celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 78
Category:

TV & Streaming

Is Sherlock Holmes Alive on 'Watson'? Morris Chestnut and Rochelle Aytes Talk His Return (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Is Sherlock Holmes Alive on ‘Watson’? Morris Chestnut and Rochelle Aytes Talk His Return (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for the Watson Season 2 premiere “A Son in the Oven.”]

“What the hell?!” That’s what’s going through the head of Morris Chestnut‘s titular doctor when he finds his friend, the sleuth Sherlock Holmes (Robert Carlyle), who’s supposed to be dead, raiding his fridge at the end of the Watson Season 2 premiere.

“His first thought is, does he believe what he’s seeing?” Chestnut continues in the video interview above with him and Rochelle Aytes (Mary) when they stopped by TV Insider’s office ahead of the premiere. “That person is supposed to be deceased. So, he just can’t believe not only is that person not deceased, but he’s raiding his refrigerator.”

We don’t get any answers — is Sherlock really alive, or is Watson seeing things? — but whatever’s going on, “Mary’s not married to him anymore, so that’s Laila’s [Tika Sumpter] problem, for now,” quips Aytes.

Chestnut says he’s still figuring out Watson and Sherlock’s dynamic. “There’s still a lot of unresolved issues that we have to talk about, including I kind of really want to confront him about this disappearing on me like he did, if he is in fact alive,” he explains.

Colin Bentley/CBS

Meanwhile, it’s a heavy premiere for Mary, whose mother, Watson’s patient with a worrying case of dementia, needs a liver transplant. Mary’s not a match, but, surprise: Elizabeth (Juanita Jennings) had a son before her whom she gave up for adoption, and she’s been visiting Miles (Khary Payton) in his bakery every day. She appeals to him, and he agrees to donate.

“It was definitely way more emotional and so heavy, so exhausting, but also very rewarding and challenging to get to play another dimension of Mary, getting to see her in a more vulnerable light,” says Aytes.

As for that shocking reveal of Mary having a brother, “I don’t even think she could really process it in the moment,” Aytes tells us before praising the casting of Payton. “Amazing actor. There were similarities between the two of us. I was looking at his face and I was like, ‘Wow, they did a great job.’ I think Mary is emotional because she has a brother that she didn’t know existed, and I’m sure there is a part of her that’s grateful to Watson for finding him. And I hope that they bring him back to show more that they’ve stayed in connection in a relationship with each other.”

While this is something that her mom hid from her, Aytes thinks that while Mary “was hurt … there’s some grace, I think, Mary gave her for being young and not ready. But it was shocking that she never told her about this person.” After all, as we see at the beginning of the episode, Mary and her mother have a great relationship. Aytes is hoping both Payton and Jennings return, plus she wants to know “who and where [her] father is. Is he alive? Is he dead? Are we estranged?”

It’s while Watson’s sitting with Mary at her mother’s hospital bedside that we learn that she was seeing someone, but the other woman ghosted her after her mom got sick. Aytes isn’t sure what Mary’s looking for in a partner right now.

“She was married to Watson for a long time. Maybe she’s not ready for something very serious, and it’s just kind of enjoying life. But I have hopes that Mary and Watson will get back together at some point,” she admits before teasing, “We have little hints of our relationship throughout the season. We have some flashbacks, which is always fun.”

Watson has (seemingly) moved on, with Laila, but if you ask Aytes, “he’s not serious” about her. Chestnut somewhat disagrees.

“Watson definitely takes Laila seriously because there is a child that could be involved, and we’ll see what happens with that later on in the season,” he explains. “But he does feel like he still has some unresolved feelings, emotions, situations, circumstances with Mary, so he’s conflicted in that regard and he has to figure out how he’s going to deal with it.”

Watch the full video interview with Morris Chestnut and Rochelle Aytes above as they break down the Season 2 premiere, discuss Watson and Mary’s relationship — and Watson’s with Laila — Sherlock’s return, Mary’s family drama, and much more, including about that secret place of Watson’s and Ingrid (Eve Harlow) possibly returning to the team of fellows.

Watson, Mondays, 10/9c, CBS

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Film Industry Needs This Cinderella Story
TV & Streaming

The Film Industry Needs This Cinderella Story

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

When the industry is a hot mess, fairy-tale moments are just that: outliers. However, as traditional paths into the film industry erode, this is the Cinderella story we all need. 

Dave Kalema is a first-generation Ugandan-American who worked his ass off as he aspired to something he didn’t fully understand and wasn’t sure he could do, but kept plugging forward until it started to make a kind of sense. It’s also the story of the fairy godmother Industry Standard, an annual competition that snapped his ambitions into focus and gave him a career-launching, nine-month residency in documentary post production.

I love stories like Kalema’s, but he doesn’t really need me to tell it; he’s also a touring performer with The Moth who has won multiple grand slams. You can read his extraordinary storytelling in “Dreamscape,” which IndieWire is proud to publish for the first time.

Dave Kalema

Still, the turning point is striking: When he got the nod from Industry Standard, he was 31 years old and 24 hours from losing his apartment. Yet Kalema insists that he would have carved his way into the industry even if he’d never heard of the program at all.

“If not for Industry Standard, I would’ve found a way to AE (assistant editor), whatever that scale of the project would’ve been,” Kalema said. “But it would’ve taken me much longer to get to a place like Library Films or to be in the rooms that I’ve been in the last year had it not been for Industry Standard.”  

A Program That Lowers the Ladder

Industry Standard isn’t a training program or an internship. It’s for people who already have post-production skills but need someone, as founder Jennifer Sofio Hall puts it, to “lower the ladder.”

Its roots go back to when Hall was managing director at MakeMake Entertainment. Facing pressure from client surveys about the company’s diversity profile, she posed a simple question to founder Angus Wall: “Can we just cut to the top of this problem and start creating some jobs for people?”

Netflix, which had a post-production deal with MakeMake, supported the idea and covered costs that allowed a resident to rotate across the company’s verticals. Hall later moved to the UK in 2022 and left MakeMake, but Netflix asked her to continue the program. 

 Industry Standard co-founders Bedonna Smith and Jennifer Sofio Hall

Residents also receive mentorship around their roles as well as the soft skills essential for industry success. Hall prioritizes candidates who are already active in the documentary community, whether by volunteering at festivals or supporting nonprofit film groups.

By 2024, Industry Standard opened its first formal application process: 350 applicants competed for five slots (three assistant editors, a post producer, and an archival producer). For the 2025 cycle, more than 450 people applied; Hall is currently reviewing 52 finalists for seven slots across editorial, post, motion design, archival research and producing, color, timing, and sound. She is also in talks with Avid and Getty to expand opportunities.

“This is not being trained on the job,” she said. “It’s not something you can dip in and out of over the course of a week. You’re in this constant state of learning and absorbing. You have to kind of have your faculties on all the time and that takes a tremendous amount of mental and emotional energy.”

Persistence Behind the Break

That’s Kalema. He’s been shooting and editing since 2018, when he founded Coin Flyp Media to direct and edit digital shorts about the personal challenges of pro athletes, but he’s invisible on IMDb. He was also an NCAA athlete at Amherst College, captain of a Division III National Championship team, and graduated cum laude.

What I really love isn’t Kalema’s backstory, or Industry Standard’s magic-wand moment of earning an assistant editor residency at Chris Smith’s Library Films that led to a full-time job. I’m also not going to argue that he’s an everyman because if you take even a moment to scan “Dreamscape,” it’s clear he’s not.

What really impresses me is all the other stuff that led to achieving his dream: a path that’s persistent, random, and doesn’t make a lot of sense. That’s what anyone can relate to, and certainly what the industry now has to offer. 

Nimble by Nature

He’s nimble. That’s hard to define, because it isn’t a singular activity. Nimbleness means adapting to whatever comes at you, being willing to work within uncertainty, and turning that into forward motion. It also means you can live with a whole squirming bucket of uncertainty; In entertainment, it might be the most valuable talent of all. 

“I think a lot of being nimble is putting yourself out there and meeting people, not when you need them, but to kind of follow through on your passions,” he said. “If you really like a film and you’re going to a film festival, tell people you really like their work or tell people that you’re really interested in the path that they took. I’ve always put myself in a position where I have to learn, where I’m forced to learn. I’ve never been scared of the experience that I don’t have.”

That’s the throughline that will let Kalema continue his journey, not the fairy godmother.

Weekly recommendations for your career mindset, curated by IndieWire Senior Editor Christian Zilko

New filmmakers who see a festival run as the ultimate goal often misunderstand some key parts of how the ecosystem works. This article attempts to clarify some key truths about film festivals — not in a negative way, but from a place of appreciating what works about them and creating realistic expectations

I won’t leave you in suspense over the cryptic headline: The biggest mistake indie filmmakers make is waiting too long to release their movies. If you go into a long festival run without any semblance of a distribution plan, your film might end up coming out two years after it premieres, when audiences and media have already moved on to fresher titles.

October is upon us, which means it’s a great time to talk about scary movies — AKA one of the last genres that gives filmmakers an opportunity to punch above their budget and turn a profit. Film industry researcher Stephen Follows uses his findings from a recent collaboration with Blumhouse to explain how the horror genre is evolving and what might be coming next.

Young professionals looking to break into Hollywood often think of “assistant” as the simple default choice for a first job in the industry. But assistants to different departments have wildly different job descriptions, and knowing what is expected of each one can help you specialize earlier and advance your career faster. This great article breaks down the role of a showrunner’s assistant. It’s a must-read for any students looking to pursue careers in TV writing.

Whether you’re looking to climb the ranks of the film and TV industry as an executive or are a creative who just wants a better understanding of how decisions are made, this list of business terms used in entertainment companies is a fantastic resource. Study it for half an hour and you’ll be able to hold your own in a conversation to the point that executives will assume you have an MBA.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kylie Jenner Makes Her Music Debut in 'Fourth Strike' With Terror Jr
TV & Streaming

Kylie Jenner Makes Her Music Debut in ‘Fourth Strike’ With Terror Jr

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Kylie Jenner has officially entered the music scene as the breathy vocalist featured on a new single by Terror Jr called “Fourth Strike.” The single is a continuation of Terror Jr’s song “Three Strikes,” which was featured in an ad campaign for the launch of Kylie Cosmetics lip glosses nearly a decade ago.

To celebrate that milestone, Jenner was featured in “Fourth Strike” and sings a small snippet at the end of the song. “One strike, two strike, let me get the mood right,” Jenner sings and raps in the song’s bridge — “Do it on purpose just to see how it ends.” She ends her verse by whispering her purported artist name, “King Kylie.”

The song is used in a new commercial for Kylie Cosmetics that leans into the teal-tinted visuals of “King Kylie” — the edgy alter ego Jenner launched back in 2014, the same year she began to conceptualize her beauty company. Over the weekend, Jenner announced that she’s re-launching some of her signature Kylie Cosmetics products from that timeframe under the “King Kylie” banner.

In the commercial, Jenner shows off her acting chops, playing a prisoner who has been just been released. Her mother, Kris Jenner, picks her up in a black convertible, and the pair drive off into the sunset.

“This King Kylie Collection is truly for you!!!” Jenner wrote in an Instagram post. “You’re the reason my biggest cosmetic dreams came true, and I wouldn’t be here 10 years later! without your support.”

Terror Jr consists of singer Lisa Vitale and David “Campa” Benjamin Singer-Vine (Felix Snow left the group in late 2017). The first song that the group released was “Three Strikes,” which they debuted in the Kylie Cosmetics lip gloss commercial. At the time, few people new who Terror Jr were, and their image encouraged that approach as there were no faces or names attached to the music.

Several fans assumed Jenner was the main vocalist, though Jenner shut down the rumors via Snapchat, stating that she was not involved in the music. The group revealed their identities after the release of their debut EP, “Bop City,” in late 2016.

Fans will soon be seeing more of Jenner’s acting when she appears in Charli xcx‘s upcoming A24 film “The Moment.” Directed by frequent Charli collaborator Aidan Zamiri, “The Moment” stars Jenner, alongside Alexander Skarsgard, Rachel Sennott, Shygirl and more.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
LA Rain: Evacuation Warnings In Palisades, Eaton Canyon, Hollywood
TV & Streaming

LA Rain: Evacuation Warnings In Palisades, Eaton Canyon, Hollywood

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

UPDATED with latest: Even before the first drop of rain falls, the impacts of the coming storm are already beginning to be felt across Los Angeles.

Among them:

  • Due to the potential for flooding, Pepperdine University will shift to remote classes tomorrow for students at the Malibu and Calabasas campuses. Regular operations are expected to resume Wednesday.
  • Topanga Canyon Boulevard will be closed beginning at 10 p.m. tonight and continuing until 5 a.m. Tuesday, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The closure will occur over a 3.6-mile stretch between Pacific Coast Highway and Grand View Drive. That stretch of road is a work zone, with nightly closures occurring beginning at midnight, but it will close two hours early tonight due to the wet weather. The stretch is bounded by high cliffs and subject to frequent slides, even un light rain.
  • Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that swiftwater rescue teams, mud and debris flow crews, as well as heavy-duty high-water vehicles are moving into Los Angeles, Ventura, Orange and Santa Barbara counties. The state is prepositioning over 200 personnel and dozens of pieces of equipment including fire engines, bulldozers, hand crews, helicopters and front loaders.

PREVIOUSLY at 4:18 p.m.: In a good news/bad news combo typical of life in Southern California, the first appreciable rain in more than six months will help provide some much-needed moisture before the fall fire season, but also potentially cause mudflows around the burn scars from last season’s massive fires.

With 1.5 inches of rain forecast to fall in Los Angeles later today — and 2-4 inches in the mountains and foothills — officials have issued evacuation warnings for debris flows near recent burn areas from 10 p.m. tonight to 6 a.m. Wednesday. Residents in the areas burned this year in the Palisades Fire, the Eaton Fire, the Hurst Fire in Sylmar and the Sunset Fire in the Hollywood Hills are advised to prepare to evacuate quickly if ordered.

See specifics on the storm in the graphic below.

The National Weather Service issued a wind advisory for much of L.A. and Ventura counties warning of “Southwest winds 15 to 30 mph with gusts up to 50 mph” that will be “strongest in the hills and peaks.” There was also a warning about potential thunderstorms or even possible tornadoes.

A just-issued alert from the NWS further warns, “Chances for Significant/Damaging Debris Flows in & below recent burn scars have increased, esp for the Eaton, Palisades & Bridge scars. If you live in/near a recent burn scar, follow guidance from law enforcement, limit travel to avoid flooding, debris flows & mud flows.”

See specifics on the arrival times for rain in the graphic below.

Los Angeles County Supervisors Chair Katheryn Barger issued a statement a little after 4 p.m. today. It indicated that “the storm’s intensity has increased,” per county officials, and that evacuation orders may be in the offing, at least for the Eaton Canyon/Altadena area which falls under Barger’s purview.

“County emergency officials are actively working to determine next steps and the timing of official orders. If issued, nearly 400 properties could fall under mandatory evacuation. Many of these are standing homes in high-risk burn areas,” she wrote.

“I know that asking residents to leave their homes is disruptive and difficult,” added Barger. “But I would rather see people temporarily relocated than anyone put in harm’s way. Please, if you are in an evacuation warning zone, prepare now and be ready to leave immediately once an order is issued.”

On the plus side, the rain should help the region avoid a repeat of this past January’s fires. Those blazes were primed by growth from a 2022 wet season that registered a total of 28.40 inches of rainfall in the Los Angeles region, followed by 25.19 inches during the year 2023. The seasonal average is about 14 inches. The key here is that in 2024 that growth was dried out as the region experienced moderate drought conditions, including a period of eight months devoid of any measurable rainfall running up to fire season.

We’ve more or less gone seven months since the Palisades and Eaton Fire burn areas received a deluge and saw mudflows that added to the damage caused by the fires. This coming precipitation, while dangerous itself, could prevent a repeat of the wet-dry fire cycle as the region rolls into fall and awaits the rains of winter.

City News Service contributed to this report.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Sky Nick Cave Novel Series ‘Bunny Munro’ With Matt Smith in LFF Focus
TV & Streaming

Sky Nick Cave Novel Series ‘Bunny Munro’ With Matt Smith in LFF Focus

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Sky’s six-episode adaptation of the Nick Cave novel The Death of Bunny Munro, starring Doctor Who and House of the Dragon star Matt Smith, was in the BFI London Film Festival (LFF) spotlight on Monday.

Director Isabella Eklöf (Kalak, Holiday, Industry seasons 2 and 3), BAFTA-winning writer Pete Jackson (Somewhere Boy) and producer Ed Macdonald from Clerkenwell Films (Baby Reindeer, The End of the F***ing World) discussed the show during a panel entitled “From Book to Screen: The Death of Bunny Munro,” programmed in collaboration with the Edinburgh TV Festival and hosted by its creative director Rowan Woods.

Rafael Mathé plays the nine-year-old son, Bunny Junior. “Following his wife Libby’s death by suicide, sex addicted, door-to-door beauty product salesman and self-professed lothario Bunny Munro finds himself saddled with a young son and only a loose concept of parenting,” a synopsis for the series reads. “Together with Bunny Junior he embarks on an epic and increasingly out-of-control road trip across southern England as the two struggle to contain their grief in very different ways.”

Monday’s panel covered the optioning of the novel, its adaptation, the choice of director, casting and the visual approach to the story and the creative choices to bring the father-and-son relationship to the screen. 

Eklöf was asked about the stylistic influences, sharing: “Ultimately, everything is instinct; everything is finding that angle where you are seeing the magic. But we did have some overarching principles.”

Some of them may be more obvious than others. “We talked about ‘70s cinema — [John] Cassavetes, [David] Lynch is an obvious reference,” she said. “There was a little bit of Natural Born Killers that you talked about for quite more specific reasons,” added Macdonald. “And then we talked about quite a load of different references. I remember Red Rocket came up. We talked about Apocalypse Now.” And he shared with a laugh that he may have even brought up Bad Santa.

Jackson told panel that he knew right away that adapting Cave’s novel would be a challenge. “My first thought was: ‘I’ve no idea how you do it.’ Great trepidation! I mean, there were floating vaginas on the first page. I love the book to bits.”

The writer continued: “I think what Nick does brilliantly and fearlessly is explore his darker impulses and his secret shames and his mad kind of desires. And in the creative team it was incumbent on us for the end result to be the same thing — to shock and to challenge and confront and also connect.”

Macdonald recalled that Cave has said his inspirations for the novel were a biblical text and the feminist SCUM (for: Society for Cutting Up Men) Manifesto.

How did the creative team avoid objectifying women the way Bunny does? Eklöf‘s answer was to objectify him instead. “Yeah, I really, very actively in my career went for the female gaze, because it’s a visual medium, so you cannot avoid to sexualize your characters,” she explained. “It’s intrinsic. Everyone’s gaze has sex in [it], but the way you make it equal is to objectify the men just as much.”

First published in 2009, Bunny Munro is Cave’s second novel after And the Ass Saw the Angel (1989). The singer is best known as the lead vocalist of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.

Bunny Munro will premiere on Sky on Nov. 20. Its first two episodes world premiere at LFF on Monday evening.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Mary Berry reveals secret to happy marriage with 93-year-old husband
TV & Streaming

Mary Berry reveals secret to happy marriage with 93-year-old husband

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

We’re at a riverside club near her Oxfordshire home for our photoshoot and interview and it’s nice to be greeted by a woman with perfect manners, who looks as pleased to see you as she would when lifting a perfectly cooked chicken out of the oven. In her 91st year [her 90th birthday was on 24 March], she’s here with Freddie, one of her two working cocker spaniels, who, despite already having had an hour-long walk in the countryside, looks up at her imploringly. I know how you feel, Freddie. We all want to have a bit of attention from Dame Mary.

I first met her 31 years ago when she was plain Mrs Berry and I attended an Aga cookery course at her home. Three decades on, she’s as beady as ever, inspecting what she’s about to wear and complimenting her assistant on her pink jumper. She’s filmed a new six-part series, Mary at 90: a Lifetime of Cooking, in which she looks back at her long career on television, as well as concocting modern twists to some of her own favourite recipes, with six famous faces, including Jamie Oliver, Gabby Logan and Tom Allen.

ITV footage from the 70s shows Mary demure, round-faced, with perfect RP, in a chintzy blouse. But behind those periwinkle eyes and that fluting voice lies ferocious drive. “Life is competitive. And whether you’re going for a job, or playing a sport, it’s good to do everything well,” she says now.

She is also a culinary time capsule, noting (and using) the advent of five spice, fennel, fresh ginger. She can pinpoint the arrival of tin foil. “I was working for Home and Freezer Digest, and I remember the editor coming in and saying, ‘Look what’s arrived from America!’ The first thing we said was, ‘Do we use the shiny side or the dull side? Does it matter?’”

Former The Great British Bake Off presenters Sue Perkins and Mel Giedroyc, current judge Paul Hollywood and former judge Mary Berry. BBC

Today, she has written more than 70 books that have sold over five million copies. Despite her drive, it was Delia Smith who pointed out, years ago, visiting Mary and her husband Paul Hunnings at their home, that she was underpaid. “Oh, Delia was absolutely brilliant. She came to stay with her husband Michael and we chatted about all sorts of things. I mean, you should never discuss money, sex or religion. But we did discuss money. She said, ‘You’re not being paid enough for your writing. I know an agent, Felicity Bryan, and I’ll ring her tonight.’ And the next day I got a postcard from Felicity saying, ‘Can we meet?’ And I’m still with her agency for my books.” [Bryan died in 2020.]

Looking back at the archive footage, it’s clear that TV chefs today don’t know how lucky they are. Mary recalls her first appearance in the mid-70s on Good Afternoon, ITV’s magazine show, in which she was to demonstrate the principles of a freezer. “I wrote a book for Marks & Spencer about how to freeze things well, because if you put something in the freezer which is grotty, it will come out grotty.

“There was no background help [for the TV appearance]. I had to bring in everything, every pot, pan, knife. All the food, vegetables, fish, mince, seasoning. I would be picked up in a taxi in the dark and arrive at Thames Television, where the tables were still set with newspapers from last night’s bulletin. They’d build a kitchen, and stick a clock on the wall, but the drawers didn’t open. There was no drain; water from the tap would empty into a bucket beneath my feet. If I turned the tap on too strongly, to wash a cabbage, say, and got carried away chatting to Judith [Chalmers, the Good Afternoon presenter], the bucket underneath would overflow and we would be paddling in water.”

After her initial invitation, Mary became a regular, standing alongside Chalmers, showing viewers how to cook. She could hardly have known it, but her first job for the Electricity Board in Bath, demonstrating how electric ovens can create the perfect sponge, was ideal training.

Watching herself back, Mary is helpless with laughter. “My voice! It was so high-pitched. But I had one aim. And that was to get people to cook and enjoy it as much as I did.” Recipes would be provided for viewers, but only ones who bothered to send in that historical artefact, a stamped addressed envelope. “Ask young people today what an SAE is, and they just look at you,” she marvels. As for brand Berry, was there a specially curated look? Zero attention. “There was no make-up. No wardrobe. You just arrived in your own clothes. And I would bring in daisies I’d picked from the garden.”

Mary Berry wearing a pink jumper holding a cake and a spoon in her hands.

Mary Berry. Nicky Johnston

When Mary made her debut on The Great British Bake Off in 2010, it cemented her name with a new generation. She landed the job after an audition, “But I said, ‘I do need someone with a second opinion, and [a rare moment of vulnerability] I’m really not very good at bread. It’s not my forte.’ So that’s how Paul Hollywood came. And gosh, he was very different from me. I don’t want tears. So, if something had collapsed in the middle, I’d say to a contestant, ‘Do you know what you could do with that? You could just scoop a little bit out, fill it with fruit and cream, and you’ve got a pudding.”

Later, when Bake Off moved to Channel 4 in 2017, she stayed with the corporation. “I feel very cherished by the BBC, and it was quite right I stayed with them,” she says. And so, Mary’s TV career continued, with series such as Classic Mary Berry and a plethora of Christmas specials.

Away from the screen, she likes to play croquet, read, walk her dogs and cook with her grandchildren. She is trim but doesn’t go to the gym. “Why go to the gym when you can walk a dog for an hour?” She has kept up with new food trends (she has a lot of plant-based recipes in her latest show) and technology. “You have to go with the trends, and yes, we are on Instagram.”

She regrets her parents weren’t around to see her being made a Dame at Windsor Castle in 2021. “I am a great believer in genes. And my father was a remarkable man. My parents set an amazing example to me. When I found that I was going to be made a Dame, I couldn’t ring and tell them, but they are up there and looking down on me, and I know they’re quite pleased,” she says, smiling. “Your own children don’t notice, of course.”

Mary enjoys a positive attitude, which helped following the death of her son William, who was killed aged 19 in a car crash in 1989. It was after this tragedy that she started teaching Aga courses at her home, although I recall there was no indication that she had been bereaved. She was just as charming and chirpy as she is today. Perhaps the whole routine helped keep up her morale.

“I think of William every day. Of course I do. And if he were to walk through that door over there, I would say, ‘Where the hell have you been?’ I’m still very proud of him. I think of the joy he gave us. He was a lovely child, but you have to step back and think – I had wonderful parents, I’ve got two more children, Annabel and Tom, and my grandchildren. I mean, it would be devastating if you only had one child. I am very fortunate. And I have a husband who is 93.”

She says the recipe for her marital success is that she steps out of the house when she can see an argument brewing. “Paul always says that the secret to our long marriage is his saying, ‘Yes, dear’ to everything, and then going his own way. But we don’t argue. If any disagreements come up, I open the back door and just go out and maybe pick some flowers or get some apples. It’s amazing if you can walk away.

“Of course, if I was living in a top-floor flat, that would be difficult. But we respect each other. And I’m very lucky. He has mellowed in his old age and he’s become very appreciative of me. So I look after him, and it’s a great pleasure. That’s what I promised to do. For better, for worse, for richer, for poorer. And we are very happy in our dotage.”

Not that I can see Mary having an argument about much, with anyone. She is totally charming and enjoys a good relationship with all her guests in the new series, particularly Jamie Oliver: “I didn’t get any school qualifications, and neither did he,” she says.

Which of her guests learnt the most from cooking with her? “Oh, Alan Titchmarsh,” she says immediately. “We made spaghetti with salmon, and he hadn’t a clue. But he was so keen. To me, the huge reward was that 10 days after we recorded the show, he sent me an email with a picture of a table, all laid with the pasta dish and a glass of red wine. He said, ‘I did exactly what you said, and I’m very proud of this.’”

She smiles. “He gets the star. That is what I love. People stop me in the supermarket and say, ‘You inspired me to cook’. That is what television does. It’s a huge cookery class, for two or three million people. If I do things well, people will make them at home.” That was the aim all those years ago. Still is.

The latest issue of Radio Times is out now – subscribe here.

1-SE-43-1-Cover

Mary at 90: A Lifetime of Cooking begins Tuesday 28th October at 7:30pm on BBC Two and iPlayer.

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

October 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Jacob Anderson & Sam Reid on Louis & Lestat Commodifying Vampirism in Season 3 (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Jacob Anderson & Sam Reid on Louis & Lestat Commodifying Vampirism in Season 3 (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Everyone’s heard about rock star Lestat (Sam Reid) in The Vampire Lestat, the third season of Interview With the Vampire. The bigger mystery is what the new Louis (Jacob Anderson) will be like as the AMC series continues to give him a new story that’s not found in Anne Rice‘s books.

While Louis is still a “vampire capitalist” in the present day, as executive producer and writer Hannah Moscovitch describes, it’s the fact that he’s commodifying vampirism that’s noteworthy. In the video interview above, filmed in TV Insider and TV Guide Magazine’s New York Comic Con 2025 studio, Anderson, Reid, and Moscovitch tell viewers what to expect from Louis and Lestat’s wildly new lives now that the human world knows that vampires exist.

“He knows what he’s good at now,” Anderson says, adding that Louis learned in Season 2 that he’s “not an artist,” but he understands art and knows “how to maximize it and make something out of it and build.”

“There was a point in the writing room where we were talking about Louis selling vampire souvenirs,” Moscovitch reveals. “It’s not quite that in the show.”

“But it’s not a million miles away from that,” Anderson notes.

Reid grimaces at the thought of vampire souvenirs. “I hear souvenirs, I think of Claudia,” he says.

Lestat’s going to be thinking about Claudia (Delainey Hayles) a lot in Season 3. He’s emotionally haunted by her death from Season 2, and the memories of everyone he’s ever loved are occupying his every thought, whether he wants them to or not.

Louis and Armand’s (Assad Zaman) depictions of Lestat in the first two seasons highlight his performative nature, a trait that remains true about this troubled vampire, no matter how his exes paint him. His rock-star persona is equally performative (and its own form of vampire commodification), but his artistic process now pushes him to be more “revealing,” according to Reid.

“He’s searching for perfectionism,” Reid explains of Lestat’s music, but “he manages to express everything and nothing through his art.”

“He’s like a really sincere troll,” Anderson teases.

The actor, who’s a successful musician himself (he writes music and performs under the name Raleigh Ritchie), is sincere in his praise of Reid’s musical performances during filming. Reid struggles to accept the compliments, but Anderson and Moscovitch insist on giving them.

“Sam’s being modest, but it’s really special and I’ve not really seen anything like it,” Anderson shares. “People are involuntarily clapping at the end of takes.”

“The crew [cries] often over the beauty of the music,” Moscovitch adds of Daniel Hart’s songs he’s written for Lestat’s band.

Learn more about The Vampire Lestat in the full video interview above.

— Reporting by Damian Holbrook

The Vampire Lestat, Season 3 Premiere, 2026, AMC, Streaming on AMC+

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Movie' Lands Streaming Date, Apple's Last Big Theatrical Push
TV & Streaming

The Movie’ Lands Streaming Date, Apple’s Last Big Theatrical Push

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

It wasn’t long ago that Apple looked like it would be making a big push into theatrical releases, believing what has been true for most other distributors: a theatrical release and its subsequent marketing push helps a movie’s cachet once it (eventually) lands on streaming later. It worked with other studios — mixing up the partner on each — on the release of films like “Killers of the Flower Moon” (Paramount), “Napoleon” (Sony), and “Argylle” (Universal). And with “F1: The Movie” in partnership with yet another distributor in Warner Bros., it found its biggest hit to date — and quietly one of its biggest successes of the year at the box office — grossing $629 million worldwide.

Dave Kalema

Apple rewarded that success with a run in theaters that has lasted 14+ weeks, even as the film has already been available for premium rental since August. Few filmmakers get that sort of runway, but for Joseph Kosinski, who certainly did for “Top Gun: Maverick,” they were willing to give him the privilege, and his movie made the most of it.

Now Apple has finally announced a release date for the movie on streaming on what is now just Apple TV (not Apple TV+), hitting the service globally on December 12. It’ll be nearly six months since the film opened on June 27; a theatrical window like that is virtually unheard of.

But that’s no guarantee the same will happen to an Apple movie again. Despite its success, it wouldn’t be a surprise if the “F1” theatrical experiment is over.

Within a matter of months of each other, both Apple and Amazon were reported to be dipping their toes into theatrical releases. After some success with “Air” and a few others, Amazon MGM is now all in, targeting as many as 14 theatrical releases a year and offering them beefy theatrical windows before they land on streaming. The studio is still doing some direct-to-streaming movies, but it has made clear its priorities.

Apple, on the other hand, before “F1” had a string of costly misses and has since been rolling back that approach. The losses for movies like “Argylle” and “Fly Me to the Moon” were well-documented, and the straw that broke the camel’s back was its approach with the George Clooney-Brad Pitt thriller “Wolfs.” That movie was going to have a robust theatrical release up until Apple yanked the rug out at the last minute and said it would drop on streaming after little more than a week. The studio tried to placate the filmmakers by saying it had already greenlit a sequel to “Wolfs,” but director Jon Watts openly said that after the theatrical fiasco, he “no longer trusted” Apple as a creative partner.

Since then, some of its higher-profile films have all been quietly and modestly released in theaters before landing on streaming, if they got a theatrical release at all, a stark contrast to what was agreed upon and stuck to with “F1.” Spike Lee’s “Highest 2 Lowest” spent a couple weeks in theaters, grossing just a reported $1.5 million, before hitting the streaming service. Paul Greengrass’ “The Lost Bus” did the same, opening in just a few select theaters and did not report box office totals.

Apple is not under the same pressure as its peers to produce for the box office and hope that streaming can pick up the slack. Back in March, a report suggested that Apple TV loses $1 billion a year on streaming and has in the vicinity of 45 million subscribers. It’s fine operating it as a loss-leader and using it as a means to continue selling iPhones.

The company also has never been bound to one approach, and it stands to reason that, if another project on the scale of “F1” with a director like Kosinski attached was on the table, it could pursue a similarly lengthy theatrical release strategy. Some of its upcoming movies sound like they could have that pedigree. There’s the Skydance-produced “Mayday” starring Ryan Reynolds, the Mattel movie “Matchbox” starring John Cena, and the Ben Stiller and Jake Johnson pickleball comedy “The Dink.” Have we mentioned movie theaters need more comedies like that last one?

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
High Potential Adds Bill Nye the Science Guy as Guest Star
TV & Streaming

High Potential Adds Bill Nye the Science Guy as Guest Star

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Bill Nye the Science Guy is adding TV guest star to his already impressive resume. The science icon and advocate will appear as himself on Tuesday’s episode of “High Potential” on ABC.

Nye will offer his science knowledge to help out “High Potential” star Kaitlin Olson’s character Morgan Gillory in a “Morgan Vision,” guiding her one step closer to solving the episode’s case.

In Season 1, Gillory was a janitor at the LAPD but become a full-time consultant after solving a murder case and impressing everyone with her IQ of 160. The show premiered in the fall of 2024 and was renewed for a second season in January ahead of the season finale. It was a hit at ABC and averaged 16 million viewers per episode, with the series premiere racking up more than 30 million views by the time it was renewed.

Nye is best known for hosting the popular educational program “Bill Nye the Science Guy” in the ’90s. Since then, he’s also had a Netflix series titled “Bill Nye Saves the World” and a Peacock show “The End Is Nye.” He’s appeared on other shows like “The Big Bang Theory,” “The Masked Singer,” “Dancing With the Stars,” “Blindspot” and more.

Along with Olson, “High Potential” also stars Daniel Sunjata, Javicia Leslie, Deniz Akdeniz as, Amirah J, Matthew Lamb and Judy Reyes. The show is based on the French series “Haut Potentiel Intellectuel (HPI).” Drew Goddard developed the series for American television and serves as executive producer via Goddard Textiles along with Sarah Esberg. Todd Harthan serves as showrunner and executive producer. Olson is a producer on the series in addition to starring. 20th Television produces, with Harthan currently under an overall deal at the studio.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
DHS Uses "Billy Madison" Quote To Respond To Strategist's Criticism
TV & Streaming

DHS Uses “Billy Madison” Quote To Respond To Strategist’s Criticism

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

When Democratic political strategist Maria Cardona blasted the Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions for violating citizens’ rights, the Trump administration responded with a quote from Billy Madison.

After appearing on CNN on Monday morning, Cardona posted on X, “ICE is engaging in egregious, criminal behavior, violating peoples’ civil rights, kidnapping, and snatching innocent men, women, and children off the streets, even detaining American citizens! While doing it, not identifying themselves, hiding their faces, not telling people why they are being taken. This is not normal! This is not American! This is not acceptable! And videotaping these agents, asking them questions, and even hollering that they should not be doing this, does not in any way constitute a ‘violent attack’ against these agents! It is part of the Constitution, to peacefully protest violent behavior against innocent people, and American citizens!”

The Department of Homeland Security responded, “What you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things Americans have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent statement were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone is now dumber for having listened to it.”

That is a quote from the 1995 Adam Sandler comedy, in which the principal tells him, “Mr. Madison, what you’ve just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul.”

In the DHS statement, the department argued that “far from engaging in criminal behavior, federal law enforcement actions have significantly REDUCED crime in the cities we have been deployed to. Locking up criminals works, imagine that.”

But DHS did not address Cardona’s criticisms that non-violent legal immigrants and even citizens have been caught up in ICE raids, by what amounts to a secret police force given the lack of uniforms or other information. Videos collected by bystanders have popped up every day, showing some of the raids. Last week, a video surfaced of an ICE officer who shot a member of the clergy who had been outside a processing facility in Chicago. ICE spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin later said that “these agitators were blocking an ICE vehicle from leaving the federal facility—impeding operations.”

In response to the DHS message, Cardona wrote, “Really @DHSgov? You respond with a quote from Billy Madison? That proves just how unserious, sophomoric, and incompetent you all are. Which would be funny if you all weren’t so deadly dangerous to the communities you are terrorizing! You are also dead wrong! The vast majority of the ppl you are detaining ARE NOT violent criminals, 93% have no violent criminal history whatsoever! There are REAMS of videos of you slamming women, children, and elderly ppl to the ground, shooting pepper balls at priests, even kidnapping American citizens!! THAT is not acceptable, it IS criminal and it is UNAMERICAN!”

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

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

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

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

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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