celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 79
Category:

TV & Streaming

Luke Thompson as Benedict Bridgerton in 'Bridgerton' season three.
TV & Streaming

‘Bridgerton’ Season 4 Sets Two-Part Winter Release

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Bridgerton will be welcoming viewers back to the Ton with a two-part release this winter.

Season four of the Shonda Rhimes-created hit period drama will return on Netflix with Part 1 on Jan. 29, followed by Part 2 on Feb. 26. Each part consists of four episodes.

The brief teaser released with the news (below) asks, “Do we rise to the occasion or do we bury oneself deeper amidst society’s secrets? As always, time — and this author — will tell.”

Here’s the official logline: “The fourth season of Bridgerton turns its focus to bohemian second son Benedict (Luke Thompson). Despite his elder and younger brothers both being happily married, Benedict is loath to settle down — until he meets a captivating Lady in Silver at his mother’s masquerade ball.”

Rhimes, Betsy Beers, Tom Verica and Chris Van Dusen are executive producers, along with showrunner Jess Brownell.

The cast includes Thompson as Benedict Bridgerton, along with Yerin Ha (Sophie Baek), Jonathan Bailey (Anthony Bridgerton), Victor Alli (Lord John Stirling), Adjoa Andoh (Lady Danbury), Julie Andrews (Lady Whistledown), Lorraine Ashbourne (Mrs. Varley), Masali Baduza (Michaela Stirling), Nicola Coughlan (Penelope Bridgerton), Hannah Dodd (Francesca Stirling), Daniel Francis (Lord Marcus Anderson), Ruth Gemmell (Violet Bridgerton), Florence Hunt (Hyacinth Bridgerton), Martins Imhangbe (Will Mondrich), Claudia Jessie (Eloise Bridgerton), Luke Newton (Colin Bridgerton), Golda Rosheuvel (Queen Charlotte), Will Tilston (Gregory Bridgerton), Polly Walker (Portia Featherington), Emma Naomi (Alice Mondrich), Hugh Sachs (Brimsley).

Additional cast includes Kate Bridgerton (Simone Ashley), Isabella Wei (Posy Li), Michelle Mao (Rosamund Li) and Katie Leung (Lady Araminta Gun).

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Downton Abbey BTS clip reveals how racing scenes were filmed
TV & Streaming

Downton Abbey BTS clip reveals how racing scenes were filmed

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Just over a month after it arrived in UK cinemas, Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale is now available to rent and buy on digital platforms – and to celebrate the release, we’ve got an exclusive behind-the-scenes clip giving us a new look at how the movie’s racing scenes were filmed.

It turns out that rather than being filmed at Royal Ascot – where the scenes were set – production actually took place more than 200 miles away at Ripon Racecourse in North Yorkshire.

Alongside footage showing the camera crew hard at work, the clip also includes interviews with the cast, including Lady Mary star Michelle Dockery, who says: “Today we’re filming the scenes at Ascot, but we’re actually at Ripon.

“It’s kind of one of the main events of the film, where the family come together and they go to the races and it’s a really exciting day for everyone.”

Meanwhile, franchise newcomer Alessandro Nivola – who has a key role in the film as somewhat dodgy financial advisor Gus Sambrook – explains: “This is a beautiful old racetrack that’s meant to double for Royal Ascot, which has been renovated since the period of the movie.”

Production designer Donal Woods further details why the change of location was made, revealing that “the real Ascot looks like Terminal 5” and that it is now a “huge skyscraper of a building”.

He continues: “Ripon’s still got a lot of period features so not every shot had to be CGI [or] had to be green-screened. And it’s a very quiet course, I mean, we’re now in the middle of the flat-racing season and we had four days filming plus two days to prep – so we needed a clear time frame to actually create the physical side of Royal Ascot that we’re building.”

The cast of Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale. Rory Mulvey / © 2025 FOCUS FEATURES LLC

Since its release in cinemas, the film – which draws the curtain on the hugely popular period drama after six seasons of the TV show and two previous movies – has gone down very well with long-time fans, while also attracting broadly positive reviews from critics.

In our verdict, we called it a “pleasant stroll with characters you know and love” while also remarking on how it ended “with a touching dedication to the legendary actress” Dame Maggie Smith, who memorably played Lady Violet Crawley and sadly passed away last year.

Downton Abbey: The Grand Finale is now available to buy or rent exclusively on digital platforms and is also still showing in some UK cinemas.

Check out more of our Film 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 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
DEVIL IN DISGUISE: JOHN WAYNE GACY -- “Premiere” -- Pictured: Patrick Macmanus at the DGA on October 9, 2025 -- (Photo by: Charles Sykes/Peacock)
TV & Streaming

Showrunner Says the Series Reveals How Prejudice Fuels Evil and Systematic Failure

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Peacock’s Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy tells the chilling true story of a Chicago contractor who hid behind the mask of a friendly neighbor and community volunteer while preying on vulnerable young men and boys. By day, John Wayne Gacy (Michael Chernus) shook hands with officials, attended fundraisers, and performed as “Pogo the Clown.” By night, he murdered (at least) 33 victims between 1972 and 1978, burying most beneath his home.

Based on the 2021 docuseries John Wayne Gacy: Devil in Disguise, the series recounts Gacy’s brutality as it exposes the systemic failures of authorities at the time, when victims from working-class families, immigrant backgrounds, and the gay community were too often dismissed by law enforcement. Devil in Disguise reveals how prejudice and neglect allowed a killer to thrive while the cries of the vulnerable went unheard.

In the series, detectives are often seen victim-blaming and dismissing crucial evidence, revealing a culture of prejudice that allowed Gacy’s crimes to continue unchecked. For example, in Episode 5, one of Gacy’s victims is called a “whore” by the investigating detective Joe Kozenczak (James Badge Dale) because his lack of financial stability forced him to stay with Gacy in his house of horrors. In Episode 8, a victim named Jeffrey (Augustus Prew) is blamed for his own attack due to his alternative lifestyle.

Brooke Palmer / Peacock

Although it may seem like a story rooted in a bygone era, showrunner, writer, and executive producer Patrick Macmanus sees it as a cautionary tale about what happens when those meant to protect and serve look the other way — particularly when it came to the cries of marginalized groups of the times, such as women and LGBTQ+ individuals, the most vulnerable members of society.

“It is honestly sort of the main driving theme of the show,” said Macmanus. “Number one, the shows I’ve worked with before have all been driven by some semblance of systemic failure. It’s something that I am just interested in exploring. This one was absolutely the systemic failure of the police to be able to find and stop Gacy, specifically the Chicago Police Department.”

“Now, part of it was because of communications issues at the time that they were facing, that’s absolutely true,” clarified Macmanus. “But a large part of it was the fact that they were blinded and clouded by prejudice. That is a fact.”

DEVIL IN DISGUISE: JOHN WAYNE GACY -- Episode 101 -- Pictured: (l-r) Ted Dykstra as Det. Allen Fanholm, Gabriel Luna as Rafael Tovar, Hamish Allan-Headley as Det. Michael Albrecht, James Badge Dale as Joe Kozenczak (Photo by: Brooke Palmer/PEACOCK)

Brooke Palmer/PEACOCK

“I want to go on the record as saying that we are in no way, shape or form, demonizing police, because if you look on the flip side of the coin, you’re look you’re watching a whole other story of police who are in that pit every single day for months, trying to unearth and uncover and name every victim that was in John Wayne Gacy’s house. So we are lauding the police as much as we are critiquing and analyzing the failures of the system,” continued Macmanus.

“On the other hand, I believe that this is as relevant to the story as it’s ever been. I think that anybody who thinks that this is a story that time has passed, that we’re exploring some other time in which people were prejudiced and allowed these things to happen, is not paying attention to the world that we currently live in.”

“The world that we currently live in is, at present, driven oftentimes by prejudice,” said Macmanus. “And that prejudice is ultimately a driver of the degradation of our societies, the degradation of our citizens, no matter where they are in the world, and ultimately a driver of violence in our world. And that is fueled by more than anything, by social media.”

“And so I would say that actually, it is more dangerous now than it’s ever been — definitely in my lifetime,” Macmanus concluded.

Devil in Disguise: John Wayne Gacy, Premieres October 16, Peacock

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Jacob Elordi Wows in del Toro Monster Movie
TV & Streaming

Jacob Elordi Wows in del Toro Monster Movie

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Del Toro’s second Netflix movie is bolted to the Earth by hands-on production design and crafty period detail. While it may be too reverently faithful to Mary Shelley’s source material to end up as a GDT all-timer, Jacob Elordi gives poignant life to the most emotionally complex Frankenstein monster since Boris Karloff.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
DR Sales Boards 'A New Kind of Wilderness' helmer's Latest Doc
TV & Streaming

DR Sales Boards ‘A New Kind of Wilderness’ helmer’s Latest Doc

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

On the heels of “A New Kind of Wilderness,” which won the Sundance Documentary Grand Jury Prize in 2024 and sold to multiple territories such as Germany and France (ZDF/Arte) the US (POV/PBS and the UK (Met Films), DR Sales has partnered again with Norwegian filmmaker Silje Evensmo Jacobsen on her new documentary “The Mystery Package,” Variety has learnt exclusively.  

The Danish documentary is being launched this week at the Cannes content market Mipcom.

“Silje Evensmo Jacobsen is a rare gem in the world of documentaries,” said DR Sales director Pernille Munk Skydsgaard. “With her ability to bridge true cinéma vérité to an artform resembling fiction, we see her as a unique director that captivates life in the exact level of her characters.

With ‘The Mystery Package”, she manages to invent a brand new genre: the Christmas adventure documentary family film.” “We claim this film to be an instant Christmas Classic that will be shown across all platforms for many many Christmases to come,” Skydsgaard commented.

“The Mystery Package” is “a story about childhood curiosity, Christmas traditions and the greatest mystery of all” life itself, with all its unexpected twists and turns,” according to DR Sales. A stranger-than-fiction-story, the core is a mysterious package that the Sandnes family from Valdal in Norway has been receiving every Christmas for the past two decades, with gifts for everyone. “Merry Christmas from all of us in Arendal,” says the handwritten message from the unknown sender. 

The children in the family Edle (9) and Brage (6) decide to uncover the secret before Christmas Eve, together with their father Magnus, one of the original recipients of the package, and their mother – no less than Silje herself, the film’s director.

The Mystery Package

Courtesy of A5 Film

“What begins as a playful search soon takes a deeper turn”, says the synopsis as the young detectives discover that very first package arrived the year their father’s elder brother Hans Petter committed suicide.”Through the children’s eyes, the investigation becomes both a whimsical detective story and a tender exploration of family memory, grief and the bond that shapes us,” says the statement.

Speaking to Variety, Jacobsen said she had been playing with the idea to film this unique story of the mysterious Christmas package for a couple of years, but had been reluctant to turn the camera on her own family. Until two years ago, when her daughter said: “I’m gonna be a detective and find out who the Christmas package is from.” “Then it was very different”, said Jacobsen who was immediately drawn to the idea of following her kids in this “funny and strange” investigation and make a true Christmas film for children and their family.

“I myself didn’t know anything,” insisted the filmmaker, who agreed to step in front of the camera with her young children, and be truly part of the investigation, letting the cinéma-vérité gradually take shape. “We walked into many dead ends and of course, I didn’t know those would be dead ends, which was crucial.”

However, not to intrude too much on her family life and dynamic, she set a precise time frame to her filming. “I decided to film almost everything every day for three weeks prior to Christmas last year. By limiting myself in time, I was able to let the narrative happen in real time but also continue to be a mum, without the constant urge to film every second of the day,” she explained.

Currently in the editing room, the pic was produced by Jacobsen and Mari Bakke Riise (“A New Kind of Wilderness”) for A5 Film, in co-production with Sweden’s Ballad Film.

“I had seen their amazing film “The Gullspång Miracle” [a Tribeca winner best editing in 2023]; I felt they were great storytellers and that they would be perfect for this project,” added Jacobsen. 

The documentary is scheduled to roll out early 2026.

At Mipcom, DR Sales’ doc slate also includes the festival hits “The Lives of My Father,” Best Doc Series at Canneseries 2025, “The Black Swan”, Best Doc Series at Denmark’s national Robert Awards 2025 and “Mr Nobody Against Putin,” a Sundance World Documentary Special Jury winner this year.

On the company’s drama slate is the Norwegian hospital drama “Still Breathing,” produced by leading outfit Rubicon (HBO’s “Beforeigners”) for NRK, and the Swedish legal thriller “Burden of Justice,” produced by Strive Studios (“Paradise City,” Snabba Cash”) for SVT. Both series will be delivered in 2026.

“I am looking forward to some intense days at Mipcom directly after MIA, meeting broadcasters and producers, presenting our new lineup of new drama series and documentaries. And for the first time in many years, we are also representing DRs new unscripted formats,” said Skydsgaard. 

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Letterkenny Producer New Metric Buys Podcast Prodco Kelly&Kelly
TV & Streaming

Letterkenny Producer New Metric Buys Podcast Prodco Kelly&Kelly

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Letterkenny and Shoresy producer New Metric Media has made its second big strategic move of recent weeks, this time buying Kelly&Kelly, the comedy podcast specialists behind shows including award-winning sports doc Broomgate, hosted by comedian John Cullen.

Vancouver-based Kelly&Kelly was founded by Chris Kelly and Pat Kelly in 2016 and has gone on to produce series for the likes of CBC, iHeart, Audible, Warner Music and Sony, working with talent including Maya Hawke, Rainn Wilson, Jason DeRulo, Anna Faris, William H. Macy and Doja Cat.

New Metric said that acquiring Kelly&Kelly will allow it to diversify and create opportunities to collaborate with talent across TV, film, podcasts, digital, and live events.

Kelly&Kelly, meanwhile, will now move further into video podcasting and unscripted content alongside New Metric’s Stand-up & Podcast division that launched in early 2025. The deal sees them join the New Metric team, effective from  Nov 1.

“New Metric Media is the best-of-the-best when it comes to creating comedy and joining Mark and the team is an incredible opportunity for us to scale up production and international distribution,” said Chris Kelly and Pat Kelly. “Podcasting is evolving, and we’re super-excited to build what’s next.”

New Metric Media Founder & CEO, Mark Montefiore said Chris and Pat Kelly are podcast pioneers. “They have built a smart and profitable business by making award-winning content that is recognized and consumed globally. These beauties will fit perfectly into New Metric’s creative-first culture that celebrates innovative storytelling and business models.”

The podcast M&A follows close on the heels of New Metric investing in Good Walk Entertainment, the label run by ex-Comedy Central President Kent Alterman and former Comedy Central Head of Content & Creative Enterprises Sarah Babineau, as first reported by Deadline.

With MIPCOM underway, the New Metric team is in town. The Canadian outfit has two new half-hour comedies in the works, Hate the Player: The Ben Johnson Story and I Kill the Bear, the new series from Letterkenny creator, Jared Keeso.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Simu Liu, Melissa Barrera Play Spy Games
TV & Streaming

Simu Liu, Melissa Barrera Play Spy Games

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84


Simu Liu and Melissa Barrera play dangerous spy games in the teaser trailer for Peacock’s upcoming espionage thriller The Copenhagen Test, which dropped on Sunday.

Liu plays first-generation Chinese-American intelligence analyst Alexander Hale, who discovers his brain has been hacked. That allows access to everything he sees and hears, which makes Hale an open book to his hidden puppet masters.

“I don’t know who I can trust anymore,” Hale says at one point as he’s caught between his shadowy agency and unseen hackers. Enter Barrera as Michelle, a mysterious siren who trades both punches and steamy kisses with Hale, judging by the series’ first-look footage, as he desperately tries to uncover the identity of his hackers.  

Meanwhile Hale must continue to act normal to flush out who’s responsible for the hacking and prove where his allegiance lies.  “If they suspect you’re compromised, you’re dead,” Hale is warned as he goes down a rabbit hole in the sci-fi spy thriller.

The Copenhagen Test is set to premiere Dec. 27 on Peacock, and the release of the teaser coincides with co-star Liu touting the eight-parter during a New York Comic Con panel. The series, set five minutes in the future, also stars Sinclair Daniel, Brian D’Arcy James, Mark O’Brien and Kathleen Chalfant.

The Copenhagen Test was created by Thomas Brandon, who also showruns, writes and executive produces the series alongside Jennifer Yale. Also sharing executive producer credits are James Wan, Liu, Michael Clear, Rob Hackett, Mark Winemaker and Jet Wilkinson.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Battlefield 6 error message: What does 'Global game quota exceeded' mean?
TV & Streaming

Battlefield 6 error message: What does ‘Global game quota exceeded’ mean?

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

This creation suite is packed with the tools players need to build wild new multiplayer shooter experiences, as well as forays into new genres.

And yet, the ‘global game quota exceeded’ error has returned to spoil our fun. Here’s what it means, and what you can do if you’re hit by it.

What does ‘Global game quota exceeded’ mean in Battlefield 6?

As it did in Battlefield 2042, this error message is all about server capacity for building in the Portal.

Essentially, EA has a number of servers for running the online portions of Battlefield 6, and some are squarely focused on the Portal.

But, if too many players are building, there are no servers available and you get the dreaded ‘Global game quota exceeded’ message.

Can you fix ‘Global game quota exceeded’ in Battlefield 6?

There’s good news and bad news, and we’ll start with the latter – there really is no way to ‘fix’ the error. You’ll simply need to try again at another time, at least until EA works to amp up its server count (which may or may not happen).

You can keep an eye on the game’s Battlefield Comms account on X (formerly Twitter) for more information.

So, what’s the good news? The positive way of looking at this is that you can spend your time blitzing through the fairly short campaign or jumping into more standard multiplayer modes.

Since those don’t seem to have the same server capacity issues, you can be reviving, sniping, and generally having fun in the downtime where Portal is giving you the game quota error message.

RadioTimes.com awarded the game 4 out of 5 stars, saying: “My greatest issue with my time reviewing Battlefield 6 has been that, after having so much fun with friends during the beta, I have had to enjoy the last few weeks without them – you can’t get much higher praise for an online multiplayer title.”

“I’m not sure that Battlefield 6 lives up to the lofty heights of BF3 and 4, but whether that is nostalgia talking, who knows?”

“What I do know is that Battlefield 6 is certainly an excellent entry in the series, righting the wrongs of 2042 and setting the series back on the right path.”

“Maybe one day we’ll get our Levolution back, but for now, I think fans of the series should look forward to this one very much.”

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 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Stephen Colbert as Scotty Bristol and Amy Sedaris as Laurel Hammond-Muntz in
TV & Streaming

Stephen Colbert’s Cameo Explained and More Changes

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for the Elsbeth Season 3 premiere, “Yes, And…”]

Stephen Colbert guest-starred as a parody of himself in the Elsbeth Season 3 premiere, but his prescient line, “We’re going to miss this show when it’s gone,” was written before his real-life late-night show was canceled by CBS this summer. That cancellation came one week before Colbert was set to film his Elsbeth episode, which reunited him onscreen with his Strangers With Candy costar and longtime friend, Amy Sedaris, as well as Andy Richter and Lindsay Mendez (who will be back throughout Season 3).

“Yes, And…” revealed that Elsbeth Tascioni (Carrie Preston) spent some time with her romantic fling, Angus (Ioan Gruffudd), and was still friends with Sheryl (Marcia DeBonis) from Season 2. Sheryl’s new book was the reason Elsbeth was on the set of Way Late With Scotty Bristol before Bristol (Colbert) was murdered.

Elsbeth used the improv skills she learned from Sedaris’s Laurel to solve the case. Laurel was revealed to be the killer of the week in the opening scene, but Elsbeth is breaking form in Season 3. Not every murderer will be revealed when the episodes begin.

The Elsbeth Season 3 premiere also gave an update on Kaya (Carra Patterson), who’s unable to get in contact with Elsbeth because she’s on an undercover mission. Here, Elsbeth showrunner Jonathan Tolins breaks down the premiere, Colbert’s appearance post-Late Show cancellation, what to expect with returning and new characters, and more.

What is Elsbeth’s biggest internal struggle this season?

Jonathan Tolins: She is dealing with Kaya not being around because Kaya has gone on undercover assignments and has gone off. She says she wants to cultivate her friendships a bit more this season. Those new friendships lead to some thorny questions for her about honesty and truth, and what is most important to her.

Carrie told us that Crawford [Michael Emerson] is an emotional burden on Elsbeth after she witnessed his murder.

We will be meeting someone from Crawford’s world who will make an appearance that will have an effect on Elsbeth this season.

Crawford was a major villain for Season 2, with a long arc. Will this character connected to him have a similar arc length?

No, I think this season, we do have some longer arcs and some new characters who have longer arcs, but we’re not doing a big new villain. We didn’t want to feel like we were repeating ourselves in any way, so it’s a little different this year.

How else are you breaking form in Season 3?

Well, we’re doing a lot of episodes that don’t adhere to the strict Columbo form of seeing the murder and then Elsbeth figuring it out. There are some episodes where you don’t see the murder, some episodes where you have no idea who did it for a while, which we’ve done once or twice before in the past. And also we’re finding fun structural ways to bring the case into Elsbeth’s orbit that’s not the typical, the police call, and we go to the crime scene, and we try to figure it out.

Michael Parmelee / CBS

Could you expand on that?

I just finished editing an episode where the murder, you see the whole murder story start, you see the murder, and then we just go to Elsbeth in her life at an event, and you think you’re in a totally different story. And then the murderer walks in, and Elsbeth meets him, and something he says sort of leads her to the case. Things like that. We like to keep our audience guessing.

That murderer is not very slick.

Well, he has no idea that this woman he’s meeting under perfectly reasonable circumstances works with the NYPD.

You wrote the premiere with Colbert in mind for the role of Scotty Bristol, correct?

Yes. What happened was, Wendell Pierce was a guest on Colbert’s show, and Colbert joked about how he really wanted to be a corpse on Elsbeth, and I think someone was there from CBS who immediately let Amy Reisenbach, who was the president of CBS, know that. Amy texted me immediately, like, “We’ve got to get Colbert on the show.” I’m a huge Strangers With Candy fan, and I wanted to get as much of Stephen as possible. To have him have a big part, we had to work out exactly how much time he would be able to give us due to his schedule.

Once I had the basic parameters, we put together a story that felt fun and that would be right for him, and also that would play a little bit on the audience’s understanding of who he is anyway. That’s why we made him a talk show host and all that. It was a real thrill for me. We cast Amy Sedaris in it, which I was well aware of their long history because, as I said, I’m a Strangers With Candy fanatic.

What was your reaction to Colbert’s cancellation, given that the news came out one week before he was set to start filming on your show?

Well, I was shocked and appalled, but then I immediately selfishly started thinking, Oh God, is he going to back out of doing the show? But then I realized he probably wouldn’t back out because he seemed very enthusiastic. And also, he would be working with his old friend, Amy. It’s not my department, but I think it’s terrible that his show is ending.

How was he on set? It was literally just days later.

He was a total delight, a total professional, just warm as can be. He was everything I wanted him to be. It was a great day.

There’s a line in this episode where he says, “We’re going to miss this show when it’s gone.” I was taken aback by how prescient it was.

I know. I felt the same way. That line was always in the script before. I’m very happy with the fact that the episode sort of resonates with what happened, but is not in any way a direct comment on what happened. I did not rewrite the script to reflect what was happening in the news that week. This was the story that we broke before we shot the episode, and then before all that happened.

Amy Sedaris as Laurel Hammond-Muntz, Lindsay Mendez as Officer Grace Hackett, Carrie Preston as Elsbeth Tascioni, Andy Richter as Mickey Muntz, Wendell Pierce as Captain Wagner, and Danny Mastrogiorgio as Detective Smullen in 'Elsbeth' Season 3 Episode 1

Mark Schafer / CBS

We talked a bit about how Elsbeth is struggling without Kaya there, but how is the Elsbeth-Wagner relationship evolving in Kaya’s absence?

I always say that they have a Lou and Mary kind of relationship, for those of you old enough to remember The Mary Tyler Moore Show. There’s such a genuine warmth between the characters and the actors. And also, there’s a really nice understanding now between the characters at this point. We’ve had 30 episodes where Elsbeth turned out to be right in the end. And so we didn’t want to keep having Captain Wagner say, “What are you doing? You’ve got to play by the book.” So we find lots of variations on where tension comes between them. And a lot of times they’re a team, a really fun team.

We have some new stuff coming up for Captain Wagner’s family and personal life, and we didn’t decide to create some big new conflict between Elsbeth and Wagner because we’ve done that. We had the first season end in a very difficult time between the two of them, and then they came back together again. We don’t like to repeat ourselves. And so I would say it’s just the relationship gets deeper and deeper as we go between them.

It seems kind of easy between them now. They just gel together.

And in the first episode that you saw, she is able to challenge him in a way that you wouldn’t have in the past about how [Lieutenant Steve] Connor [Daniel K. Isaac] is being treated in the precinct.

We hear mention of Kaya in the first episode, and we get an update on her undercover work. It’s been revealed that Kaya comes back in Episode 3. How often can fans expect to see or get updates on Kaya this season?

I’m not being cagey. A lot of it depends on scheduling and people’s lives and how the story goes. All I’ll say is, we love the character of Kaya. We love the relationship between Elsbeth and Kaya, and we love Carra Patterson, so we’re going to keep trying to get her as often as we can. That’s what I’ll say.

But we are also introducing fun new characters. We have a new uniformed officer in the premiere, played by Lindsay Mendez, who’s wonderful as Grace Hackett, and she’ll be back a number of times. We have some of the people that we introduced last year. We’re going to be introducing a new detective later on this season, so we mix it up.

One of the things about our show is that in order to get all these huge, incredible guest stars, we don’t have a huge cast of regulars. So I would say one kind of frustration of my job is that we work with these wonderful actors who everybody wants, and sometimes we can’t get them when we want them. So we have to be flexible and work it out as best we can. But I think we’ve done a good job of creating this stable of wonderful characters that we want to see. But we only have 43 minutes and a murder mystery and all these things. So I can’t make promises all the time about when you’re going to see who you want to see, but just know that we want to see them too.

Elsbeth, Regular Air Time Premiere, Thursday, October 16, 10/9c

October 13, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Andrew Jarecki's 'The Alabama Solution' Rocks Sundance Film Festival
TV & Streaming

Andrew Jarecki’s ‘The Alabama Solution’ Rocks Sundance Film Festival

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84


[Editor’s note: This interview was originally published on January 29, 2025 and has been lightly updated for the film‘s HBO debut Friday, October 10. It will also be streaming on HBO Max and is currently in limited theaters for Oscar qualification.]

Andrew Jarecki was never more anxious about sharing a new project at Sundance.

At the festival, the veteran documentarian debuted his Oscar-nominated “Capturing the Friedmans” (2003), “Just a Clown” (2004), “Catfish” (2010), and Emmy-winning series “The Jinx: The Life and Deaths of Robert Durst” (2015), which he followed up with a popular sequel.

Earlier this year in Park City, Jarecki and his producer-turned-co-director Charlotte Kaufman premiered HBO’s “The Alabama Solution,” a hard-hitting exposé of the brutal Alabama state prison system, a six-year investigative project that deploys video footage taken on the contraband phones of the inmates themselves, as well as interviews by the filmmakers. The movie inspired a long, standing ovation at The Library, and the film’s activist subjects, Melvin Ray and Robert Earl Council, sent a pre-recorded video and participated in a live Q&A by phone from prison. It had an Oscar qualifying run in limited theaters starting October 3 and is a strong contender for the Best Documentary Feature Oscar, with a 90 on Metacritic.

Diane Keaton at the Ralph Lauren Spring 2024 Ready To Wear Fashion Show at the Brooklyn Navy Yard on September 8, 2023 in Brooklyn, New York. (Photo by Gilbert Flores/WWD via Getty Images)

This movie left my jaw open a few times. I gasped at the shocking conditions at the Alabama prisons: water sloshing on floors, strewn garbage, the rats accompanying solitary confinement. The filmmakers themselves became inured to the horrifying video footage the inmates sent them via their cell phones. They saw men’s faces bashed by prison guards, the bloody streaks left behind by men dragged after a beating. They learned of murders.

“First, you have to wrap your head around that this is a reality that’s happening in our country’s prisons,” Kaufman told IndieWire over Zoom. “Most people understand that America’s prisons are tough, but I don’t think people quite understand to what level is the cruelty, the trauma, the abuse, the negligence. The first couple of years of making this film was like having a bucket of ice water dropped on us every day.”

Six years ago in 2019, Jarecki’s daughter was reading a book about Anthony Ray Hinton, who had been wrongfully convicted in Alabama. Jarecki was reading articles about Montgomery and a memorial to people who had been victims of lynching. “It was Presidents’ weekend, and we said, ‘We got to go to Montgomery, maybe we’ll learn something,’” said Jarecki. “Pretty much by chance, I met a man who was the first Black prison chaplain in the state of Alabama, and we started talking. And because I’ve been interested in the justice system, and made a bunch of films in and around it, I started asking him about the prisons. He said, ‘Well, why don’t you come in and volunteer?’ And I said, ‘Would they let me in there?’ And he said, ‘Yeah, if you come and volunteer, you can do it.’”

PARK CITY, UTAH - JANUARY 28: Director Charlotte Kaufman and Andrew Jarecki attend the
Charlotte Kaufman and Andrew Jarecki attend the ‘The Alabama Solution’ premiere during the 2025 Sundance Film FestivalGetty Images

That’s why Jarecki and Kaufman decided to check out the Alabama prisons. They eventually obtained permission to film the opening scene, an outdoor picnic for the inmates at Easterling Prison. “It was then that we started to be taken aside by these men,” said Jarecki. “And we discovered that there were things happening in the prison that nobody on the outside was allowed to see. So that was the initial way in.”

Once they got that first glimpse and whisperings of what was going on, the filmmakers felt “compelled to continue to look and to investigate,” said Kaufman. “The main response to all of this horror is a feeling of wanting to understand how it’s possible this is happening. As much as there’s sadness and outrage, feeling compelled to keep looking and to keep understanding.”

Another wrinkle: The two ringleaders of the activist movement inside the prisons, Council and Ray, who launched the Free Alabama Movement and were posting on social media like Facebook and YouTube, were in increasing danger. The film shows them hit and then slammed in the isolation tank. “We knew, as we started to learn about just how dark things were in the prison,” said Jarecki, “that people were regularly retaliated against. When we were told about these incredible leaders inside, Robert Earl Council and Melvin Ray, it was clear that they were going to be able to tell us things that we otherwise wouldn’t know, and give us a perspective from the view of somebody who’s in the midst of that horrible system. They had been working for many years fearlessly to get the word out. But trying to get through the walls of the prison is difficult.”

Anxiety about the potential reaction to the movie drove the filmmakers to keep a tight lid on the film before they showed it at Sundance. “It’s driven by our deep concern for their safety,” said Kaufman, “and wanting to be intentional of how we release it to the world, so that their attorneys, their defense committee, and they themselves, can be prepared, and that it’s not in a disorganized fashion.”

Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman at the 2025 Sundance Film Festival
Andrew Jarecki and Charlotte Kaufman at the 2025 Sundance Film FestivalAlanna Taylor

The mission and practice of the incarcerated subjects documenting their lives within prison walls even predated the film’s production. “When events were happening around them that they felt was important for the world to see, they were documenting it,” said Kaufman. “But obviously, one-off videos sometimes don’t portray the whole truth of what’s happening. They’ve shared with us, and then they gave us a lot of their time to have these in-depth conversations throughout six years. The fact that we were able to have those conversations not on the wall phone, which is monitored by the prison, but we were able to have them through this other means was extremely meaningful.”

Often the prisoners stand in the window holding their phones, so their faces are illuminated. They bought the phones from the prison guards. With no wifi, they nabbed cellular service signals in the sky, and figured out ways to charge the phones. “There would be conversations about, ‘Oh, you’re backlit.’ ‘When’s the next time we’re going to be able to talk?’” said Kaufman. “How precious do you want to be about those things? Because the most important thing is the dialogue, and the medium is the message. That’s part of the point of this film: Should it be that difficult to be able to have honest conversations and document what’s happening in our facilities?”

It’s not new to have cell phones in prisons across the country. “Cell phones have been present in Alabama’s prisons and in many prisons since 2013-14,” said Kaufman. “Not everybody is using the technology in such a brave way and ingenious way, as the men who are in our film, but they are present.”

For the moment, neither Ray nor Council are in solitary confinement. “The retaliation against them has been pretty varied over the years, and obviously for long periods of time,” said Jarecki. “The two of them together have spent a combined 14 years in solitary confinement. At the moment, they are, from a relative standpoint, stable. They’re keen to see people react to the film and see people absorb this material that’s been secret for so long. So they’re concerned, and we’re concerned, obviously, about any further retaliation by the administration.”

Kaufman sees the film as not all about the evils of the prison system. “As much as this film is about all of the darkness and the corruption and the cover-up,” she said. “It’s also a portrait of human resilience. And they are still very resilient.”

The movie introduces us to people who we would not otherwise get a chance to meet. And we can see their humanity. But we see the Alabama prison system denigrating convicted criminals, no matter their race, as somehow not deserving of being treated as human beings. “There’s this binary quality to the thinking about criminal justice,” said Jarecki. “There is a mindset that there are people who are criminals and people who are not criminals, and our job here is to just root out the bad ones and then lock them up forever, because society will be safe with no recognition of which crimes we prosecute. You could have a person that’s stolen a billion dollars in taxes. Maybe that person is going to get pardoned. You have another person that’s stolen $30 in baby formula. Maybe that person’s going to get locked up for a long time. So the system is seemingly illogical.”

It’s hard to witness in the film just how intractable and resolute the Alabama prison establishment and state government have been in refusing to do anything about what’s going on. “In the early days,” said Jarecki, “we thought, ‘surely they will recognize that when the Department of Justice is writing findings letters that say that horrible things are happening, the state is going to respond to that in some way, right?’ We’ve talked to people in the DOJ who’ve said, ‘Most of the time, when we bring up massive problems in a state’s prison system, constitutional violations, horrible conditions, the state is embarrassed, and the state wants to do something about that.’ Not so with Alabama.”

Of all the terrible prison systems in America, Alabama is the worst. “It’s the deadliest prison system,” said Jarecki. “That includes the highest level of drug overdoses, of murder, of rape and suicide. However, as you could see from the film, similar things are happening in many states, because these states are not allowing anybody to see inside, and so journalists don’t get access to these prisons. You say democracy dies in darkness. People die in darkness. We think of that as something that happens in some far off country or in the middle of war. There’s a great line from Melvin Ray: “How is it possible that a journalist can go into a war zone, but can’t go into a prison in the United States?”

While scholars have shown that mass incarceration is rooted in racism and historical slavery, Kaufman said, “This is a system that hurts everybody. It’s harmful to the guards, it’s harmful to those incarcerated. The cruelty doesn’t discriminate. The system is an equal opportunity disaster.”

Next Up: The film is generating an impact campaign. “The film is the beginning of what we hope is going to be an impact both in Alabama and outside Alabama,” said Jarecki. “Charlotte and I are both working a lot on that. It’s going to be a way of life for the next year.”

“The Alabama Solution” is currently in limited theaters and will make its debut on HBO and HBO Max Friday October 10.

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