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Toni Collette in 'Wayward.'
TV & Streaming

A Closer Look at the Real-Life Inspiration in Netflix’s ‘Wayward’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

In the hit Netflix series Wayward, the thriller-drama revolving around the inner workings and dark secrets of a fictional school for troubled teenagers, the devil is in the details. The eight-episode limited series traces dual fictional narratives that overlap at a remote institution in a small Vermont town, vividly creating glimpses of the troubling abuse of the teenagers being “treated,” within — and it’s tantamount to torture in many instances. While its primary characters — two wayward high school besties who become trapped at the campus; the institution’s intimidating and enigmatic leader; and a young married couple, one with secrets about the school and the other with ambitions to reveal them  — mostly have the feel of composite versions of the young people sent to these schools or those dealing with the trauma they tend to instill. Yet the series, whether it’s acknowledged officially or not, is filled with details of a very real, notorious institution, the people whose lives were impacted by what was endured and a missing persons case that remains cold after 22 years. 

Wayward creator Mae Martin, who portrays Officer Alex Dempsey in the show, revealed in a recent interview that Wayward’s scripts were drawn from her own real-life experiences — a wayward teen herself, she saw a close friend shipped off to a troubled teen camp. While Martin has not indicated any direct connections, several of the details in her scripts — from the therapeutic tactics down to the Tall Pines Academy logo — either identically mirror or uncannily resemble the people who attended and events that occurred at CEDU, one of the most notorious troubled teen facilities in the nation’s history. CEDU was shuttered decades ago amid a flurry of lawsuits, and like the Wayward’s fictional institution, it was rampant with brutality, cruelty and had multiple residents disappear under strange circumstances in cases that local police have all but abandoned. 

For many, CEDU is considered ground zero for the now multi-billion dollar troubled teen industry but the organization and its institutions have a dark history of emotional, physical and psychological abuse. It operated at multiple locations from 1967 until its closure in 2005, leaving behind a legacy of abuse with impunity that occurred within a cult-like environment and was based on degradation and stripping the identity from teenagers, who’d been sent there for reasons extending from harmful drug addictions to everyday teenage depression.

Desperate Escapes 

Wayward opens with a smashed window and a heart-pounding chase as a mysterious teenage boy desperately flees his Tall Pines Academy dorm, then the walls of the campus, and into the unforgiving woods. Meanwhile, the school’s security team flips the floodlights on and comes after the runaway with all of the institution’s power. That escape experience may be heightened for dramatic impact, but it’s easy to presume that a similar terror was most certainly felt by hundreds of teenagers trying to escape the camps or institutions where many were kidnapped at their parents’ instructions and forced to live there against their will. 

This was a consistent issue over the 40 years CEDU existed as a law-flouting, minor-endangering alternative for parents. The unknown levels of abuse were quite real for the hundreds who had attempted to flee, like the teen in Wayward’s opening moments, out of total desperation. 

Close Ties With Local Police

Wayward shows a close and corrupt relationship between law enforcement in Tall Pines — a town full of secrets — and the institution that brings money and young blood into the community. Tall Pines Academy’s founder and cult-leader-like headmistress “likes to be involved,” as Alex is told on day one at the local police force; he is also informed after a run-in with the desperate Tall Pines runaway (whose escape opens the series) that this happens all of the time and police often must bring them back to campus. CEDU’s San Bernadeno campus had a similar relationship with the local sheriff’s office. According to an investigation in Los Angeles Magazine, out of 415 reports of program-fleeing juveniles from CEDU’s San Bernardino location over eight years, local law enforcement logged only 10 “attempts to locate” and four search and rescue missions. The L.A. Mag report also indicates that the sheriff’s office consistently stonewalled their investigation into the death of a missing teenager, Daniel Yuen. 

Daniel Goes Missing — or Does He?

One of the many character-driven plot threads in Wayward involved a character named Daniel, a conniving young man who is one of a handful of the series’ characters who don’t live to appear in the eighth and final episode. Daniel’s death (spoiler alert: he is stabbed by a fellow student) is covered up when he’s said to have run away. At CEDU, a supposed runaway existed in real life: Daniel Yuen. L.A. Mag’s investigation reveals that many details emerged about the day of the teenager’s alleged escape. One that resonates, though, is an account by an unnamed source that Daniel had been disciplined for trying to flee, restrained by a fellow pupil “until a CEDU staff member arrived to take control.” Twenty-two years later, his parents having searched far and wide for their son — sometimes even aided by former CEDU staffers whom they were paying — have had no luck; Daniel Yuen is still missing. 

Group therapy in episode 103 of Wayward.

Netflix

The Synanon Connection

With her long coat, oversized glasses, and dead-on stare, Toni Colette’s central Wayward character gives off the uncomfortable feeling of a cult leader. So it’s not surprising to see that in a recent interview about the show, Martin revealed that her inspiration for Colette’s Evelyn Wade was the Synanon cult, once called the “most dangerous and violent cults America had ever seen.”

“In researching these schools — a lot of which are now being talked about in different documentaries — I learned about Synanon,” Martin said in the interview, per Esquire. “That was a self-help cult in the ’70s in L.A., which was ultimately shut down, but it kind of transformed and was part of the beginnings of the ‘troubled teen’ industry. So we took those facts and then dialed them up a bunch.”

One aspect included in the series is “The Synanon Game,” a group attack therapy dreamed up within the cult where members humiliated one another and encouraged the exposure of one another’s innermost weaknesses. This is directly lifted and placed into Wayward with the “Hot Seat” therapy session that the students endure. Following his time with Synanon, Charles DIetrich founded CEDU Educational Services, Inc. in 1967; “The Synanon Game” was adapted into hours-long emotional growth sessions called “raps,” where students were incentivized to “indict” their classmates for rule infractions and lay into their shame by screaming “disclosures” about them to the group. After this, at night, “smooshing” would soothe the pain felt in these sessions — as displayed in a form on Wayward. This is a session of group touching involving hugging, caressing, hair stroking and lap-sitting.   

Mae Martin as Alex Dempsey and Mark McKinney as Maurice in episode 105 of Wayward.

Netflix

One Good Cop

In Wayward, deputy Alex discovers that multiple teens have gone missing from the Academy and does a quick online search and discovers an activist and investigative blogger named Maurice — an unhinged man who is working to expose the dark truth about Tall Pines Academy. After the two meet, their potentially fruitful partnership veers into mistrust and meets a violent end. In San Bernadeno, as the investigation into some of CEDU’s missing kids was reopened, a remarkably similar meeting played out, according to David Safran, a CEDU survivor who has become involved in multiple media projects on the troubled teen industry and CEDU’s missing kids. 

“In real life, that happened exactly like that,” Safran told The Hollywood Reporter, referring to the outreach he received from Detective Alisha Rosa in November 2021. “It wasn’t Vermont. It was a newly-promoted California detective who was transferred to the Twin Peaks station in the San Bernardino Mountains. She discovered multiple kids had gone missing from CEDU and quickly found my blog post on Medium and reached out to me. It really became the story of an intrepid cop and a citizen journalist connecting on how to find out what happens to these kids.”

Despite some key differences in the fictional Maurice’s backstory (he’s a parent of a missing kid, not, as Safran is, a former pupil of the institution) and their demeanors (Safran does not give raving madman), Safran notes other striking similarities between Maurice’s experience on the show and his own. One notable moment came in the scene where Wayward’s local sleuth tells Alex that he has heard nothing but radio silence from every media outlet that he has contacted about exposing Tall Pines Academy; this was Safran’s experience when contacting media outlets about the CEDU missing persons cases, including that of Daniel Yuen. Finally, both Maurice and Safran were skeptical of a still green detective attempting to take on a massive, entrenched institution like CEDU or the fictional Tall Pines Academy. Safran told THR that this shifted with time and that the real story with Detective Rosa came later, when she was taken off the revived CEDU missing kids case in a rug-pull by her superiors as her investigation, aided by Safran, was progressing. 

***

With her series now a major hit, having shot to No. 1 on the Netflix Top 10 chart in its first week on the platform and remained in the top 10 since, it seems within the realm of possibility that Martin may be asked to bring the limited, one-and-done series back. Whether a potential second season would delve further into what life was like at CEDU — or focus on or even acknowledge the connections to actual events — the institution is now the central mystery for Wayward. But for survivors like Safran, many of whom have expressed their opinions on the series online, the show is commendable for shining a light on the dark tactics found in corners of the troubled teen industry and for buoying the conversation about these horrors — that can be deeply traumatizing and linger for a lifetime — but felt that it should also lean into the reality of its depictions of life there. And be clear with its audience: Wayward is fiction but plenty of what is seen is based in fact. This is real, and is still happening. 

“It’s just not the day-to-day counter therapeutic techniques, all that kind of stuff is similar, but not. It’s not authentic to the experience. They know the historical record, they know the lingo, they know the cult stuff,” Safran says of Wayward’s notable lack of acknowledgment of how fact-based it is. “Reality in the troubled teen industry is always darker and funnier and weirder.”

Netflix was contacted by The Hollywood Reporter to seek comment on the above connections, but did not immediately reply. This story will be updated with any response from the streamer.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Emmerdale confirms three special episodes - including Bear mystery solved
TV & Streaming

Emmerdale confirms three special episodes – including Bear mystery solved

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Emmerdale has confirmed three special standalone episodes coming up this autumn.

The instalments will focus on April (Amelia Flanagan) and Marlon Dingle (Mark Charnock), Robert Sugden (Ryan Hawley) and Bear Wolf (Joshua Richards).

Viewers of the ITV soap will know that April Dingle has found herself in danger in recent weeks as she and Dylan Penders have been exploited by the villainous Ray Walters as part of his criminal operation.

In the special episode focusing on the troubled teen, Marlon tries to get through to her as she remains at the mercy of the drug dealers, with ITV teasing that the instalment will explore the fragile and possibly broken relationship between the father and daughter.

The Robert Sugden-focused episode, meanwhile, will take viewers behind the bars of his recent incarceration.

Emmerdale viewers will remember that the character returned to the village in May after serving six years in prison following the death of Lee Posner, but what exactly happened during those six years?

Elsewhere, the Bear-focused episode will see Paddy (Dominic Brunt) discover that his estranged father, who he believed had been living with friends in Ireland since July, never actually made the journey across the Irish sea.

ITV has teased that the episode will “explore the hundred missing days of Bear’s life and we’ll learn that he is sadly trapped in an all too common situation for a forgotten generation”.

Further details on when the special episodes will air will be announced in due course.

Read more:

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1. Stream on ITVX.

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

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

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Olivia Swann as NCIS Special Agent Captain Michelle Mackey and Todd Lasance as AFP Liaison Officer Sergeant Jim
TV & Streaming

Sydney’ Season 3 Premiere? Boss Explains Resignation (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the NCIS: Sydney Season 3 premiere “Gut Instinct.”]

NCIS: Sydney is making us wait a bit longer to find out who that mystery woman was waiting for Blue (Mavournee Hazel) at the end of the Season 2 finale. In fact, the Season 3 premiere introduces a new mystery about the forensic scientist.

When the new season begins, Blue has resigned, having sent in a video. Doc (William McInnes) doesn’t buy that’s all there is to it. Meanwhile, JD (Todd Lasance) has signed up for a dating site, giving DeShawn (Sean Sagar) and Evie (Tuuli Narkle) plenty to mock him for (especially with those photos), and making things a bit awkward with Mackey (Olivia Swann).

Below, showrunner Morgan O’Neill breaks down the premiere and teases what’s ahead for Blue, Mackey and JD, and more.

How long is it going to take before Mackey realizes that the therapist in the psych eval was right and she can’t just ignore what happened?

Morgan O’Neill: You’ve hit on the overarching theme of the third season of NCIS: Sydney, and the reason I think it’s such a cool framing device for our entire season is that we all have to deal with that at some point, right? I mean, it’s a really human revelation that you have to deal with your past or your past is going to deal with you. And Mackey being stubborn, it’s going to take her longer than it takes most people. But one of the things that she has in her corner is her team, and in particular JD, because JD is that kind of sounding board for her. And you’ll see at the end of the first episode, they have a moment where they kind of acknowledge each other’s failings and strengths all at once. And so I feel like with the benefit of the team and a little bit of time, Mackey will eventually come to realize that you can’t outrun your past, but it’s going to take a few bumps along the way. That’s just the nature of Mackey. That’s how she rolls.

How is she going to deal with that?

She refuses to deal with it in an obvious way, and then she has to deal with the ramifications of not dealing with it. And so her past comes to her and in a really confronting way. Like a lot of us, she’s not going to deal with the problem until she has no option but to deal with the problem. And that’s when the problem has come to her and is sitting right on her doorstep. So, without spoiling what happens, suffice it to say that it becomes a pretty big deal for Mackey, and in not dealing with it, she drags the whole team into it.

There’s this mystery of what happened to Blue. What can you say about what’s going on with her and why she sent that resignation video?

Well, as we know, the end of the second season of NCIS: Sydney ends with Blue coming home after Darwin,  and there is a strange lady sitting in her living room, and from the expression on Blue’s face, it’s pretty clear that she’s an unwelcome visitor. And then we open in Season 3, Blue’s no longer there, and we work out that she’s resigned and everyone’s a little bent out of shape by it because she’s such a beloved member of the team and they misconstrue the arrival of Trigger [Claude Jabbour] is somehow the replacement for Blue, which clearly he is not, but it feels especially to Doc that something’s hinky, that this is not the way Blue would’ve departed if she had departed of her own volition. And so he refuses to accept that she has simply decided to move on and send in a video resignation. And he’s probably, I dare say, right to think that that doesn’t all add up. And the team is doing their best, obviously, to be professional and to be grownups and to sort of put a happy face on the whole thing — she may have moved on to something that she’s more excited by — but I think deep down, all of them know that something is not as it should be. And when we get to Episode 2, we’ll realize why.

JD signed up for a dating site. The humor in that has already started. Are we going to see him going on dates, hear about them, and see him decide it’s not for him? How much comedy are you getting out of that?

A lot is the short answer. JD is such a beautiful character in my view. There’s a level of self-deprecation that makes him so appealing to me, I think, and to a larger audience. He has that ability to find humor in his own circumstances, which I find a very appealing quality. But what it also does in Australia is it puts an enormous target on your back because if you’re willing to acknowledge that life is strange, then the rest of the team is going to come down to you like a ton of bricks and they do.

The reality is, for JD, he’s found himself in a situation where he’s kind of been in denial for the first two seasons of the show about his emotional situation. Like a lot of people going through those really tricky life-altering events, he’s hoped against hope that somehow it gets itself back together again or the ship is set back on course or whatever, but it’s not. He’s living in his friend’s garage, and it’s been two years, and he’s got to get his s**t together. So I think the events of Darwin have probably shaken him out of that stasis, and he’s decided that whatever deeply buried, repressed feelings he may have for his friend and colleague, Michelle Mackey, he’s not going to succumb to them, and he’s going to do the exact opposite. He’s going to fill that void with whatever he can. And as it is in the 21st century, that’s kind of online dating. So he jumps in boots and all, but he’s really, let’s be honest, ill-equipped to be playing in that pond as his dating profile photographs will tell us.

Daniel Asher Smith/Paramount+

It’s a stopgap measure at best, and it obviously provides a huge amount of comedy for our team. But what it’s really telling me as an audience, I suppose, is here is the guy desperately trying to be professional. He’s trying to keep things tidy in the workplace because Darwin has probably brought out a whole bunch of emotions that he feels are unhelpful in a team environment. And so I guess he’s overreacting, and his overreaction is in the form of going on a dating site. And having been on dating sites myself, it’s the wild west out there, I can tell you.

How does Mackey feel about that? Because we already get the bit of awkwardness about it in the premiere, and it feels like they both know how the other one might feel, and it’s just like, let’s just not acknowledge it.

Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head. You’ve got to remember, these are two charismatic, clever, empathetic, courageous, attractive, and single people working shoulder to shoulder for 70 hours a week. That’s a combustible situation, but they’re also super professional, and they’re the leaders of this team; they’re kind of notionally mom and dad for the rest of the squad, and acknowledging that they may have feelings for one another would be totally counterproductive to the team environment. So, they try and be as professional as they can, but they’re humans. And so it’s an imperfect way of wallpapering over what might be going on underneath.

NCIS: Sydney, Tuesdays, 10/9c, CBS

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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LA Film Production Declines, but New Incentives Show Positive Signs
TV & Streaming

LA Film Production Declines, but New Incentives Show Positive Signs

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

In June, California officially passed its new tax incentives to stop runaway production from the state and from Los Angeles specifically, and today, FilmLA released its first report of the quarter in LA since those incentives were passed.

The bad news is, shoot days in LA were still down in Q3 compared to where they were in 2024, a decline of 13.2 percent compared to July through September this same time last year. The good news is, FilmLA doesn’t seem phased at the dip over the summer just yet, and in fact the organization believes the effects of the passage of AB 1138 are already showing things heading in the right direction.

Seymour Hersh in Cover-Up

“We know that it will take a little while for new incentive-backed projects to get underway and be reflected in our data, so we were not surprised to see on-location production continue to slip this summer despite the state’s increased investment,” FilmLA Vice President Philip Sokoloski said in a statement. “Fortunately, we’ve already begun to see early signs of these incentives having their desired effect; we’re excited to be taking calls from productions looking to line up their locations and pull permits.”

In August, the California Film Commission announced that it had approved 22 TV projects to receive its first round of tax credits since Governor Gavin Newsom signed into law the expansion of the program up to $750 million of funds. The CFC said it had seen a 400 percent increase in shows applying for the credit, and that the 22 shows approved would bring in $1.1 billion in spending across California. Some of the shows approved include a new show from Larry David, another from “This Is Us” creator Dan Fogelman, and of course Season 2 of Seth Rogen’s “The Studio,” naturally.

In terms of why FilmLA’s numbers haven’t picked up to match that surge of interest in the program, shows have up to 180 days to begin production after qualifying for the tax credit, so a good chunk of these shows and films approved still haven’t gone into production, or at least not during the July-September quarter.

And the real culprit of decline for FilmLA was commercial production, which gets no tax incentives as part of the film and TV program. Shoot days for commercials were down 17.9 percent in the quarter compared to last year and even down slightly from last quarter. TV production was still down year-over-year, 20.7 percent to be exact. But that dip is after Q2 was way up from 2024 in shoot days, and of the total shoot days in Q3, only 8.8 percent of those were actually tax incentivized, so it stands to reason that there’s much more to come in the near future.

Some of the shows that shot in LA this past quarter, and some of which also qualified for the prior round of credits, include “Dancing with the Stars” (ABC), “The Price is Right,” “The Valley” (Bravo), “Dinner Time Live with David Chang” (Netflix), “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” (Hulu), “9-1-1” S9 (Fox), “Criminal Minds” S19 (CBS), “High Potential” S2 (ABC), “Bel-Air” S4 (Peacock), “Golf” S1 (Netflix), and “Shrinking” S3 (Apple TV).

Feature film production this past quarter was even up compared to last year, but just nominally at 9.7 percent. Roughly 22 percent of those shoot days were already incentivized, and many of them were indie projects. Some of the ones that FilmLA reported shot in Los Angeles this past quarter were Ben Affleck’s “Animals” and Chris Rock’s film “Misty Green” for A24.

“LA’s creative industry is too important to let go without a fight,” Sokoloski added. “As part of our ongoing focus on streamlining and enhancing the on-location filmmaking process, we are convening industry listening sessions and using what we learn to improve our service delivery and recommend actionable process and policy improvements to our valued government partners.”

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Danielle Fishel Sets 'Boy Meets World' Reunion at 'Dancing With the Stars'
TV & Streaming

Danielle Fishel Sets ‘Boy Meets World’ Reunion at ‘Dancing With the Stars’

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

The “Boy Meets World” cast is got back together to support Topanga.

During Tuesday’s dedication night on “Dancing With the Stars,” Danielle Fishel danced to the theme song from the hit sitcom in a number honoring William Daniels, who played Mr. George Feeny.

Fishel danced a jive with her partner, Pasha Pashkov. Daniels, 98, join the duo in the routine. She received the score of a 29 of 40, receiving her first 8 of the season.

Many members from the cast were also in the audience, including Will Friedle (Eric Matthews), Betsy Randle (Amy Matthews), William Russ (Alan Matthews), Trina McGee (Angela Moore), Bonnie Bartlett (Lila Bolander and Williams’ wife), and Alex Désert (Eli Williams).

“The fabulous group of people who will be joining me at DWTS tomorrow for Dedication night! I feel such an overwhelming responsibility to give a full out, joyous, celebratory dance to the man who is responsible for THOUSANDS of people becoming teachers and who has helped raise multiple generations,” Fishel captioned her Instagram announcing the cast set to attend. “This dance is a dedication from me to Bill but I am representing ALL OF YOU who loved and appreciated him and his career for so many decades. Unfortunately, @rider_strong is working out of town but he will be missed.”

She previously opened up about the routine.

“Saying it out loud feels crazy. But yes, we get to dance to the ‘Boy Meets World’ theme song, the one you all know and love,” she previously shared on her “Danielle With the Stars” podcast. “I’m so excited. It’s really a dedication to Bill and the role he has played in my life and the role ‘Boy Meets World’ has played in my life. I have really felt like ‘Dancing with the Stars’ has been a second act for me in my career and as a performer.”

She mentioned how much of an inspiration Daniels has been in her life and to many members of the TV family. She added, “To be able to say thank you to him and give him this kind of a platform for him to receive the love that he deserves is going to be very memorable. So I’m very, very excited about that. I can’t wait.”

“Boy Meets World” aired from 1993 to 2000. The cast later reunited for a spinoff, “Girl Meets World,” which aired for three seasons on Disney Channel from 2014 to 2017.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Apple SVP On Why They Dropped The "Plus" From Apple TV
TV & Streaming

Apple SVP On Why They Dropped The “Plus” From Apple TV

by jummy84 October 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Eddy Cue, Senior Vice President of Services at Apple, is giving insight into the rebrand of Apple TV+ into simply Apple TV.

Apple quietly rebranded its streaming service into Apple TV and dropped the plus sign, but in the process created some confusion.

Apple TV is also the name of their streaming media player hardware, and the app name within the device. The plus helped distinguish the streaming service from the other two, but in a recent interview, Cue explained why they decided to rename it.

“We put the plus in there because we’ve used it in our other services like iCloud+ and [Apple] News+, but we do that when we have a free service and then there’s a paid version,” Cue said on The Town podcast.

He continued, “We stayed consistent because of it, but we all called it Apple TV, and we said, given where we are today, it’s a great time to do it, so let’s just do it.”

Although Cue makes a good point about the plus being a paid version of services that have a free tier, that has not always been the case. Take, for example, Apple Fitness+, the workout service, which has no free tier. Similarly, Apple Music, a paid service, doesn’t offer a free tier, and its name doesn’t include a plus, similar to Apple Arcade.

Cue also clarified the confusion some users were now debating about Apple TV being both the streaming service and the streaming device.

“Our hardware is called Apple TV 4K for your TV,” he said. “I think that’s fine, and the app is called Apple TV. It’s been called Apple TV on our third-party products as well, so I don’t think that’ll be a problem at all.”

The Apple TV streaming service launched in 2019 with eight original series, including The Morning Show, For All Mankind, See, Servant, and Dickinson.

October 15, 2025 0 comments
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Jimmy Kimmel Live
TV & Streaming

Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert Give Trump Credit for Gaza Deal

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert gave their reactions to the Gaza peace deal on Monday night. Both late night hosts conceded that President Donald Trump successfully helped broker a breakthrough ceasefire that resulted in Hamas releasing the remaining Israeli hostages, while still finding plenty of other things to criticize the president about.

“What a day for Donald Trump,” Kimmel said on Jimmy Kimmel Live! “You know what? He finally did something positive today and I want to give him credit for it — because I know he’s not the type to take credit for himself … While we’re only in the first phase of what will undoubtedly be a long and tricky process, but the fact is the bombing has stopped, the hostages have been released, and Trump deserves some of the praise for that. So I know it sounds crazy to say, but good work on that one, President Trump. Now maybe you can not invade Portland. Just an idea.

“Trump’s been lobbying hard to try to win the Nobel Prize for peace,” he added. “Now Trump’s focused on winning the prize next year, which is fine. Let him keep trying to make peace. I’m fine with coming up with prizes and trophies to motivate. Give them the ‘Nobel Re-Open the Government and Leave Healthcare Alone’ prize.”

Colbert, who was off last week, opened with a breathless rundown of all the news he missed: “The government shutdown is headed into its third week; Trump fired more than 4,000 federal workers; the DOJ charged New York Attorney General Leticia James with fraud after Trump’s pressure campaign; Trump sent troops to Chicago and Portland and is threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act; Trump announced a whopping 100 percent new tariff on China, which caused the stock market to have its worst day in six months — and Taylor Swift dropped her new album, The Life of the Showgirl, to merely mixed reviews,” Colbert said on CBS’ The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. “Well, those reviewers are just jealous of her talent and of Travis Kelce’s majestic redwood.”

Then Colbert got to the peace deal, and he had quite a lot to say about it.

“There is some good news out there today: Thanks to Trump’s newly brokered ceasefire in Gaza, all living Israeli hostages and almost 2,000 Palestinian prisoners have been released,” Colbert said to audience cheers. “It’s important. Credit where credit is due — Donald Trump did something good.”

Colbert paused for a quick beat. The audience remained silent.

“Are we still canceled?” Colbert asked, looking offstage. “You sure? I tried.

“It’s kind of surprising to see him do something good,” Colbert marveled. “It reminds me of in Empire Strikes Back when Darth Vader revealed this shocking secret.”

There was then a quick cut to the famous climax of the Star Wars film, only instead of Vader intoning, “I am your father,” he said, “I am an organ donor.”

“Despite the deal on Friday, in a truly foreseeable turn of events, Trump did not receive the Nobel Peace Prize,” Colbert continued. “How dare you, Nobel Committee? The man is a paragon of peace. He walks in the footsteps of Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King … After losing his campaign for the thing you don’t campaign for, Trump said he didn’t do the peace deal for the Nobel. And the White House communications director, Steven Chung, agreed, saying, ‘President Trump will continue making peace deals, ending wars, and saving lives. He has the heart of a humanitarian.’ We remove that heart from one of the detainees in our ICE facilities. He keeps it in the Oval Office next to the Diet Coke button in a little bowl.”

Colbert then said, “On his flight over to Israel, Trump was asked by Fox News whether the ceasefire he brokered might help him in the afterlife,” before playing a clip of Trump responding, “‘I don’t think there’s anything [that’s] going to get me into heaven.’ I agree with Donald Trump. While Trump tries to bring peace to the Middle East, he’s trying just as hard to bring war to the Midwest. And personally I’m horrified to see how he’s stomping on my old stomping grounds of Chicago, Illinois, where I lived for over a decade. ICE has been terrorizing communities in the Windy City, going door to door in front of elementary schools, arresting immigrants, legal or otherwise, arresting U.S. citizens without any due process and teargassing journalists who are merely reporting on what they’re doing.”

Here are last night’s monologues from ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! and CBS’ The Late Show With Stephen Colbert, below:

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Battlefield 6 maps: Full list of maps in the game
TV & Streaming

Battlefield 6 maps: Full list of maps in the game

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Here’s a full list of the maps in Battlefield 6, as well as all the DLC ones being added throughout the game’s first season of post-launch content.

How many maps are in Battlefield 6?

At launch, there are nine maps in Battlefield 6, but that doesn’t tell the whole story.

Depending on your chosen mode, you might fight in a smaller section of one map, or across the entire thing, and the maps themselves will change throughout a battle.

Of course, more maps will follow in future (more on that in a moment). For now, though, read on for the full list!

All Battlefield 6 maps so far

Here’s the full list, including the global location of each.

Empire State

Set in New York, the tight streets of Brooklyn make this map infantry-only but with plenty of verticality across rooftops and buildings.

Manhattan Bridge

Another map in New York, this one allows vehicles like tanks, and even helicopters for air support.

New Sobek City

The first of two maps in Egypt, this one on the outskirts of Cairo packs everything you could want from a Battlefield map, with sniper spots, helicopters, tanks, and plenty of opportunities for heroism.

Siege of Cairo

With more densely packed city streets and a focus on infantry and tanks, Siege of Cairo is an early favourite for players looking to exercise the tactical part of their brains.

Iberian Offensive

The first of two maps in Gibraltar, which plays a big part in the campaign, Iberian Offensive sees infantry and tanks take centre stage.

Saints Quarter

Infantry-only and full of sniper spots and tight city streets, Saints Quarter is also set in Gibraltar and is ideal for racking up close-quarters kills.

Liberation Peak

This mountainous map has more open sight lines, but with plenty of hiding spots for cunning ambushes.

Mirak Valley

Set in Tajikistan, Mirak Valley is the largest map in the game so far and gives you access to fighter jets, helicopters, tanks, and more.

Operation Firestorm

This classic from Battlefield 3 has never looked better, and lets you use every vehicle type in the game to capture key points of the refinery.

All confirmed Battlefield 6 DLC maps to come

Battlefield 6. EA

Battlefield 6’s first season of post-launch content is split into three chunks, with the first arriving a matter of weeks after launch.

Dubbed Rogue Ops, it’ll introduce the Blackwell Fields map set in the California badlands.

California Resistance, the second update, will introduce Eastwood, a suburban map with a huge golf course.

Winter Offensive, which arrives in December, won’t add a new map but will bring an icy revamp to Empire State.

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.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Bobby Bones in May 2025; Hilaria Baldwin in September 2025.
TV & Streaming

Bobby Bones on Hilaria Baldwin’s ‘Dancing With the Stars’ Elimination and ‘Bullying’ Claims

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Bobby Bones has a hot take on Hilaria Baldwin‘s surprise Dancing With the Stars elimination.

“I was reading about Hilaria Baldwin saying she was bullied off of Dancing With the Stars,” Bones began a Monday, October 13, TikTok video. “As somebody who was treated like crap by the hardcore fans of the show, yeah, bullying happens. But you don’t get bullied off the show. You get kicked off the show because nobody voted for you, or you didn’t get scores.”

Noting that Baldwin “was a great dancer” and “came in with a ton of dance experience,” Bones claimed that she was eliminated “because people didn’t like you.”

He explained, “I got, again, bullied like crazy, but people liked me, so I won the show. So, that’s bull crap. Although that’s the meanest fan base of anything ever — Dancing With the Stars, the hardcore fans. People that vote and love the show and have a good time, you guys are cool. But the hardcores? Bad people.”

Despite scoring near the top or in the middle of the leaderboard all season, Baldwin and her pro partner, Gleb Savchenko, were sent home during the October 7 Disney Night episode. In an interview with Us Weekly published on Monday, Baldwin blamed her early exit on social media “mean girls” who voted “for all the other couples except us.”

@mrbobbybonesDancing …..♬ original sound – Mrbobbybones

“Very coordinated, very strategic bullying,” she also said during a Friday, October 10, Instagram Live, per the outlet. “And as I feel the darkness that undoubtedly brings to me, I always want to remember that my life belongs to the whole community and I want to leave a lasting mark of courage to speak up against what is simply wrong.”

Baldwin also told Us Weekly that she has nothing but “wonderful things” to say about dancing on the ABC competition series. “There’s more good people than bad people. And I just want one day that people can just see me and stop, like, the crazy stuff,” she added.

Bones is no stranger to facing DWTS controversy. Fan votes propelled the radio personality and his pro partner, Sharna Burgess, to win Season 27 in 2018, despite receiving lower scores than the other finalists throughout the competition. Changes to the voting system were made after his win, including the introduction of the Judges’ Save, which was removed ahead of Season 32 in 2023.

Last month, Bones admitted that he “cheated” to win DWTS, revealing on Jason Tartick‘s Trading Secrets podcast he would “illegally” practice his dances in another studio after his allocated “four hours a day” with Burgess were up.

“People like traditional dancers. You ain’t gonna like me because I have no idea what I’m doing. I was very transparent about that on the show. Very vulnerable, like, ‘Guys, I’m clueless,’” Bones said. “And the fact that I was winning made it difficult on people who had always watched the show.”

Disney/Eric McCandless

After his win, Bones said he was told by producers that he had the “highest separation ever in the history of that show of votes.” He shared, “I think the quote from one of the executives was, ‘I could have peed on stage in my final dance and won.’ But they never told me that.”

Dancing With the Stars, Season 34, Tuesdays, 8/7c, ABC and Disney+ (Streaming Next Day on Hulu)

For a more extended celebration of two decades of Dancing With the Stars, from exclusive interviews to retrospectives and must-see photos, pick up a copy of TV Guide Magazine’s Dancing With the Stars 20th Anniversary special issue, available for purchase online at DWTS.TVGM2025.com and on newsstands now.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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AI Is the Sickest Thing About Gross-Out Comedy
TV & Streaming

AI Is the Sickest Thing About Gross-Out Comedy

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

The funniest thing about Todd Rohal’s “Fuck My Son!” — alas, one of the only funny things about this impressively sick but tiresomely self-amused celebration of bad taste — is that the most controversial aspect of the movie isn’t its title, or its demented story about a gun-packing mother who forces a random woman to have sex with her monstrous son (imagine if the Sarlaac from “Star Wars” had a baby with the alien from “Mac and Me,” nipples and boils everywhere, diaper oozing wet shit, just a gaping hole full of hotdogs where his dick should be), or even how brutally it treats the sex slave’s elementary school-age daughter, Belinda, who will be cooked in an oven if her mom doesn’t comply with their captor’s demands).

'The Mastermind'

No, the most controversial aspect of “Fuck My Son!” is that it uses some very crude and obvious AI for what amounts to roughly 90 seconds of screen time. A number of festival viewers were outraged. I guess some things are just too obscene for audiences to stomach.

Like everything else in Rohal’s film, the AI-afflicted scenes are designed to triple-underline their own grotesqueness. A prologue modeled after an AMC theater pre-show (“No jacking off in the theater,” “Do not pee or crap in your seat,” “Our restrooms are now closed”) is filled out with inhuman crowds, while the characters from Bernice’s favorite show — a “Veggietales”-esque abomination called “The Meatie Mates” — pop up throughout the movie in increasingly artificial form, their every appearance better reflecting the ghoulish slop that today’s children eagerly consume on YouTube. 

As in Radu Jude’s recent “Dracula,” the technology isn’t used as a shortcut (if anything, incorporating AI made Rohal’s work considerably more difficult), but rather as a commentary on the soullessness of modern “art.” Reactive to a world in which people have become more offended by form than content, “Fuck My Son!” exists to explore the efficacy of shock value at a time when image-making itself has become so repulsive and society has ingested its own memetic sickliness as a sign of the future. 

Rohal wants to push back against the numbing dystopia of Project 2025, so he’s cooked up a collective experience — one that will tour across the country, advertising its lack of streaming availability as its greatest hook — designed to startle us back to our senses and restore the sheer joy of transgression. Little other joy is on offer (either within this movie, or outside of it), but “Fuck My Son!” feels like it was only made to indulge in the fact that it still could be.

So while I may not have particularly enjoyed the experience of watching it, I have no choice but to admit that it does, indeed, exist. Critics are raving “This is a real thing that people made.” Put it on the poster. 

Of course, this material didn’t originate with Rohal; an idea as pure and profound as “Fuck My Son!” has to come from somewhere. Usually it’s from a divine vision or the liquid meth they sell at the front of America’s finest gas stations. In this case, it came from a graphic novel: Johnny Ryan’s “Fuck My Son: A Tale of Terror, Issue One,” which Rohal has faithfully adapted like a sacred text. And that’s just as well, because the movie has no interest in making such intellectual property more palatable to a wider audience.

Either you want to see a movie called “Fuck My Son!” or you don’t (“It’s just garbage,” the director has said. “It’s made by trashmen for trashmen”), and Rohal’s film is squarely targeted at the people who might conceivably pay for a ticket; the aforementioned pre-show offers viewers the choice of “Perv-o-Vision” glasses that make all of the characters naked, or a “Nude Blok” edition for those who pray to “fill their lives with blissful ignorance and intolerance” (the film’s spirit all but requires comparisons to John Waters, even if its execution cleaves a lot closer to early James Gunn). 

The world of “Fuck My Son!” is a small and seedy place where every mote of innocence only exists as an invitation for perversion, or worse. We first meet Sandi (Tipper Newton, recalling Sarah Silverman in her ability to conflate innocence with repulsion) as she takes little Bernice (Kynzie Colmery) dress shopping, where — of course — a peeper is spying on all of the dressing rooms. Shot like an ’80s Z-picture but always self-indulgent enough to make clear that it’s in on the joke, the movie soon introduces its leading ladies to an overbearing mother (a Chris Farley-esque Robert Longstreet, growling in drag) who’s fallen and can’t get up. 

But it’s a trap! The mother lures Sandi and Bernice to her van, knocks them out, and takes them to the remote farmhouse where she lives with her mutant son Fabian (Steve Little). There’s so much sex in the world, and she can’t stand the thought that her sweet child will never get to have any of it. The mother wheels Fabian in, places Bernice nearby with a front-row view, and — wait for it — demands that Sandi fuck her son. Bareback. “Person to Person” star George Sample III eventually shows up to round out the cast, but that’s really about all there is to it. As positioned to Sandi, the terms couldn’t be simpler: “The sooner you fuck my son, the sooner I’ll let your daughter out of the oven.” What’s a mother to do? 

Rohal pays lip-service to the idea that parents will do anything for their children, but this movie is much less interested in developing its themes than it is in watching Sandi fish around Fabian’s innards for his Lovecraftian penis (spoiler alert: she finds it, and the massive appendage becomes a veritable character in its own right). Is it gross? Very.

But the grossness doesn’t scale at a particularly engaging rate, and while Rohal’s agenda required a certain amount of cheekiness to validate the fun of its own shock value, it’s hard to overlook the reality that “Fuck My Son!” is far less disturbing than the movie promised by its title. For all of its eldritch horrors (Fabian’s penis eventually penetrates almost everything you can imagine, with child rape being the most obvious red line that Rohal won’t cross), this heightened story is too “fun” to be even half as fucked up as the things we read in the headlines every day, and not funny enough for its increasingly whacked out “WTF”-ness to be enjoyable on its own terms. Things get wild because they can, and then slaphappy because they can’t be anything else.

When a title card pops up that reads: “The Ending: Part I,” the joke is that a movie with so little substance would require something as pompous as a multi-tiered epilogue. 

What meaning there is behind “Fuck My Son!” is easy enough to understand: Enjoy this kind of garbage while you can, because it won’t be long before late night TV hosts are locked in jail, Donald Trump starts talking about Eddington as if it were a real town he saw on Fox News, and everyone who saw “One Battle After Another” is labeled as a card-carrying member of Antifa (the “A” in “AMC A-List” stands for “Anarchy”). Appreciate when slop could still be a display of defiance instead, and not just the visual language of cultural defeat. See “Fuck My Son!” not because it’s good, but rather because it refuses to pretend that it isn’t bad. If only that argument were enough to convince me that it shouldn’t have been better.

Grade: C-

“Fuck My Son!” opens at the IFC Center in New York City on Thursday, October 16, before traveling to other theaters around the country. Its full touring schedule can be found here.

Want to stay up to date on IndieWire’s film reviews and critical thoughts? Subscribe here to our newly launched newsletter, In Review by David Ehrlich, in which our Chief Film Critic and Head Reviews Editor rounds up the best new reviews and streaming picks along with some exclusive musings — all only available to subscribers.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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