most of his career directing commercials. He describes himself as a daydreamer who loves “films made by filmmakers who have school bags filled with empathy.”

At Film Bazaar, Kindling Pictures is seeking co-producers, financiers and film funds. The company has invested 25% of the budget and is looking to raise additional financing while attaching strategic partners to help execute Bhandarkar’s vision.

“We believe it embodies a rare balance of humor, poignancy, and danger,” said Rao. “We are very excited about this film because it promises to be an extraordinary cinematic experience,” adds Dasgupta.

November 24, 2025 0 comments
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