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Jessica Capshaw Moves on From 'Grey's Anatomy'
TV & Streaming

Jessica Capshaw Moves on From ‘Grey’s Anatomy’

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains mild spoilers from the season premiere of 9-1-1: Nashville.]

Jessica Capshaw can never quite seem to escape Grey’s Anatomy, but she wouldn’t have it any other way. In her first major foray into television since departing Grey’s as a series regular in 2018, Capshaw is trading in her hospital scrubs for the attire of a high-powered equestrian and entrepreneur in a new 9-1-1 spinoff set in Music City — which launched right before the venerable medical drama’s 22nd season on ABC.

Co-created by Ryan Murphy, Tim Minear and Rashad Raisani, 9-1-1: Nashville stars NCIS: LA alum Chris O’Donnell as Don Hart, a former rodeo rider and the fire captain of the city’s Station 113. The latest installment will blend the same high-octane, life-threatening emergencies of its predecessors — the original 9-1-1 also returned Thursday for season nine without original star Peter Krause, while the Austin-set Lone Star starring Rob Lowe ended earlier this year after five seasons — with a classic dose of soapy family drama in the vein of Dynasty and Succession.

But in a first for the 9-1-1 franchise, one of the leads is not a first-responder. Capshaw plays Blythe Hart, the matriarch of an aristocratic Southern family who fell for working-class Don many moons ago, despite her father’s disapproval, after he helped put out a fire at her ranch. Don and Blythe’s only son, Ryan (Michael Provost), has chosen to work alongside his father at the 113, leaving their family’s sprawling business empire in the hands of his mother.

“I do think a wonderful thing about playing her is that she just has this confidence and this chill — chill as in calm, not as in icy,” Capshaw tells The Hollywood Reporter. “She’s very confident and secure, but not, to me at least, in an effort to seem above it all. Even though she has so much and is so privileged, there’s something very warm and earthy about her. Her efforts to be a part of that family for [Don] at work and at home is very evident later in the season.”

Don and Blythe’s marriage will be tested as they grapple with the inevitable arrival of Blue Bennings (Hunter McVey), the son Don fathered decades ago in a previous relationship with failed backup singer Dixie (LeAnn Rimes). As Dixie, who is dealing with her own health issues, encourages Blue to “sink [his] hooks” into the Hart family (and their deep pockets), Blythe begins to suspect the Bennings have ulterior motives for showing back up in Don’s life.

It’s a juicy premise that immediately appealed to Capshaw, who has relished the opportunity to help build a show from the ground up for the first time. “The beginning was unique in that it wasn’t completely unknown territory, because I did know how beloved the original 9-1-1 was and is, and then Lone Star. There was an understanding of its capacity to charm and engage audiences,” she says. “We do have crossover with the original 9-1-1 cast members when doing press to promote the show, so it feels like a family. We’re lucky enough to stand on their shoulders and also they on ours, hopefully, in our success.”

Calling in from Nashville, where she is halfway done shooting the first season, Capshaw opens up below to THR about her long-awaited return to the small screen, the enduring legacy of Grey’s‘ Dr. Arizona Robbins and her fan-favorite relationship with Sara Ramirez’s Dr. Callie Torres — and whether she might pull double duty for an episode or two of Grey’s and Nashville this season.

***

For TV viewers who have grown accustomed to watching you on Grey’s, how would you compare and contrast Arizona Robbins with Blythe Hart?

I always felt that when Arizona came into Grey’s, it was during a time when the series had reached such a fever pitch. It was such a popular show, and part of what I think people responded to was that it was so honest. There were these friendships at the center of these crazy life-and-death circumstances that really allowed you to understand these young people as they were making their way through their residencies. As you got to know Cristina (Sandra Oh) and Meredith’s (Ellen Pompeo) dark and twisty, the show was like, “We’re going to show you our guts. We’re going to show you the actual insides of our emotional lives, and then we’re going to show you our patient’s actual guts.” Then when I came on in the fifth season, looking back on it now, I think that they were ready for a little bit of lightness.

Arizona came on with so much hope. She worked with children. She was interestingly and uniquely, but not in a bad way, delusional like, “I’m going to be who I am in this world.” My storylines were all with Bailey (Chandra Wilson). She was so used to telling everyone else what to do, and Arizona just kept smiling, going along, and giving her a chance. Then finally, she turned on her and was like, “I get it. I’m a stranger with a ponytail and a smile, but I know what I’m fucking doing. So back off.” That lightness and brightness came in a way that worked for that time. Then over the next 10 years, we obviously took huge, huge journeys with her, but she did retain that light quality.

I think Blythe has a lightness about her that might come from her privilege. Believe you me, we’re going to find out a lot of things that are very heavy, but she tries to bring the light and warmth to the situation. She’s very inclusive and warm and makes decisions to include [others] where I think a lot of people would be like, “Hell no! That person?” (Laughs.) So that is definitely something I see as a common thread between the characters. I think that they both definitely occupy the space of understanding that they know what they want.

The contrast — when I was watching it — is surprising, because there’s a calmness in playing Blythe. I don’t know if it’s that she’s southern and there’s a mannered quality to the way that she conducts herself or the way she dresses, or, again, the privilege that she has, or that she’s married to and is the mother and wife of two men that run into burning buildings; you definitely have to have a certain disposition to be OK with that choice. But she has a calm about her that I don’t know that Arizona necessarily played in her relationships. She played them in the OR, but not in relationships. She was bouncy, and Blythe is not bouncy.

Given that you are playing a main character who is not a first responder, what kinds of discussions have you had with showrunner Rashad Raisani about Blythe’s place in the story? How did you think about building her as a character?

When we got here to start making the show, the first scenes I had were with Michael Provost, who plays our son Ryan, and then with Chris. Either by happenstance or coincidence, our first scenes were together, and that is the trio. Their last name is Hart, but that is the heart. It starts with them and their love of family. What’s been really important is this partnership between Blythe and Don. It has grown into something that shouldn’t be aspirational. We all should be in these loving and equal partnerships, and really be able to take each other to the mat, and then also love each other up as much as possible, but that is what has happened. There’s already been a lot of ups and downs and all arounds and discoveries, and ways in which they as a couple have had to persevere and ask some follow-up questions so that they can get right with each other. But ultimately, they’re trying really hard to take care of their family.

Speaking of family, what has been really important to me — and what I’ve spoken to Rashad about a lot, and something that has grown organically — is that Blythe is in the firehouse every so often. I wouldn’t call her a den mother, but she is very familiar with the squad. We made a decision that, when she walks into rooms or hospitals or emergencies, there’s a real shorthand between her and the squad. She knows Roxie. She knows Taylor. She’s going to get to know Blue! But she knows Ryan, and I do think a wonderful thing about playing her is that she just has this confidence and this chill — chill as in calm, not as in icy. She’s just very confident and secure, but not, to me at least, in an effort to seem above it all. Even though she has so much and is so privileged, there’s something also very warm and earthy about her. I think that her efforts to be a part of that family for him at work and at home is very evident later in the season.

Jessica Capshaw with Chris O’Donnell in the 9-1-1 Nashville premiere.

Disney/Jake Giles Netter

The trailer revealed that Don is the biological father of Blue, and Blue’s single mother, Dixie, appears to be hatching a secret plan to get Blue to worm his way into the vast Hart family fortune. The pilot sees Blue come face-to-face with Ryan for the first time, but it also reveals that Blythe has known about Blue’s existence for years. How does Blythe feel about the fact that her husband has fathered another child outside of their relationship, and how did you think about playing the reveal that she has known about this other child all along?

I thought it was very interesting because obviously, for Ryan, it’s completely shocking. The entire circumstance of him meeting his half-brother is shocking. And, of course, he first goes to his father, because he’s the one that tells him and has a private conversation, and it’s not entirely satisfying. He doesn’t get all the answers to why and how and what exactly happened. So then you have him finding his mother where he’s like, “Mom, this is bad. Dad betrayed us.” It’s protective, and it’s kind. Michael is such a talented young actor and so wonderful to work with, and it really was our actual first day of filming, so it’s gobsmacking to me that we managed to pull off the scene that looks like we really have known each other for so long. (Laughs.)

He comes to me and says, “This is all wrong, and this is terrible.” I said to Rashad — and it’ll be interesting to see what people’s perception of it is — that it was really important to me that we keep the ethos of the lines that were written. Because she’s not saying, “It’s no big deal,” but she’s saying, “I know. This [happened during] a period of time where we were separated, and believe you me, I had my fun too.” In a way, to me, it really puts a finer point on — this is not a woman who got cheated on, who was betrayed, who got left, and then figured out how to be OK with it. There’s no martyrdom in it. There’s no victimhood. There was a period of time where Don and Blythe weren’t going to make it; they weren’t going to stay together. So they had this separation, and these things happened.

When a child came of it, there really wasn’t a ton of her being like, “Off with your head!” and flipping tables, and “No, this can’t be!” It was kind of the only occasion in which there could be not an equal but at least a level playing field. It helped me understand how she could move forward and how she could say, “OK, this happened, and now what? Because we’ve already made this choice to stay together. So what does that mean?” And, again, that’s where I think Blythe’s warmth and generosity comes in, because she says to Ryan, “We’ve been supporting this child since the day he was born.” And this is not her child!

How does Blythe really feel about Dixie, though? Does she feel threatened by the extensive history that this woman has with her husband, considering that they come from the side of the tracks?

Certainly. We wouldn’t have the drama without it! Again, I go back to this confidence that she has that is wild to me. And when I play it, I’m like, “Damn, Blythe, you’ve got this.” But she’s less threatened and more that she just knows she’s trouble. She just knows that where there’s smoke, there’s fire. She just knows that if you give her an inch, she’s going to take a mile. It’s like, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.” So I think she’s very cautious about her. I think she knows that Don is such a good person and that he has been missing this piece of his life in having a child that has been around in the world without him.

I think that she’s also just trying to manage all of it. We’ll get to it later in the show, but Blythe wears a ton of hats in her family. She’s got this big family, but she’s actually in the inner workings of running the businesses, so she’s not just at home. It would be fine if she was, but my point is, she’s not doing nothing. She’s managing, whether it’s the whiskey business or the philanthropy or the race horses. Honestly, I’m not sure how she can be doing as much as she’s doing, but she’s doing a lot. (Laughs.)

Jessica Capshaw with LeAnn Rimes in 9-1-1: Nashville.

Disney/Jake Giles Netter

It’s not lost on me that you are now returning to the same network that made you a star 15 years ago, and Nashville is the lead-in for Grey’s this fall. The latter has become a cultural touchstone at this point, and after having played one of the first lesbian main characters on network television, you are closely intertwined with the show’s diverse and inclusive legacy. When did you first notice and understand the impact that Arizona has had, particularly on queer women?

I noticed a very distinct shift, really, through streaming. Once it was on Netflix and people were not just watching it in real time, they were going back and watching it, and then they were going through and watching it again and again and again. Shonda’s commitment to that character, I will be forever grateful to her for sometimes even seeing things that I couldn’t even necessarily imagine. I was like, “OK, here we go.” There was a great partnership with Shonda [Rhimes], there was a wonderful partnership between Sara and I, and I do think that we created something really, really special. So I think that I noticed it when streaming made it even more available, and then I definitely had a front row seat when people started coming up to me. It was the thing that was top of mind for people when they came up to say something.

I would get really incredible letters that were just describing life-altering experiences from people who were not talking to their parents because they had come out and their parents had been like, “This is not whatever … fill in the blank.” And through the show, they had seen this other side of something and gone back to their child and been like, “I see this other thing that I didn’t see.” That was bonkers to me. The fact that a television show could create a pathway to repair was wild to me, and it really was so emotional. So I was very, very grateful for that because, honestly, in the beginning, you’re playing a part and you’re creating a character. It’s a very different kind of acting. It’s not a movie where you get the whole script, and you know where you start and where you end. You’re on a television show where every single week you’re getting a new story. You don’t know what’s going to happen, and you’re truly, as much as you’re creating the ride, also along for the ride.

How has your relationship with the character changed over time, particularly as you have had time and space away from the show?

That’s a very interesting question. I’m not quite exactly sure how to answer it, only because I think that you’d get the script, you’d play it, it would get edited, you would see it, and then that’s where it lived. It lived in relation to the rest of the season, and I didn’t do a ton of going back and watching it. I will say that it became popular for teenage girls especially, I think, to watch it over and over and over again. For my kids, of course, that’s their mom. So I don’t think it was  purposeful [on their part], like, “I’m not going to watch it,” but I didn’t feel like they started watching it when some of their other friends did.

And then when they actually did start watching it, I would hear my voice in the living room. I would be like, “What’s going on?” (Laughs.) And I would come in. When I walked into the room and I started watching it, in this particular instance, it was the beginning [of Arizona]. It was something that I filmed, I don’t know, 13, 14 years ago, and you’re that much older, you’re more into your life and you look at it. It stays in this little moment, and I don’t necessarily revisit it so much as I can see how it gets rewatched the way that it does, and it’s pretty wild.

Do you sit down and rewatch Grey’s at all with your kids now that they are interested in the show? Or are you the kind of actor who doesn’t like watching themselves on screen?

I do give grace to my younger self. In this particular instance, I did come around the corner, I heard my voice, and I stood there. She was watching it and I was watching it, and I did stay for the rest of the scene. But I definitely feel like she was like, “This is too meta. I need you to get out!” (Laughs.)

Jessica Capshaw, right, with Sara Ramirez, on Grey’s Anatomy.

Everett Collection

Grey’s showrunner Meg Marinis has said that she has an open door policy with all of the show’s alumni, and she has been intentional about which characters she has brought back. Your return in season 20 was designed to bring back some of the joy, levity and love for teaching that the attendings at Grey Sloan were desperately missing. You have a new day job that is keeping you very busy these days, but would you want to return more in a guest-starring capacity?

I love Meg, and one of my best friends, Camilla Luddington [who plays Jo], is still on the show. She and I have our podcast called Call It What It Is, so I spend at least five hours a week with Camilla working on other things. It was home for so long, and I love it there. I love the family and I love the character, so I’m always available to that show. I don’t know how it would go now. I’ve thought about it — I don’t know if it would be super distracting if I was at 9 o’clock Blythe, and then 10 o’clock Arizona, but I would be game to try!

Do you think Arizona and Callie have found their way back to each other in New York?

I love that you saved that question for last! (Laughs.) That’s too hard a question to answer, because you know what? What I love and think is so fascinating and so cool is that the fans of Grey’s Anatomy — and specifically the fans of certain ships and couples — come up with all this fanfiction. I haven’t read it all and I don’t go mining for it, but I will tell you that I know it exists. The reason I’m bringing it up is because I would not dare to imagine what is happening in the make-believe land of Callie and Arizona or the alumni characters as they live and breathe after they’ve left the hospital. But I think that all these different fanfictions that come up with things is so cool, so I have no idea. But I think that if you’re committed to that relationship and if you’ve been a fan of that relationship, then whatever you want to imagine about them and where they are is what should be living in your head.

***

9-1-1: Nashville airs Thursdays at 9/8c on ABC, followed by Grey’s Anatomy at 10/9c. Episodes stream the next day on Hulu.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Spitting Image team say they're "baffled" by Paddington Bear lawsuit
TV & Streaming

Spitting Image team say they’re ‘baffled’ by Paddington lawsuit – and insist their parody is going nowhere

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The satirical puppet sketch show, which ran from 1984-1996, used to top the TV viewing charts and was beloved for its absurdist caricatures of Britain’s leading figures, from Margaret Thatcher to John Major, even the Queen Mother.

While most politicians and pop culture figures of the time took their puppet parodies (fairly) on the chin, the new revival of the veteran comedy show has ruffled someone’s feathers… or should we say fur.

Created by Al Murray and Matt Forde, the new Spitting Image revival, now available on YouTube, made headlines this week when it was revealed that StudioCanal, the French film and television production company behind the Paddington movies, and the Bond estate have filed a High Court complaint over copyright and design right concerns, following the depiction of the beloved bear.

“We’re baffled by that, to be honest,” says Murray. ‘If we were going to expect anything, it would be a hard stare from Paddington.”

Their radical reimagining of the sweet-natured bear sees Paddington as a foul-mouthed, crazy-eyed Pablo Escobar-esque parody, with a penchant for powder over marmalade sandwiches. He hosts the shows podcast ‘The Rest is Bullsh*t’, a parody of the Goalhanger ‘Rest is’ sphere, alongside an equally caricatured Prince Harry.

“If you’re looking for [podcast] hosts, you need two national treasures. They were the first names on the team sheet,” says Forde.

While his characterisation may be extreme, Forde and Murray insist it is only intended for purely comedic purposes.

“It’s the oldest thing in comedy,” explains Murray. “We’re not saying we’ve done anything particularly original. [Paddington] is normally presented as this very ‘goody-two-shoes’ character and we’ve flipped him over. It’s a very Spitting Image thing to do – to take someone and say ‘Hey, maybe they’re the opposite.’”

“I mean, they’ve fallen into a bear trap of their own making,” says Forde. “We’re getting tons more views as a result of the lawsuits publicity, so more people are watching this depiction of Paddington that they don’t want anyone to see.”

Is it potentially a case of miscommunication involving the ‘British sense of humour’?

“I mean taking the piss is a great British value, as is having a sense of humour about ourselves,” says Murray. “But there obviously has been a drift towards people who want to shut other people’s jokes up – and it’s weird, it seems like an attack on comedy really.”

“In my experience, people find you funny taking the p**s out of things, until you take the p**s out of something they like. Then they don’t find you funny anymore.”

But it’s the fact the call for legal action has come from fellow creatives that really surprises the pair.

“I would imagine that the people at StudioCanal who’ve come to this are the sorts of people who not long ago were pretty outraged by Jimmy Kimmel being pulled off air,” explains Murray. “If they’re sensitive, creative people that’s probably how they felt about it.”

“But they’re trying to do that to our absurdist, ridiculous Paddington and that leaves me scratching my head.”

Whilst they may see a funny side in the call for legal action, (“We are literally talking about a fictional bear and a puppet show!” exclaims Murray at one point) the pair recognise that the dispute over their depiction of Paddington highlights a wider conversation on freedom of speech in our current political climate.

“It’s terrifying that pressure can come from all sorts of different places,” says Forde. “I think the risk is that these kinds of authoritarian instincts exist on left and right.

“They exist in governments; they exist in corporations. We’re living in an era where politicians can get you taken off the air and the consequences of that – and it’s not just comedy – will close people in all sorts of other industries down.

“People need to be careful about thinking. ‘Well, I never liked Jimmy Kimmel anyway, so I’m fine with it’ because eventually, they will get round to you, and they will shut you up.

“Comedy is an easy first target because people don’t like being laughed at, but it’s not comedy that they have an issue with. It’s the freedom of speech.”

Their new YouTube show was born out of the success of their live theatre production – Idiots Assemble: Spitting Image The Musical created by Murray and Forde, alongside Sean Foley. It was during this run they realised the new medium of theatre, unlike TV, avoided outsider input in what content their show could cover.

“There was no one between us and the audience,” explains Murray, “That was what was brilliant about it.”

“As stand-ups we’re used to that,” agrees Forde, “You write it, you perform it and there is a purity in that. Once it filters through more layers, it becomes tamer, and I think in the modern era people want comedy like this to really pack a punch.”

Their YouTube series is not the first revival of the iconic ’80s show. Spitting Image was briefly resurrected in 2021, with both Murray and Forde working on the show as writers and voice actor respectively, parodying a new cast of political and pop culture figures, from Donald Trump to Greta Thunberg. It was cancelled by ITV after just two series.

Hosting their show on YouTube has allowed for this greater freedom when creating the satirical sketches.

“The danger sometimes with television is it becomes very bureaucratic and slow,” says Forde. “The comedy can almost get legislated out of a sketch. I think this smaller team and nimbler production has allowed it to just hit harder.”

And it seems the public would agree. The show’s viewing numbers on YouTube have hit nearly 12 million views and is reaching millions more across other streaming platforms.

The pair believe the media reaction highlights a clear appetite for cutting political satire and hope to bring the beloved classic to the smartphone generation.

“There are different themes, different celebrities, that you want to be lampooning,” says Forde. “To be able to apply that in 2025 when you’ve got TikTok and X and Instagram and make something the younger generation really love – that’s a real thrill.”

It’s not just Paddington viewers can tune into watch; the show parodies a host of recognisable figures, from Taylor Swift to Vladamir Putin. But for Forde, with his spot-on impersonation, his favourite has to be Trump.

“Trump is so much fun,” he says. “The puppet is phenomenal; it’s a grotesque recreation of him. When we’re writing and ad-libbing in the room, you’re inside the mind of this maniac and we have the tools to bring him to life in our own way.”

Parodying figures from all realms of the political spectrum, the pair maintain they never let their personal politics influence their character choices or depictions either.

“They’re all fair game and it’s just so much fun taking the p**s out of them,” says Forde. “But for each one there must be that grain of truth to it. It must be silly and big and daft, but you need to hit upon something that people recognise in those characters.

“In a way, the politics falls away from it. These are characters you’re satirising. They just happen to be political ones.”

“If the impression goes with the puppet,” says Murray, “…it doesn’t need to be laser point accurate because the puppets, after all, aren’t. They’ve got the essence of the person… it’s like, as Matt’s saying, it’s got to have the grain of truth in it. And then you dial it all up.”

The current run of Spitting Image will last for 12 episodes, but what about the show’s future?

“We’re seeing if it’ll work and whether the audience will come to it,” says Murray. “And we haven’t got to wait for someone to say yes, you spend so much time in comedy coming up with things and having to wait for someone to say yes.”

“I mean purely as a viewer, you think, why are these things so rare?” continues Forde. “It’s immensely frustrating that Spitting Image wasn’t around for so long.

“So many of the things we’ve done even in the last two episodes have gone viral, so there is a huge appetite for this sort of comedy. You want it to always be around.”

And what about our furry friend? It looks like he’ll be sticking around – he’s not heading back to Peru just yet.

‘I think if you were to ask our Paddington…” teases Forde. “You know, he’s an energetic guy, wants to work a lot…”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Edgar Hansen
TV & Streaming

What Happened to ‘Deadliest Catch’s Edgar Hansen? His Sexual Assault Case and Exit From Show

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Sig Hansen is a staple on Deadliest Catch, and for several seasons, viewers also got to know his brother Edgar Hansen as they worked aboard the F/V Northwestern together. However, he abruptly disappeared from the program after Season 14 in 2018 and has not returned since.

Deadliest Catch is currently in the midst of its 21st season, with Sig remaining as a main player. But what happened to Edgar? Scroll down for everything we know about why he left the show and more.

What happened to Edgar Hansen?

Edgar’s exit from Deadliest Catch came after he pled guilty to sexually assaulting a 16-year-old girl. His guilty plea came in July 2018, following a September 2017 incident, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Per The Seattle Times, Edgar submitted a handwritten statement, in which he agreed to the assault. He pled guilty to fourth-degree assault with sexual motivation.

“I committed this assault for the purpose of my own sexual gratification,” Hansen said. “I am very sorry for that conduct, and I have commenced treatment to ensure that nothing like this assault ever happens again.”

Hansen’s victim was identified as 16-year-old “Jane Doe,” who told her therapist in October 2017 that Hansen had sexually assaulted her the month prior. She reiterated the allegations in an interview with a police specialist.

Did Edgar Hansen go to jail?

No, Edgar did not serve any jail time as part of the plea deal he reached in the case. Instead, he received a 364-day suspended sentence, had to pay court fines and fees of $1,653, and underwent a sexual-deviancy evaluation and treatment, per The Seattle Times.

Why did Edgar Hansen leave Deadliest Catch?

While Discovery has not commented on Edgar’s legal issues, he no longer appeared on Deadliest Catch after the court case in 2018. His last episode of the show was at the end of Season 14 in 2018, which had already been filmed prior to his sentencing.

When Season 15 returned in April 2019, Edgar was no longer part of the cast. However, viewers have claimed to spot him in the background of scenes aboard the F/V Northwestern in the years since, so it’s possible he still works with his brother and the rest of the crew.

Deadliest Catch, Season 21, Fridays, 8/7c, Discovery Channel

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Trilith Institute Opens Residency Applications for Georgia Filmmakers
TV & Streaming

Trilith Institute Opens Residency Applications for Georgia Filmmakers

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

As today’s filmmaking production struggles to find a place to land anywhere in the United States, the Trilith Institute is encouraging emerging filmmakers already based in Georgia to make their movies and TV stories there. And with funding, a stipend, and mentorship to boot.

The nonprofit Trilith Institute announced today that applications for its 2026 Emerging Creative Residency (ECR) will open October 10. (Applications on its website are now live here.) Now entering its third year, the flagship program provides filmmakers who live in Georgia with housing in the Town at Trilith, plus $100,000 in production funding, a living stipend, focused mentorship, and access to industry resources. Selected writers and directors working in independent film will be supervised and mentored from development through production and distribution.

The Woman in Cabin 10.  (L-R) Keira Knightley as Lo and John Macmillan as Captain Addis in The Woman in Cabin 10. Cr. Parisa Taghizadeh/Netflix © 2025

The Institute’s first two residents have already found success. The 2024 ECR grantee, Ebony Blanding premiered the feature film “A Mess of Memories” at the BronzeLens Film Festival in Georgia, where it won multiple awards. The 2025 recipient, Christian Noél, is currently in production on an original half-hour comedy pilot developed through the program. The series, billed as “Caddyshack” meets “Parks and Recreation,” is Trilith Institute’s first TV project.

“With our first feature film and now a television pilot, we are truly realizing the mission of Trilith Institute: to foster and retain the next generation of storytellers here in Georgia,” said Jeffrey Stepakoff, president and CEO of Trilith Institute, in a press statement shared with IndieWire. “By empowering emerging writers and directors like Ebony and Christian with meaningful resources, mentorship, and industry access, we are building a sustainable creative pipeline that keeps talent rooted in our state while contributing fresh voices to the global storytelling landscape.”

Applications for the 2026 ECR are open now through November 7, 2025, at trilithinstitute.org. The selected resident will receive a year-long immersive experience, both living and working at Trilith while developing their original project with the guidance of industry professionals.

The nonprofit Trilith Institute is focused on building up a robust entertainment landscape in Georgia, through education and workforce development. The brand also includes Trilith Studios, located in Fayette County, which has hosted Marvel productions from “Loki” on TV to multiple “Avengers” films. Most recently, out of the DCU, James Gunn’s “Superman” shot at Trilith as well, plus “Agatha All Along” and “Thunderbolts.”

More details about the residency are here.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Preschool Series 'Wadoo' Set at Mediawan, El Reino Infantil
TV & Streaming

Preschool Series ‘Wadoo’ Set at Mediawan, El Reino Infantil

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

European animation outfit Mediawan Kids & Family has joined forces with El Reino Infantil, the Hispanic world’s top YouTube Kids network, to develop “Wadoo,” a digital-first animated preschool series that will test characters through AI-assisted social media shorts before expanding into a full series.

The comedy-adventure property centers on Wadoo, a curious young dragoness who leads preschoolers on musical journeys through a magical world. Each of the planned 39 seven-minute episodes will blend discovery, friendship and environmental themes, culminating in original songs that reinforce the episode’s lesson.

The partnership represents Mediawan Kids & Family’s strategic push into animation based on digital-first properties, bridging traditional production expertise with El Reino Infantil’s massive online reach of over 222 million YouTube subscribers across 11 languages.

“We are thrilled to join forces with El Reino Infantil, a leading digital player, to launch Wadoo, a truly innovative preschool IP designed with the new generation of audiences in mind,” said Julien Borde, president of Mediawan Kids & Family. “This collaboration marks a major strategic step in our ambition to combine the best of digital creativity with the excellence of traditional production.”

The project will roll out through an extensive soft-launch strategy, beginning with social media shorts released on El Reino Infantil’s channel to test character designs and storytelling approaches. These shorts will utilize AI tools to enhance artists’ creative capabilities while maintaining creative control with the production teams.

“At a time when children’s entertainment is undergoing major transformation, this alliance with Mediawan Kids & Family has the potential to redefine how brands that resonate with new generations are built,” said Roberto “Kuky” Pumar, CEO of El Reino Infantil. “From this convergence comes Wadoo: a project designed for a present where digital and physical coexist in a phygital universe. Today, success is collaborative.”

Following audience analytics and community feedback from the shorts, the full 39-episode series is scheduled for release in 2026, combining YouTube distribution with international broadcast through Mediawan Kids & Family Distribution. The producers aim to build a comprehensive transmedia franchise following models established by hits like “Miraculous” and “La Granja de Zenon.”

Nicolas Fisch from Mediawan Kids & Family and Ylka Tapia from El Reino Infantil will serve as executive producers.

Mediawan Kids & Family, the children’s division of pan-European studio Mediawan, houses production labels including Method Animation, Somewhere Animation and Elliott Studio, along with international operations in Italy, the U.K. and the Netherlands. The company distributes “Miraculous – Tales of Ladybug and Cat Noir” and maintains a catalog of 2,500 half-hours of programming sold to over 150 countries.

El Reino Infantil is known for animated series including “Zenon the Farmer,” “Bichikids” and “The Little Sailor,” while also developing games, merchandise and live shows across Latin America, Asia and Europe.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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A New Sharon & Ozzy Osbourne Documentary Is Coming to Peacock
TV & Streaming

A New Sharon & Ozzy Osbourne Documentary Is Coming to Peacock

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Peacock will show Sharon & Ozzy Osbourne: Coming Home having landed the U.S. rights to the poignant film. The NBCUniversal-owned streamer will launch the documentary on its service next week (Oct. 13).

This doc follows Ozzy and his wife Sharon as they plan their return to the UK from the U.S. and then finally make the move. Their kids, Jack and Kelly, also feature as the couple up sticks and head home.

It was produced by UK label Expectation in association with JOKS Productions. The film also chronicles the preparation for Ozzy’s huge Back To The Beginning farewell gig, as he struggles to overcome health issues in order to be able to perform. The concert featured Ozzy and the original Black Sabbath lineup as well as the likes of Metallica and Guns N’ Roses.

Osbourne died in July, aged 76. He achieved global fame having co-founded Black Sabbath, before going on to have a successful solo career. The star, once dubbed the Prince of Darkness, toured for years, living the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle to the full. He was also a family man and cameras famously captured him at home with Sharon and the kids in the breakout MTV series The Osbournes.

The new film was commissioned by the BBC in the UK. It was originally destined to be a full-fledged series but ended up a single film as events played out. It went out in early October in the UK. The first title was Home To Roost, but the BBC and international title is now Sharon & Ozzy Osbourne: Coming Home.

Paramount+ also has an Ozzy Osbourne doc, Ozzy: No Escape From Now. The Expectation film, meanwhile, has footage and interviews with Ozzy, Sharon and family gathered over several years, and capturing the couple in reflective mood as they talk about their lives, family and relationships as they make the trans-Atlantic house move.

The film is sold internationally by Banijay Rights, which cut the U.S. deal. It’s a splashy distribution agreement days ahead of MIPCOM, the biggest TV sales market of the year, which kicks off next week in Cannes. Sharon & Ozzy Osbourne: Coming Home will be on the Banijay slate in Cannes, and it will be looking to close more deals on the film.

“To secure the US home for the final, inspirational chapter of Ozzy Osbourne’s life is an absolute privilege for us at Banijay Rights,” said Matt Creasey, the company’s EVP, Sales, Coproductions & Acquisitions. “We are pleased our partners at Peacock have committed to what is a deeply moving look at one of the world’s most well-known families.”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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"I Cried on That Phone Call"
TV & Streaming

I Cried on That Phone Call

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers from the season 22 premiere of Grey’s Anatomy, “Only the Strong Survive.”]

Grey’s Anatomy ended its 21st season with one of its biggest hospital explosions in recent memory when the operating floor of Grey Sloan Memorial Hospital went up in flames after a highly flammable acetylene tank was brought into the hospital. Only star Ellen Pompeo‘s Meredith Grey and a handful of other doctors were shown after the blast — everyone else could have potentially been killed off when the hit show returned.

Now, after a summer break, Grey’s has returned with its season 22 premiere and showrunner Meg Marinis and her writers revealed the fates for the doctors of the long-running ABC medical drama. Fan-favorite Dr. Atticus Lincoln aka “Link” (Chris Carmack) barely survived — and has quite a recovery ahead of him — but it was ultimately Dr. Monica Beltran, played by Natalie Morales, who is the sole casualty. She was crushed by hospital machinery, but stayed alive long enough to help instruct surgical intern/now resident Jules (Adelaide Kane) to help save a child on the operating table.

Below, Marinis brings The Hollywood Reporter into the writers room to reveal how they make decisions on who lives and who dies on Grey’s Anatomy, as she teases the effect that Beltran’s death will have on both Jules and Dr. Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone), why Grey’s most optimistic doctor now has a hard road ahead, and what to expect from Pompeo as Meredith Grey in season 22.

***

After the season 21 cliff-hanger finale, you said you had some ideas about how you would handle the fates of your up-in-the-air characters but that you weren’t set in stone until you got back into the writers room. What were you thinking coming out of the finale about where you wanted to go?

I didn’t want to kill anyone. I didn’t want to kill anyone! Even when we were choosing the VFX for the finale, post was like, “If you choose this one, there has to be someone who is dead. This is a huge explosion.” I said, “It’s going to be fine. We’re going to save everybody!” And then I sat down in the writers room and I was like, “We can’t save everybody. We just can’t. It doesn’t have as much of an impact if everyone is saved.”

Can you take me inside the debates you had in the room about who would die, and how heated do you guys get?

We’re a pretty nice, kind writers room. So if it’s heated, it’s heated with fun, right? We had that small group of people on the OR floor. You go through the chain reaction: If you kill this person, what story? If you kill this person, what story? We can’t kill that person! You go: If this, then what? We really look at the impact of each character’s death and what that does for the show, what that does for other characters and what stories can be told from that death. Then one morning, I woke up and went to the writers room and I said, “It’s Monica.”

Why?

I wanted to see someone die selflessly saving someone’s else’s life, and she was not only saving that little kid on the table, she was saving Jules. It really speaks to the kind of character Monica was. I didn’t want to. It was very difficult. It was very painful. I cried on that phone call. I love working with Natalie Morales. She is an exquisite performer, an amazing actor who brings so much to the table. I’ve already pledged that I will work with her again one day! She’s a writer’s dream. But also, just going through the impact and consequences on Jules and Amelia, that is where we landed.

How did Natalie take it if you cried, did she cry as well?

No, she’s a professional — unlike me! She loved being on the show, but she understands story. She’s a writer and director herself, so she understands storytelling.

We see Jules and Amelia are both devastated by her death; Jules was there in the room with her, and Amelia has recently been in a romantic relationship with Monica. Why did you want to focus on these two characters after this loss?

In particular with those two characters, I want to launch a different aspect of Jules’ career journey. She was dying for that solo surgery at the end of last season — all cardio, singularly focused. And the solo surgery she got was a pediatric surgery under duress, and she doesn’t even like kids. So that was really interesting to us. And while Amelia was so centered in that storyline at the end of last season with Piper [Perabo]’s character and with the child [in the finale], I wanted for us to believe that everything was kind of OK for Amelia after we saved Link’s life. I also really wanted to deliver consequences of Amelia taking on all these impossible surgeries.

It’s a double whammy for Amelia with Link also. How close did you come to killing off Link?

Well, I feel like we got pretty close because he flatlined in the stairwell! We definitely talked about it. And we felt like we love the character of Link, we love Chris. But we thought: This couple has been through so much that we were not ready to go there yet. As Amelia mentions in the episode, she lost her father at a very young age and that really propelled the way her life went.

You didn’t give Jo and Link too much time of wedded bliss. When you plotted their wedding last season, did you know where you were going to be taking their story next with Link’s recovery ahead now?

Yes, we intentionally made that big wedding story right before.

How relieved was Chris to hear that Link survives? Was he worried when he first got the phone call?

Oh, yeah. When he read the last scene [of the finale] in the table read he was like, “Um, OK, is it me or nurse Linda?!” Linda [Marguerite Moreau] is OK, but she was right next to him.

What recovery journey will you be exploring with Link, and how will you challenge Grey’s most optimistic character?

I just want to shout out Chris’ performance because he is usually this very positive, jovial character on our show, and this is a side of the character we’ve never seen. He really brought it with the stairwell scenes. I mean, the poor guy had to get carried down the stairs! But the emotional performance that he delivers just kills me every time. We’re going to see more of that as the episodes go on. It’s so amazing to see performances you haven’t seen from characters you’ve known for so long, because we haven’t put them through an injury like this. Also, because that’s his character, this is going to be really hard for him. He is not a sit-in-a-bed kind of guy, but he has to because he’s really injured. And also, his wife is very pregnant with twins, so not being able to be there for her is going to be very difficult for him.

How long is he bedridden?

He’s not in bed the whole season. In the next episode, he’s in the hospital. But I would say the first part of the season is his recovery, but this baby has to be born pretty soon!

Why was this the time to give Chris some more challenging material and focus on Link this season?

There’s never a reason why it’s time for one character to go through it more than the others, but to talk about filling some of it, I mean, he was put through it. He had to lay on that floor in the OR for so long with that thing on top of him. I also want to shout out our art department. The sets of those ORs were amazing. It looked so real; it was so dusty, there was so much debris and there was fake fire, and Chris is just happy-go lu-ky lying on the floor for hours. He’s also a big, muscular guy and our actors had to carry him down a real stairwell. There was a lot of physical stuff, a lot required in filming this episode and nobody complained. Everybody was so up for it. The performances in this episode, across the board, were breathtaking.

Were there any characters you came close to killing that you abandoned?

I mean, everyone on that OR floor was a discussion. But I don’t know if I want to divulge!

How does this high-tense, high-stakes premiere set the tone for what you are tackling this season? And now that this is your third season as showrunner, how do you compare how year three feels?

I’d like to say it gets easier, but it doesn’t! There’s always the pressure of the show being on for so long — how do you continue to keep it fresh and keep it going and keep eyeballs on it? This premiere delivered an old-school, high-stakes Grey’s disaster episode, but we’re still going to have quieter emotional episodes as well. The second episode is the 450th episode, and there’s some high stakes in there, but also some beautiful, emotional storylines to pay off the impact of what happened with the explosion, but also emotional storylines that have a little bit of a nostalgic quality, too.

What are some of the real-world storylines that have seeped into this season’s stories?

One of the real-world themes that has come into this season is the theme of hope. No matter where you stand on anything, things have been happening one after the other, and in particular, that’s what we felt this summer. We thought, “How can we write our feelings out in this season of television?” And that is through the theme of hope. Who gives you hope; who helps you find it after you’ve lost it; what gives you hope; and, how can you be hope for somebody else? How do we rise from what happened?

Ellen Pompeo said she’s not going anywhere and that she’ll be on screen similar to how much she was on the show last year. Has any of that changed?

No. Same. We are so happy to have her whenever we can, same thing with Scott [Speedman]. His schedule is going to be a little bit different moving forward [with his other work], but we’ll see Meredith a lot at the beginning of the season.

You previously said that Ellen typically films in chunks for her schedule. Since we saw her in the premiere, what can you tease about her arc in the next couple of episodes? Obviously, you have a hospital floor to rebuild. Will that be a big part of her storyline?

Yes, it will be, as well as being a source of strength for her sister who just experienced a huge loss.

Any characters you are bringing back or any nostalgic surprises you can tease?

We’ll definitely have a couple of visits from old characters. I will say, Meredith will interact with some of those planned visits, and you might get to see Meredith in her old house. Something else I will tease that is exciting to me is the character of Ben [Warren, played by Jason George] being back and not being on probation with Teddy [Kim Raver] anymore, and really getting to see him come into his own rather than him being behind. We’re going to be looking at stories about Ben moving forward and catching up. We weren’t always planning to reveal that in the first episode, but it felt most organic to do it then. We’re going to see Bailey [Chandra Wilson] seeing him as a leader. We also might not be finished with Nora [Floriana Lima], even though you saw her transferred. The separation of Teddy and Owen [Kevin McKidd] will be part of the season, for sure.

With Lucas (Niko Terho) and Simone (Alexis Floyd), you also didn’t wait long before Simone confessed to him that she slept with someone else [new intern played by Trevor Jackson]. Where is that relationship headed this season?

As hard as it was, I don’t think Simone knew she was going to tell Lucas. My intent in that scene is that the reason she tells him is because it’s the only way to communicate to him that they shouldn’t be together. It wasn’t like, “I have to get this off my chest because I feel so guilty about it.” That he will not take “no” for any answer unless I tell him this. That’s why there was the blurt in that moment and also, it’s really fun to play that conflict within that group of four.

What can you tease about the new interns?

Well, West [Jackson] is extremely confident, even though he hasn’t been there for that long, he thinks he knows it all. We’ll get to be more of that in episode two. Simone is going to try to deny that attraction, but it’s clearly still there. And new intern Danny — sweet Danny! — she’s going to need a new first day. (Laughs.) Now we have to see these residents be teachers, and it’s always fun to see people who still make mistakes be in charge of teaching people. And also, our attendings having to let them teach is a little nerve-racking. So it’s switching up the dynamic that way. Now there’s a new class of interns to make mistakes, and it’s also going to be on them when they make mistakes, which really sucks.

Also, have you spoken to or heard from former Grey’s star Eric Dane at all since his ALS diagnosis?

My second script he wasn’t in, because his character [McSteamy] had already died. But my first script he was in, and I was a researcher at the time. So I knew him, but I didn’t know him as well as I know the cast now. But it is just the saddest news, it’s awful. I know that other people at the show have spoken to him.

***

Grey’s Anatomy releases new episodes Thursdays at 10 p.m. on ABC, streaming next day on Hulu.

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Gavin & Stacey icon in look at crime drama led by True Blood favourite
TV & Streaming

Gavin & Stacey icon in look at crime drama led by True Blood favourite

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Meanwhile, Green Wing’s Sarah Alexander and Gavin & Stacey icon Larry Lamb, who both play supporting roles in the series, also feature.

You can watch the trailer at the top of this article now.

Larry Lamb in Art Detectives. Jack McGuire/AcornTV

Art Detectives is set to launch on U&DRAMA on Thursday 30th October, with the full box set also being made available in full on U from that date.

The series will follow Mick and Shazia as they solve murders connected to the world of art and antiques, from Old Master paintings and medieval manuscripts to Banksy street art and collectible vinyl.

Stephen Moyer and Sarah Alexander, wearing glasses and looking closely at some evidence in Art Detectives.

Stephen Moyer and Sarah Alexander in Art Detectives. Peter Marley/AcornTV

The synopsis for the series says: “Each episode follows Mick and Shazia as they navigate a rich and colourful world driven by greed, obsession, lust and revenge.

“Throughout the season, the artfully astute detectives encounter a fake Vermeer, Viking gold, a rare Chinese vase and items rescued from the Titanic.

Stephen Moyer and Nina Singh in Art Detectives.

Stephen Moyer and Nina Singh in Art Detectives. AcornTV

“Mick navigates these demanding cases while managing a budding romance with museum curator Rosa (Alexander) and the sudden reappearance of his charismatic father, Ron (Lamb), who just happens to be one of Britain’s most notorious forgers.”

Lamb was seen reprising his role as Mick Shipman on the final episode of Gavin & Stacey at Christmas, while earlier this year he also appeared in Channel 5 drama The Feud, opposite Jill Halfpenny and Jamie-Lee O’Donnell.

Art Detectives will launch on free streaming service U and U&DRAMA on Thursday 30th October – visit U here. Find U on Instagram at @‌streamonu.

Check out more of our Drama 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 10, 2025 0 comments
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Kelly McCreary Returning to 'Grey's Anatomy' for Season 22 (VIDEO)
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Kelly McCreary Returning to ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ for Season 22 (VIDEO)

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

Maggie is back again! After the consequential Season 22 opener for Grey’s Anatomy took away one full-time, it looks like the second episode of the season will welcome back a familiar face in Kelly McCreary‘s Maggie Pierce.

Maggie’s return was foreshadowed in the post-episodic teaser, which promised to follow the fallout of the premiere episode’s fatal loss, as Amelia Shepherd (Caterina Scorsone) reels from the death of Dr. Monica Beltran, who died after being crushed in an equipment collapse due to the explosion caused by the events of the Season 21 finale.

McCreary first left Grey’s Anatomy in Season 19 after nine seasons on the show. She previously returned for the Season 20 finale, briefly, to sign divorce papers with her then-husband Winston Ndugu (Anthony Hill).

Grey’s showrunner Meg Marinis teased that fans should expect some familiar faces to grace the halls of Grey Sloan Memorial in Season 22. She also indicated that Amelia in particular would bear the brunt of the loss of Dr. Monica Beltran (Natalie Morales), telling TV Insider, “This will have a drastic impact on Amelia.”

Grey’s Anatomy‘s next episode marks the series’ 450th episode, and it’s titled, “We Built This City.” The description for the episode tells us, “The team at Grey Sloan navigates a chaotic first day of surgical rotations amid hospital renovations. Meanwhile, Meredith spends time with Amelia.”

It looks like Meredith won’t be the only one pitching in to give Amelia an assist right now, as her sister-in-law-ish Maggie will also be on hand to do some much-needed damage control.

Interestingly, her return coincides with a question mark surrounding Ndugu’s potential future with Jules Millen (Adelaine Kane). The two have had a very “will-they-or-won’t-they” type of relationship thus far, but when Monica died after guiding Jules through a surgery post-explosion, Jules rushed into the arms of Ndugu, which seemed to elevate the chances that they might finally go there and give their chemistry a chance at coupledom. We’ll have to wait and see whether and how Maggie’s return to Seattle might affect that when next week’s episode airs.

Elsewhere in the teaser, it looks like Atticus “Link” Lincoln (Chris Carmack) is still not completely in the clear after the near-catastrophic injuries he sustained in the explosion incident. The preview, embedded above, shows him and Jo (Camilla Luddington) dealing with his limitations after the accident. Plus, the case of the day looks gnarly as a patient deals with a forklift piercing his abdomen. In other words, it’ll be another day at Grey Sloan when the show returns next week!

Grey’s Anatomy, Thursdays, 10/9c, ABC

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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How Fremantle Is Reaching Out to the YouTube Generation
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How Fremantle Is Reaching Out to the YouTube Generation

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

As he prepares to travel to Mipcom, Andrew Llinares, Fremantle’s director of global entertainment, talks to Variety about his market slate and the enduring appeal of the production and distribution powerhouse’s legacy shows, such as “Got Talent,” “Idol” and “The X Factor.”

Leading Fremantle’s entertainment slate at Mipcom are strategic reality show “Pandora’s Box,” comedy format “Knockout Champs” and factual entertainment series “The Secret DNA of Us.”

“Pandora’s Box” was developed by RTL Creative Unit in the Netherlands, with productions already underway in the Netherlands, France and Hungary. The Dutch show is produced by Fremantle’s Blue Circle for RTL Netherlands.

“It feels like an evolution of that strategic reality genre with a new game mechanic at the core of it,” Llinares says.

Strategic reality format “Pandora’s Box” will launch at Mipcom.

Courtesy of Fremantle

The show is inspired by the Greek myth – where Pandora, the first mortal woman on Earth, was given a sealed box by the gods. “We have Pandora’s Box at the center of a game with 12 contestants, who are told, ‘Do not open the box.’ If the box remains closed, there’s a big prize fund. However, there are lots of temptations to open the box,” he explains.

He adds, “Two of the players are cursed in each episode; they discover that they’ve been cursed, and that means their busts have been lowered into the box. Whichever two players are in the box at the end of the episode are going to fight in a duel to stay in the competition. So, you don’t want to be in the box.”

The show has the “look of the world of Greek mythology,” Llinares says.

“Knockout Champs,” which comes from Dutch digital label De Stroom and is produced with Blue Circle, features a mix of content creators from the digital world and comedians. The show, which was originally created for YouTube and established a substantial following there, has now been produced for Dutch streamer NPO Start.

Andrew Llinares, Fremantle’s director of global entertainment.

Courtesy of Fremantle

“It’s a comedy show in rounds where two teams are trying to make the other team laugh against their will. You score points by making your opponents laugh,” Llinares says.

“Knockout Champs” was created with Supergaande, a group of genuine friends comparable to groups like Sidemen and Beta Squad. It’s boundary-pushing comedy that speaks to a young, diverse generation by staying true to the culture and comedy their in-built fan bases live for.

“We all know YouTube is getting lots of young eyeballs right now, and it can be a struggle to get young eyeballs to traditional television. But what happened was that the young audience absolutely came over to watch the show. They fell in love with the content that they were watching on YouTube, and they followed it to NPO Start,” Llinares says.

“The show was made very much in the same style as the YouTube content. Sometimes when something makes that transition and is made for ‘real TV’ it would potentially be made in a different style, and maybe cleaned up and polished, and jokes that are edgy might be edited out because they’re too edgy.

“There was a very real desire to keep the show exactly the same, so it has the same spirit, the same kind of language, the same edginess to it. What that meant was that the young audience that watched the show felt they were watching something incredibly authentic.

“It’s really fun, and there’s an edge to it, which is the core to its success. It hasn’t allowed itself to be sanitized for regular TV.”

The show’s success with younger audiences has vindicated the approach. “We shouldn’t give up on young people just because it’s harder to reach them. Young people consume content probably more than anybody else on the planet, and I still want our formats to speak to young people. I want young people to be excited by our formats,” Llinares says.

Music artist, YouTuber and boxer KSI has become a judge on “Britain’s Got Talent.”

Courtesy of Fremantle

“Knockout Champs” held the top spot for four weeks on NPO Start. In the same timeframe, on social media it exploded with 50 million plus views in just four weeks. It ranks as NPO Start’s third most-watched title so far this year. The show’s core audience is young men (78% of the audience are 16 to 34 year old men).

Fremantle happily embraces both traditional television and the digital world, Llinares says. “My take is that the world of entertainment is just getting broader, and there is a space for all of it, to interact with it, with all the different pieces of it. It’s a little like how KSI coming in as a judge on ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ speaks to that kind of melding of those worlds. I don’t think they’re separate anymore. I think that it’s all mainstream, and there’s a way of bringing it together.”

“The Secret DNA of Us” is a “warm hug of a show,” Llinares says. It was created by Fremantle label Naked in the U.K., and the first version of it was produced by Eureka in Australia for SBS. “Each episode, we take an entire town and test their DNA, and from that we find out what the common connections between people in the town are. We also find some really interesting individual stories from that DNA. So you get this amazing sense of community, this amazing sense of people in a community finding out that they’re linked in all sorts of ways. They might share a similar story. They might even be related. And then you’ll get those people that we really highlight in the show, who find out remarkable things about themselves.

“The Secret DNA of Us” is like “a warm hug,” Andrew Llinares says.

Courtesy of SBS

“So it’s a warm hug is a good way of describing it, because it’s one of those shows that speaks to all of us, wanting to know who we are and where we’re from. It can be a really joyful show, it can be a funny show, but it can be a very emotional show as well.”

For a show to be a success, it needs to feel culturally relevant, Llinares observes. “For something to take off and go beyond being a TV show, that becomes something that people talk about in society, it absolutely does have to touch the moment, and speak to the culture of the moment.”

Reviewing his three headliners at Mipcom, Llinares says, “I think they all speak to very different needs of the market, and they also speak to different audiences. They all tick very different boxes.”

Some of Fremantle’s evergreen formats have either celebrated or are about to reach major milestones. In the summer, “America’s Got Talent” started its 20th series, and next year Fremantle celebrates 70 years of “The Price Is Right,” 50 years of “Family Feud” and 25 years of “Idol.”

Llinares is well-qualified to comment on the success of such globe-trotting formats. He was the original showrunner on “The X Factor” and “Got Talent” when they first launched in the U.K. in 2004 and 2007, respectively. Since 2011, while living and working in the U.S., he was an EP and showrunner for the U.S. version of “The X Factor,” before becoming EP and showrunner on “Dancing With the Stars” in 2018.

What’s the secret to their continued success? “With great shows and keeping them on air for many years that core DNA of the show is so, so important,” Llinares says.

“What’s wonderful about ‘Got Talent’ is that it’s been around for 20 years now, and it’s continued to grow in terms of the types of talents on the show and the scale of the show, but the DNA of the show has remained the same, which is taking people and celebrating their extraordinary talents and the amazing stories that go along with that.

“It’s an amazing fairytale of a show. When you boil it down, it’s about taking people and absolutely celebrating the best version of them and I think that central core DNA of the show has never, ever changed.”

The introduction of the Golden Buzzer is one innovation, but it simply enhanced the emotional punch of the show.

“I always think a show like ‘Got Talent’ is an emotional journey. You see that in those audition shows. You have the emotion of someone coming in and wanting to make it through, wanting to be celebrated. And if they get a ‘Yes,’ you get this huge, amazing moment, as we did with someone like Susan Boyle back in the day. The Golden Buzzer just takes that moment and makes it even bigger and makes it more of a spectacle.”

He adds, “I always say we’re in the business of feelings, and so you have to make sure the show makes you feel something. And I think the talent shows in particular make people feel in a very extreme way, like you feel extreme joy or extreme sorrow, depending on whether someone’s doing well or if they have a bad week, and they’re eliminated. As producers, you have to continue to then think, ‘How do I find a new way of creating that emotion?’

“So, really, when it boils down, what’s the success of a great format? It’s the audience being engaged.”

Nowadays, engagement also means social media interaction. “When we’re talking about longevity, we know one of the things that keeps the conversation going around the shows is social video,” Llinares says. “The auditions are wonderful bite-sized stories. They’re perfect for that kind of viewing, they are doing extraordinary numbers.”

“We got a first-window into it with Susan Boyle, and even Paul Potts on the first British series, when YouTube was in its absolute infancy. It had grown in a couple of years between the two of them to the point where it felt like there was a huge global story around Susan Boyle.

“We’re marking an incredible 20 seasons of ‘America’s Got Talent’ – a series that just reached 1.7 billion social video views.

“Fremantle has a long-standing legacy in creating enduring entertainment hits – across decades and platforms – and part of that success comes from constantly evolving with audiences.

“You can see a bridging of the worlds of linear and digital entertainment, whether it’s the breakout success of ‘Knockout Champs’ co-created with digital-first talent; making YouTuber KSI a permanent judge on the next season of ‘Britain’s Got Talent,’ or opening up our IP to make exciting creator-led titles like ‘Sidemen Supermarket Sweep.’”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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