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Jon Stewart Defends Democrats Holding The Line In Government Shutdown
TV & Streaming

Jon Stewart Defends Democrats Holding The Line In Government Shutdown

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Day six of the government shutdown and The Daily Show host Jon Stewart is defending Democrats‘ decision to not capitulate to Senate demands.

“Those bastards! It’s like they don’t even want people to die of generally preventable diseases,” he quipped. “I wonder what this seemingly reasonable and narrow request will sound like when put through the Fox-o-meter.”

The mandates, which include extending Obamacare subsidies and reversing Medicaid cuts, were described by Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) on Fox Business as “healthcare for illegals, transgender surgery,” with Stewart admonishing that the trans community isn’t a “garnish you add on every talking point like you’re some transgender salt bae.”

Referencing president Donald Trump’s threats to cut Democratic priority programs and make additional federal firings, Stewart said, “So the trap is, if the Democrats shut down the government, Donald Trump takes advantage of the situation and begins to — I don’t know — trim programs Democrats care about, or maybe Donald Trump might let go of some federal workers, or Donald Trump might eliminate funding, only for blue states, or Donald Trump might fucking send in the National Guard but only into blue areas. In other words, to continue doing all this shit Trump has not needed any provocation or pretense or reason to already have been doing. Lo these past, God, it feels like fucking 80 years.”

Stewart then addressed a clip of Speaker of the House Mike Johnson, who told reporters the POTUS “takes no pleasure” in the government shutdown.

“The president takes no pleasure in this? The president takes only pleasure,” Stewart maintained. “Given the president’s vascular condition, this might be the only thing keeping him hard, I swear to you. His catchphrase was literally, ‘You’re fired.’ His only reason for getting up in the morning is vengeance.”

The political comic continued, lobbing a punch at ICE: “Suddenly, a small ask for people’s preservation of healthcare is a Molotov cocktail. Because, apparently, Republicans won’t be satisfied with 99.8% domination, they must have it all. ICE went from deporting the worst-of-the-worst to throwing grandmothers onto linoleum and zip-tying American children, and everyone’s just supposed to be cool with the new masked, incredibly well-funded paramilitary group.”

He added, referencing Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem being blocked from entering a building in Illinois to use the bathroom: “And Democrats are just reduced to petty gestures of restroom resistance.”

Stewart concluded, “Look, I’ve given Democrats an enormous amount of shit for their poor leadership: lack of specific and actionable plans, terrible messaging, abysmal wordplay. Did I mention poor leadership? But standing up for 75 million Americans in this moment to defend the rights of people to go into a little less medical debt seems like the least they can fucking do.”

Watch the episode below:

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Alistair Petrie on 'Sex Education,' 'Hamlet' and Playing the Villain
TV & Streaming

Alistair Petrie on ‘Sex Education,’ ‘Hamlet’ and Playing the Villain

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Alistair Petrie is no stranger to villains. The British star has played some of television’s most notorious, especially as the stone-faced, unfeeling headteacher Mr. Groff in smash hit series Sex Education, which saw his icy glare pierce through screens in over 55 million households worldwide across its four seasons.

But as hardcore fans of Netflix’s sex-positive teen dramedy might remember, Michael Groff’s redemption arc was undeniably one of the show’s more moving plot points. Petrie’s character, once practically vibrating with resentment and shame, learns to shed his steely exterior and make amends with his son Adam (Connor Swindells), with whom he had a fraught relationship. It’s an ending only made possible by the work of Petrie who, unlike the men he often portrays, is attentive, warm and softened by a palpable adoration of the craft.

“I think the villainous roles are hugely fun to play, but a lot of a lot of them can be underwritten from time to time,” confesses Petrie, also known for roles in Star Wars spinoff Andor and the BBC’s Sherlock. “The hero’s journey needs to be figured out and the villains can sometimes [fall] by the wayside. That’s what I find so entertaining when I read them — certainly the ones I take on — because you think: ‘Who is the human being? Where’s the villainy come from?’ It doesn’t just appear,” he continues to The Hollywood Reporter over Zoom in late September. “And in that sense, you’re being asked to elevate the material from where it was originally conceived. Every good story needs a villain, and how do you fulfill that? You try and find the human being within it.”

It’s this search for humanity that makes Petrie the perfect fit for theater’s biggest baddie: King Claudius, uncle to Shakespeare’s Prince Hamlet. The 55-year-old leads a mighty ensemble cast currently performing at the National’s Lyttelton Theatre until November, with Life of Pi‘s Hiran Abeysekera embodying our protagonist with a mischievous sense of frenzy through Robert Hastie’s sharp, contemporary take on the classic.

“What I love about playing Claudius on stage is that he has such main character energy,” says Petrie about the king-slayer, whose act of fratricide in a bid for the Danish throne sends his nephew spiraling. “When the curtain goes up, Claudius firmly believes that he’s in a play called Claudius. He’s not in a play called Hamlet. This is his moment.”

Alistair Petrie, above left, plays King Claudius of Denmark in Robert Hastie’s Hamlet at the National Theatre.

Sam Taylor

It’s something that Petrie finds brilliantly inspiring on the stage, a place he describes as “an amazing actor’s medium, whereas film and television are much more of a director’s medium.” Hamlet marks his return to theater after 11 years, and the Brit casts his mind back to a stint in Declan Donnellan’s West End production of Shakespeare in Love, in which he played Lord Wessex.

It’s not an experience he thinks back on entirely fondly, as Petrie found himself pulled between the painstaking demands of theater and family life. “I’m certainly not frightened of hard work — I revel in it — but I value my other real-life roles as a partner and a husband and a father,” he explains. “I blithely thought that you can live slightly out of London and still commute in and quickly do a West End Show in front of an audience and then just pop home and carry on as normal. But you can’t. It requires extraordinary reserves of energy, really, and something had to give.”

Petrie, married to actress Lucy Scott with whom he shares three sons, also admittedly found himself a little bogged down by the expectations placed upon the cast in the stage adaptation of the Oscar-winning film Shakespeare in Love (1998). “It was a very big-budget show. It had very grand plans. It was sort of Disney-backed,” he says, “and I think the expectations were so high and that was slightly thrust onto us. … When we finally finished, I had no desire to step on stage again. It wasn’t so much the doing of it. It was more [about] how it collides with your life, and I just wasn’t prepared to give that up.”

With his theatrical mojo rediscovered, Petrie finds himself back in front of a live audience. And after over a decade away, he’s relishing the thrill. “As an actor, I love the sense of being part of of a group, of an ensemble,” he says. “I do think if we search for anything in life, we do look to belong somewhere — I mean, a psychologist could have field day with me,” he jokes, “but I think it’s very much tied into the notion of being brought up as a military kid and moving around a lot. You’re desperate to fit in, and as soon as you find yourself as a part of something, you’re on to the next thing. There’s a certain masochism to being an actor.”

One set that Petrie found himself immediately at home on was the fan-favorite Sex Education, an experience that he continues to feel the ramifications of to this day. “It permeates throughout everything in the most glorious way. Sex Education is a gift — not was a gift. I put it in the present tense,” the actor says about his time as Mr. Groff.

In the early throes of production when fellow cast members Asa Butterfield, Emma Mackey, Ncuti Gatwa, Aimee Lou Wood and Connor Swindells were yet to reach the dizzy heights of stardom, he admits there were concerns about how the show would land with Netflix audiences. “Given the explosion of all the streamers and all the platforms and all the curation that people could do,” says Petrie, “would we find an audience? Or would we be buried in some kind of algorithm, in the bowels of Netflix? And it was just the most glorious reverse,” he smiles about the show, which debuted to critical and audience acclaim. “You couldn’t have predicted how people would receive it, of all age groups and demographics all over the world.”

Sex Education is a part of his life Petrie would never abandon in the face of snobbery, notably because it’s provided him with some of the strongest off-screen relationships of his career. In particular, Petrie is close with his on-screen son and Barbie actor Swindells, and last year officiated his wedding to fellow thespian Amber Anderson.

“I talk to Connor literally every day,” says Petrie. He pauses, recalling his first few days on the Sex Ed set. “I am absolutely a 50-something-year-old man trapped in a 22-year-old person’s body. There’s no question I’m a complete labrador when it comes to working in this industry. And within seconds, I thought, ‘Oh, this is going to be great.’ We were just one happy gang. I couldn’t give a rat’s ass whether I was comfortably nearly double their age — watching them all soar as they are, I look on it with almost a parental pride.” He’s working on a new series with Sex Ed alumn George Robinson, Petrie tells THR, who fans will know as Isaac Goodwin.

From left: Petrie and Connor Swindells as father-son duo Michael and Adam Groff in ‘Sex Education.’

Netflix

But Mr. Groff was a role that nearly escaped him. In 2019, Petrie found himself down to the final two for Prince Philip in another Netflix behemoth: The Crown. The part eventually went to Tobias Menzies, but disappointment was soon eclipsed by a phone call asking him to read for a thrilling new show about the sex lives of eager teens.

“The scripts were obviously so good,” Petrie says about the material crafted by The Crown mastermind Peter Morgan. “I thought, ‘Gosh, this is a character I really want to to investigate. Tobias and I are different, and it was either going to be him or it was going to be me. And he was magnificent — he’s a mate and a wonderful actor — and when I saw it, it made perfect sense to me.” Within an hour of being told Menzies nabbed the role, Petrie got the call about Groff. “Serendipity hovers over my being quite a lot,” he says, “and I will accept that. If serendipity is my God, I’ll take it.”

Another serendipitous development that’s got Petrie excited is the upcoming second season of The Night Manager with Tom Hiddleston, the British spy thriller adapted from John le Carré’s 1993 novel. In the first season, which had us gripped all the way back in 2016, Petrie played Lord Alexander “Sandy” Langbourne, financial director to the cunning Richard Roper (Hugh Laurie).

What was supposed to be a miniseries is now returning on Amazon Prime Video for a hotly anticipated second installment that, at certain points, didn’t involve Petrie at all. “I would get a phone call probably about once a year: ‘We think we’re on,’” says the Briton. “I was like, ‘Great.’ And then I get a phone call about a year later, and it would be like, ‘We are going to do it, but you’re not in it.’ I went, ‘That’s totally fine. All good.’” He remembers phoning up good pal Laurie, who serves as an executive producer on both seasons. Laurie said something to the effect of: “‘If you’re standing on set one day and the camera’s on you and I’m standing behind the camera as an exec producer, then I guess we’re doing it.’”

Eventually, after hours-long conversations about how to “crack” a le Carré-esque story that isn’t entirely based on any of the author’s work, season two of The Night Manager was a go, Petrie included. “Eventually, [writer] David Farr was available,” explains the actor. “I think he sat down and said, ‘OK, this is what I would do’ and presented it. There was a general sense of, ‘Oh, OK, this is a story worth telling.’” He also sings Laurie’s praises: “He’s so wise and brilliant about le Carré’s work. As an exec producer, he’s always going to be creatively involved. I think read it and looked at it amongst everyone else and there was a decision: ‘This is the one. I think this is it.’”

The Night Manager is expected to return to screens imminently. Petrie also says the cast is supposed to be filming a third season next year. “David has delivered a Shakespearean tragedy, I think it’s wonderful,” he teases. “This is just based on what I’ve read, but it’s going to be enormous. We’re supposed to be doing a third one next year and I really hope we do, because the people in it and around it are just wonderful.”

With Shakespeare in Love, Hamlet and now a Shakespeare-adjacent season of The Night Manager ahead, Petrie can’t help but think about the bard’s artistic impact on his career so far. “He wrote about all the great themes that run through our emotional lives,” ponders Petrie. “He wrote about power and love and madness and revenge and mortality and jealousy and the fear of God, and he did it pretty well.”

This time around, with his sons all grown up, Petrie’s got the work-life balance a little more figured out. What remains is sheer pride. “In amongst the crash bang of this industry, we raised three well-adjusted, decent human beings,” he beams. “We’ve managed to figure it out, my wife and I, because we are such a team. So the emotion of doing all this is running beautifully high at the moment.”

Hamlet is on at the National’s Lyttelton Theatre until Nov. 22, 2025.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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7 Coronation Street spoilers next week: Betsy Swain arrested by DI Costello
TV & Streaming

7 Coronation Street spoilers next week: Betsy Swain arrested by DI Costello

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

And when Betsy Swain (Sydney Martin) ends up behind bars, is it all above board on DI Costello’s (Daon Broni) watch?

Elsewhere, Theo Silverton (James Cartwright) is found with another man, as his partner Todd Grimshaw (Gareth Pierce) conceals his cancer fears.

Bethany Platt’s (Lucy Fallon) concern over Hope Dobbs’s (Isabella Flanagan) behaviour leads to a problem with her stoma, while Cassie Plummer (Claire Sweeney) gets right on Tracy Barlow’s (Kate Ford) nerves!

Also, Abi Webster (Sally Carman-Duttine) confronts Kevin Webster (Michael Le Vell) over ruining her fresh start.

Bernie Winter (Jane Hazlegrove) wants to ensure no one else suffers like Asha Alahan (Tanisha Gorey), as Tim Metcalfe (Joe Duttine) makes it clear his troubling past isn’t up for discussion.

Read on for all your Coronation Street spoilers for Monday 13th October – Friday 17th October 2025.

7 Coronation Street spoilers next week

1. Betsy Swain in mystery arrest drama as Carla Connor reveals Becky insecurities

Lisa wonders if Carla trusts her, ITV

Carla tells Lisa she’s sold the Rovers to someone called Ben.

While it sounds as though Carla is unaware of Ben Driscoll’s (Aaron McCusker) connections, we know that he is actually engaged to Eva Price (Catherine Tyldesley).

Eva will be taking charge of the pub with her partner and his mother, Maggie (Pauline McLynn), later this month.

Betsy speaking to concerned Lisa and Becky

Becky panics. ITV

Meanwhile, Carla admits she’s worried about going to Ireland as she doesn’t want to leave Lisa alone with Becky, and Lisa questions if Carla trusts her.

Lisa assures Carla she loves her and has no interest in Becky.

With Carla away, Betsy persuades Becky to model some of her designs for her college project, and as Becky struts around, Lisa can’t help smiling and joining in.

When Betsy films them and uploads it to her socials, though, Becky panics that people will recognise her.

A gloomy shot of Betsy sitting on a bed in a police cell in Coronation Street

Sydney Martin as Betsy Swain. ITV

Betsy later stays out all night, and Kit Green (Jacob Roberts) tells Lisa her daughter has been arrested.

As Betsy sits alone in a cell, tired and confused, Lisa blames Becky’s sudden reappearance for causing Betsy to struggle once more.

Becky is stung, while Betsy is interviewed and told that, according to DI Costello, she damaged a police car, resisted arrest and tried to attack him.

Betsy refuses to comment, while Costello spells out to Becky that she needs to disappear again, or things will be even worse for Betsy.

Has DI Costello set this whole thing up?

2. Theo Silverton cheats as Todd Grimshaw fears bowel cancer results?

Todd with George at the hospital, both wearing suits in Coronation Street

Todd with George at the hospital. ITV

Todd worries about his test results for bowel cancer, and after he tells an alarmed George Shuttleworth (Tony Maudsley) he wants to plan his own funeral, George checks his emails and discovers Todd’s hospital appointment.

Christina Boyd (Amy Robbins) encourages George to support Todd, and Todd is grateful to have him as he heads in to see the doctor.

In the Bistro, Theo and Gary Windass (Mikey North) meet with Pete (Andrew Hayden-Smith) to discuss a potential contract.

Dressing gown clad Pete looking shocked as dishevelled Todd arrives in Coronation Street

Todd is stunned to walk in on Theo and another man. ITV

Spotting Billy Mayhew (Daniel Brocklebank), controlling Theo says he’s worried that Todd’s not telling him something, and Billy squirms.

Billy later dashes outside to take a call from Todd, while Theo masks his fury and orders shots.

The next day, Todd nurses a hangover and heads home to face Theo’s wrath, and apologises for staying at Billy’s while insisting nothing happened.

But as Pete emerges from the bathroom, Todd is reeling. Has Theo cheated?

Theo is remorseless as he accuses Todd of sneaking around, and Todd explains his health scare.

Theo looking towards Todd in Coronation Street

Has Theo strayed? ITV

But when Theo tries to twist the situation and blames Todd, Todd snaps and orders him to pack his bags.

In the Rovers, Glenda Shuttleworth (Jodie Prenger) hosts a Mr & Mrs competition, and as Theo arrives wanting to talk, Todd refuses to engage.

Todd reaches for Glenda’s clipboard with an idea in mind, but what will he do?

And what did the doctor say about his tests?

Coronation Street has been working with Galop on the portrayal of abuse within an LGBTQ+ relationship.

3. Bethany Platt’s stoma splits amid salon drama

Bethany grabbing Hope's bag as Cassie and Audrey watch in Coronation Street

Bethany is convinced Hope is guilty. ITV

Audrey Roberts (Sue Nicholls) offers Bethany some shifts doing nails at the salon.

When Shona Platt (Julia Goulding) gets a call from David Platt (Jack P Shepherd) that he’s stuck in a lift and won’t make the baby scan, Bethany has an idea – will it work?

As the week continues, Bethany is put in charge of Hope, who’s on work experience.

When a client shows them some ‘miracle pills’ that promise strong hair, nails and weight loss, Hope is impressed.

Bethany holding the area where her stoma sits in Coronation Street as Cassie, Hope and Audrey look on in Coronation Street

Bethany realises her stoma has split. ITV

But Bethany warns that these companies are only after money and don’t care about people’s health, referencing her own weight loss surgery as an example.

As the client leaves, she realises her pills are missing, and Bethany accuses Hope, ordering her to empty her bag.

When Hope refuses, Bethany tries to grab her bag, causing her stoma bag to split.

Last year, Bethany had to be fitted with a permanent stoma as a result of complications from the aforementioned operation.

One year on, how will she cope with what happens in the salon?

Anyone affected by Bethany’s story can find support at Colostomy UK. You can also call their 24 hour helpline on 0800 328 4257.

4. Cassie Plummer gets under Tracy Barlow’s feet as Tyrone Dobbs is neglected amid recovery

Tyrone looking distressed as he lays on the floor in Coronation Street

Tyrone is left alone. ITV

Cassie abandons helping Tyrone Dobbs (Alan Halsall), who has spinal injuries, with his exercises to spend time with Steve McDonald (Simon Gregson).

Tracy is fuming to find that the pair have drank Ken Barlow’s (William Roache) last bottle of wine from his first wedding to Deirdre (Anne Kirkbride).

Fiz looking affronted at Cassie in Coronation Street

Fiz and Cassie argue. ITV

Meanwhile, Fiz Dobbs (Jennie McAlpine) heads into town rather than home, and Cassie returns to the house to find Tyrone lying in agony after falling out of his wheelchair.

In the aftermath, Cassie is hurt when Fiz blanks her; but then she learns that Fiz lied about working and has been given the week off to look after Ty.

Tracy looking angry with Cassie in Coronation Street

Tracy schemes to get rid of Cassie. ITV

Tracy grows sick of Cassie lounging around the house, and hits upon an idea after hearing Tyrone talking to Fiz about her favourite band.

So Tracy hands Cassie tickets for a gig and urges her to use them to get back into Fiz’s good books so they can be out of each other’s hair.

Will it work?

Coronation Street is working with Spinal Injuries Association on Tyrone’s story.

5. Abi Webster accuses Kevin Webster of sabotage

Kevin and Abi in Coronation Street

Kevin and Abi in Coronation Street. ITV

Kevin is asked by Abi if he wants to look after Alfie, but when he calls to collect him in an angry and upset mood, Abi changes her mind and asserts that Kev can see Alfie another day instead.

Kevin breaks down in tears, and there’s more trouble ahead when Abi gets a call from a rival garage, learning she didn’t get the job.

Abi barges into the house and accuses Kev of sabotaging her chances, but did he?

6. Bernie Winter is determined to stop abusive Naomi as Asha Alahan isolates herself

Dev sitting across from Asha who has a blanket over her in Coronation Street

Asha snaps at Dev. ITV

Asha returns home from the hospital after trying to take her own life, and as she snaps at Dev, it’s clear her struggles still run deep.

Asha realises she’s overstepped the mark and apologises, insisting she’ll be fine on her own.

Asha sitting alone with a blanket over her in Coronation Street

Asha wants to be left alone. ITV

As Asha curls up on the sofa and blocks out the world, Dev confides his worries in Bernie.

Bernie reckons someone should have a word with Naomi before she pushes anyone else to the brink, but how will they deal with the woman who hurled vile abuse at Asha?

And can Asha begin to heal?

If you need help and support on issues raised within this article, please visit Samaritans, CALM, Rethink Mental Illness and Mind for guidance.

Coronation Street is working with The Ambulance Staff Charity (TASC) on Asha’s story.

7. Tim Metcalfe shuts down abuse trauma dialogue

Tim looking conflicted in Coronation Street

Joe Duttine as Tim Metcalfe. ITV

Tim tells wife Sally Metcalfe (Sally Dynevor) that he won’t be seeing Trisha again and the subject is closed.

But with recent events having exposed Trisha as an abuser who groomed Tim when he was underage, can Tim really put the matter to rest?

For support on Tim’s story, visit NSPCC or call the helpline on 0808 800 5000.

Read more:

Visit our dedicated Coronation Street page for all the latest news, interviews and spoilers.

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

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

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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TV & Streaming

When Is ‘It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown’ Airing on TV in 2025?

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Another Halloween season is upon us, which means that it’s time for all your favorite traditions, including carving jack-o-lanterns, indulging in fun-size candy bars, and, for many families, watching the 1966 classic Peanuts special It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown. But if you’re waiting to catch the show in its classic primetime TV airing, you may be as disappointed as Linus in his pumpkin patch: while the special aired for free on network TV every year 1966 through 2020, a deal with Apple + TV has kept it off the airwaves for the past five years. However, people without Apple+ TV subscriptions can stream the special for free at any time on Saturday, October 18 and Sunday, October 19, 2025.

 

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Student Academy Award Winners 2025: See Full List
TV & Streaming

Student Academy Award Winners 2025: See Full List

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced its student winners from colleges and universities around the world at the 52nd Student Academy Awards ceremony on Monday, October 6, 2025. Gold, Silver and Bronze placements were announced and trophies presented during a ceremony held at the Ziegfeld Ballroom in New York City. 

The Student Academy Awards were established in 1972 to provide a platform for emerging global talent by creating opportunities within the industry to showcase their work. All Student Academy Award-winning films are eligible to compete for the 98th Oscars in the Animated Short Film, Live Action Short Film, or Documentary Short Film categories. The 2025 winners join the ranks of such past Student Academy Award winners as Spike Lee, Robert Zemeckis, Patricia Riggen, Pete Docter, and Patricia Cardoso. Last year, five 2024 Student Academy Award-winning films made the Oscar shortlists. Past winners have gone on to receive 69 Oscar nominations in total, and have won or shared 15 awards.

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - DECEMBER 12: Sam Altman speaks onstage during A Year In TIME at The Plaza Hotel on December 12, 2023 in New York City. (Photo by Mike Coppola/Getty Images for TIME)

This year, the Student Academy Awards competition received 3,127 entries from 988 colleges and universities worldwide. With remarks by Academy CEO Bill Kramer and Academy President Lynette Howell Taylor, the night’s category presenters included Academy Actors Branch Governor Lou Diamond Phillips and filmmakers Craig Brewer, Jon M. Chu and Alex Woo. The 2025 ceremony is available to view on the Oscars YouTube page.

The 2025 Student Academy Award placements are:

Alternative/Experimental

Gold: Xindi Zhang, “The Song of Drifters,” University of Southern California

Silver: Vega Moltke-Leth, “Without Perfection,” University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Bronze: Mati Granica, “flower_gan,” London College of Communication, United Kingdom

Animation

Gold: Tobias Eckerlin, “A Sparrow’s Song,” Film Academy Baden-Württemberg, Germany

Silver: Lucas Ansel, “The 12 Inch Pianist,” Rhode Island School of Design 

Bronze: Sofiia Chuikovska, Loïck du Plessis D’Argentré & Maud Le Bras, “The Shyness of Trees,” Gobelins, France

Documentary

Gold: Tatiana McCabe, “Tides of Life,” University of the West of England Bristol, United Kingdom

Silver: Rebeka Bizubová, “Confession,” Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava, Slovakia

Bronze: Jane Deng, “I Remember,” New York University 

Narrative

Gold: Jan Saczek, “Dad’s Not Home,” Krzysztof Kieślowski Film School, Poland

Silver: Meyer Levinson-Blount, “Butcher’s Stain,” Tel Aviv University, Israel

Bronze: ZEFAN, “Kubrick, Like I Love You,” Columbia University

First-time honors go to the University of Copenhagen, Gobelins, Krzysztof Kieślowski Film School, Academy of Performing Arts in Bratislava, London College of Communication and University of the West of England Bristol.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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Noted Experimental Filmmaker Was 92
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Noted Experimental Filmmaker Was 92

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Ken Jacobs, the pioneering experimental filmmaker noted for incorporating manipulated found footage into a series of films over more than seven decades, died Sunday in Manhattan. He was 92.

His son, filmmaker Azazel Jacobs, noted that Ken’s wife Flo Jacobs had died on June 4: “While the official cause of death was from kidney failure, life without his collaborator and partner since 1960 was unimaginable for so many, especially him.

“He worked on his art every day, completing some final ‘eternalisms’ on the day he went to the hospital,” Azazel Jacobs continued.

Film at Lincoln Center called him “the titan of American experimental cinema.”

Born in Brooklyn, Ken Jacobs got his start in New York’s downtown art scene during the 1960s during the era of Andy Warhol and Allen Ginsberg. After studying painting with Hans Hoffman, he moved into filmmaking. He collaborated with his friend Jack Smith on the notable underground films “Blonde Cobra” and “Little Stabs at Happiness.”

Flo and Ken Jacobs

Courtesy Azazel Jacobs

Jacobs and his late wife Flo founded Millennium Film Workshop in 1966. Ken Jacobs taught in the cinema department of Binghamton University in New York for over three decades.

In 1956, he made his first film “Orchard Street” about the Lower East Side, and many of his later films also “used Manhattan streets, rooftops and dumps as the backdrop for sardonic minidramas of social despair,” his former student, film critic J. Hoberman, wrote in 2013.

His 1969 film “Tom, Tom the Piper’s Son” uses a short film from 1905 as source material to manipulate speed, light and motion. It was admitted to the National Film Registry in 2007. Jacobs explained the film saying, “There’s already so much film. Let’s draw some of it out for a deeper look, toy with it, take it into a new light with inventive and expressive projection. Freud would suggest doing so as a way to look into our minds.”

His later films include 1986’s “Perfect Film” and 1990’s “Opening the Nineteenth Century: 1896.” In 2004, he released “Star Spangled to Death,” a nearly seven-hour compendium of found footage on 20th century American history that he began compiling in 1957.

Jacobs’ films, videos and performances have been exhibited at venues including the Berlin Film Festival, the London Film Festival, the New York Film Festival and the Museum of Modern Art.

His honors include the AFI’s Maya Deren Award, a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation and the New York State Council on the Arts.

In addition to his son, he is survived by a daughter, artist Nisi Ariana.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Emily Deschanel To Star In Indie 'Monkey Bread' From Amelia Brantley
TV & Streaming

Emily Deschanel To Star In Indie ‘Monkey Bread’ From Amelia Brantley

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

EXCLUSIVE: Emily Deschanel (Bones) is set to star opposite Amelia Brantley in Monkey Bread, an indie marking Brantley’s feature directorial debut, which she also scripted.

Exploring the challenges of navigating Los Angeles as a 30-something struggling actor, the film is a family drama following Ruth (Brantley), who, while tightroping the line between dreams coming true and utter disappointment, gets a gig babysitting for one of her idols and comes face to face with the life she thinks she’s always wanted. Deschanel plays a movie star who is trying to juggle family, motherhood and her career.

Others in the cast include Samuel Hunt (Chicago P.D.), Grant Jordan (Howdy, Neighbor!), newcomer Ethan Lichterman, and Keith Kupferer (Ghostlight). Brantley and Brenden Rodriguez are producing, with Hunt, Dan Steinberg, and Robert Massar serving as executive producers. Production is currently underway in Los Angeles and Chicago.

In a statement accompanying the casting announcement, Brantley said, “Working with Emily and this incredible cast has been full of pinch-me moments. I still can’t believe I’m directing and getting to tell a story that is so deeply personal. This film is a love letter to my fellow artists who continue to create and try and hope and push forward. I’m very excited for people to see it.”

Best known for starring opposite David Boreanaz in Fox’s hit procedural Bones, which ran for 12 seasons, Deschanel has also been seen on TNT’s Animal Kingdom, with additional roles in films like My Sister’s Keeper and Cold Mountain. She is repped by Gersh and Principal Entertainment LA.

As an actor, Brantley has been seen on series including Animal Kingdom and The Lincoln Lawyer, among others. She is repped by Metropolitan Talent Agency and Venture Entertainment Partners.

Hunt is repped by GVA Talent Agency; Jordan by Allegory Creative Talent; and Kupferer by Gersh and Fusion Entertainment.

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Cast, Creator Talk Show Secrets, Movie Hopes
TV & Streaming

Cast, Creator Talk Show Secrets, Movie Hopes

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s October, which means only one thing: Gilmore Girls season. But this fall season also brings with it the 25th anniversary of the beloved dramedy.

Not every show stands the test of time, and even fewer can say they’ve become synonymous with an entire season like Gilmore Girls. The series that centers on the strong and unique bond between mother and daughter Lorelai and Rory Gilmore, played by Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel, in the charmingly eccentric small fictional town of Stars Hollow successfully blends a nostalgic and comforting feeling with witty and rapid-fire dialogue.

For many, it goes beyond being only a TV show. “The medicinal and therapeutic effects this show has on people are extraordinary and it’s deep. I don’t know if Amy [Sherman-Palladino, creator] wants to hear it, but this show saves people, and it saves them on a daily basis,” Scott Patterson, who starred as diner owner Luke, who had a soft heart underneath his gruff exterior, for the show’s entire run, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It soothes, heals and gives people hope there are better times ahead, that there were better times in the past and that we can have a better time in the present.”

The series premiered on The WB on Oct. 5, 2000, and ran for seven seasons (the last one on The CW after The WB and UPN merged). But it wasn’t until 2014 that Gilmore Girls found a second life thanks to Netflix acquiring the streaming rights. The series not only skyrocketed in popularity at the time, especially during the fall, but led to the 2016 miniseries Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life, which reunited most of the cast.

While the dramedy proved to be a success over time, Sherman-Palladino also remembers having to fight for the show early on, as they had fewer resources compared to their competition like top shows Friends, Survivor, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and American Idol. She even recalls one of the biggest fights she had with Warner Bros. during season one — over an Oscar Levant reference in the script.

“They were desperate for me to take it out and I said, ‘Why?’ They’re like, ‘Nobody knows who Oscar Levant is.’ I thought, there’s four gay kids in Iowa right now who know who Oscar Levant is (laughs), and it’s for those four kids,” Sherman-Palladino tells THR. “And in the next page, there’s a Justin Timberlake thing for everyone who doesn’t know who Oscar Levant is.”

Overall, she attributes the show’s triumph to “alchemy, alchemy, alchemy, because we were really left alone to build our worlds and our characters. [Warner Bros.] gave up on even trying to give us notes on the scripts. They didn’t understand the scripts. It wasn’t soapy enough for them. There were too many pop culture references they didn’t understand. At every turn, we were not necessarily what they wanted or what they thought they needed, but it was a different time. Today, a Gilmore Girls would not get on the air. No way, no how.”

But thankfully, Gilmore Girls released at just the right time. And now, to mark the show’s 25th anniversary, the cast and creator reflect on the beloved series for The Hollywood Reporter, below.

“I Wrote a Script That Was Unusual for [Warner Bros.]”

Creator Amy Sherman-Palladino and stars Lauren Graham, Kelly Bishop and Scott Patterson look back at how the show and quirky fictional town of Stars Hollow first came to be, as well as their initial thoughts when they read the first scripts.

AMY SHERMAN-PALLADINO (CREATOR) The show was a random pitch. I was pitching to The WB, and I was pitching a bunch of other stories, and they were bored out of their minds and didn’t seem to care about anything I was saying. As a last-ditch thing, I said, “I’ve got this sort of thing that’s like a mother and daughter, and they’re more like friends than mother-daughter,” and they’re like, “Oh, we’ll buy that one.” 

Right after I sold it, my husband [Dan Sherman-Palladino, executive producer/writer/director] and I went on a trip to Hartford, Connecticut, because we were going to go to Mark Twain’s house to get some ideas. We went through Washington Depot, Connecticut, and stayed at an inn called the Mayflower Inn. It was leafing season; it was bucolic and beautiful in October, the leaves were changing and there were signs up for pumpkin patches and hay rides. And it was like, what the fuck? I come from California. There’s no pumpkin patches and hay rides here. It felt like the whole thing was straight out of central casting. 

Lauren Graham and Alexis Bledel in Gilmore Girls season one.

Everett Collection

I wrote a script that was unusual for [Warner Bros.]. It was very long because I knew the pace was going to be very fast. When a page is a minute a page, by the time Gilmore Girls really got up to speed and in its true form, we were less than 30 seconds a page. We needed twice as many pages to get the same amount of product — but at the time that I did the pilot, nobody believed me. 

LAUREN GRAHAM (“LORELAI GILMORE”) At the time, my taste of what I liked and what I felt a connection to was in between [comedy and drama]. So the first thing I responded to when I read this was the language. It was so funny and different and warm and unique. I felt a real connection to the character [Lorelai]. I remember at the time, the first thing people would say to me is, “But she’s a mom and you’re still playing the girlfriend or whatever,” and I just didn’t think of that as any kind of barrier. I just thought it’s such a great character. 

KELLY BISHOP (“EMILY GILMORE”) When I read that first [script], it’s the first line out of my character Emily’s mouth when she opens the door and her daughter’s standing there and she said, “Is it Christmas already?” I went, “There it is.” That just explained the whole relationship right there, how often they saw each other, and then of course, [Edward Herrmann], my husband [Richard], comes in and when he sees her, he says, “Is it Easter already?” It was just so funny and smart, really a very intelligent show.

SCOTT PATTERSON (“LUKE DANES”) Reading the pilot, you see all of these very light, airy, ethereal characters who are extremely funny and there are tons of jokes in there, but it needed a counterweight. Emily’s character provided that, then Richard to a certain extent and Luke. So it was an opportunity to really be an anchor character, where everybody bounced off of him. There is a lot of humor that can be gleaned, and that’s where I live on the comedy side. So it was almost as if it was written for me. 

“I Don’t Want to Meet Somebody That I Can’t Have”

When it came to casting the show, Sherman-Palladino recalls it being challenging because she knew there was only one specific person meant for each role, and she was willing to wait as long as she needed to find them.

SHERMAN-PALLADINO When we were reading for Emily’s [role], I kept saying, “No.” They’re like, “Well she could come back,” and I just kept saying, “No.” I was driving everybody crazy. I said, “Look, I’ll know her when she walks in,” and when Kelly Bishop walked in, I’m like, “OK, that’s Emily.”

Alexis [Bledel, “Rory Gilmore”] was the wild card because she had never done anything before. She was sick as a dog when she came in to audition. She didn’t want to be there, but she just had a quality about her. The WB at that time had a lot of fucking going on [in shows] — there was a lot of young girls who were into boys, and I wanted the girl who wasn’t into boys. I needed the quality of somebody who was into books and had her friends and liked her life and was happy with her life, and didn’t necessarily want to be a popular girl. She felt like she was cool with everything and that’s a hard quality to find in Hollywood. 

Alexis Bledel, Edward Herrmann and Kelly Bishop in season five.

So I had Kelly and Alexis, and I couldn’t find her mother. Lauren [Graham] was initially on vacation and the casting director was talking about her, but she was on another show. I kept saying, “I don’t want to meet somebody I can’t have because if I fall in love with her and then I can’t have her, I will kill myself and you will all have committed murder.” So I fought it and fought it, and then we couldn’t find Lorelai, so finally I was like, “All right, fine. You win.” She came back from vacation, walked in the door; she read three words, and I’m like, “Well, that’s it, we’re done.”

We were unimportant at the time [compared to other WB shows], so we had a lot of leeway. We’d put these little parts on and if the character scored, we’d bring them back. Sean Gunn [who played Kirk] came in the first time and he was funny. We were like, “Let’s bring him back for every time we had another part for him,” and then finally we just went to them and said, “We need Sean Gunn to be a regular because he’s so funny. We can’t lose him to another show.” They let us do that for Liza [Weil, who played Paris], for Milo [Ventimiglia, who played Jess]. I hadn’t even had a part written for Milo. We did the same thing with Matt Czuchry [who played Logan], because I knew I wanted [Rory] to have a real college boyfriend and I wanted there to be similarities to her dad and from that world. 

Matt Czuchry, Bledel and David Sutcliffe in season six.

Everett Collection

“We Were All in a Panic Constantly, So There Was No Cozy Vibe at All”

Though Gilmore Girls was known for its comforting vibe onscreen, it was quite the opposite on set, as the cast and crew had so little time to shoot entire seasons. But despite how fast-paced the show moved, they all remember plenty of special moments and memories made throughout filming.

SHERMAN-PALLADINO We were all in a panic constantly, so there was no cozy vibe at all. It was very frantic. We were shooting 80 pages in eight days, so 10 pages a day with no hiatuses and no breaks, and we were doing 22 episodes. I don’t know how we did it. We had so little time and so little money that by Christmas, when I think we would get a week off, Lauren and Alexis’ eyes were so huge for lack of sleep and from the constant workload that I kind of thought they were going to kill me. We were doing a different kind of show with a massive amount of dialogue, with a massive amount of walk and talks without coverage, and it was just hard. 

We were not a show that could go back and reshoot anything. If we didn’t get it, we didn’t get it. There was no fixing it later. If the sun was going down on one location day and we didn’t have work in the camera, we weren’t getting the work in the camera. It was just the kind of show it was, very high stress all the time. 

Lauren Graham, Melissa McCarthy and Bledel in season one.

Everett Collection

GRAHAM The writing on this show is like music to me. You wouldn’t sing a ballad super speedy and you wouldn’t sing a pop song super slowly. I was a kid who recited, for whatever reason, I’m sure to the horror of my father’s dinner parties, but I memorized “Casey at the Bat” and “Jabberwocky”; that was just fun for me. I did a fair amount of theater and the language [of Gilmore Girls] has a theatrical quality; you can feel it, you can hear it when you miss a word or when something’s out of step, because, even though it’s this bubbly stream of consciousness, it’s written with an incredible amount of precision. I think it just spoke to what I gravitated towards already. 

BISHOP The one [episode] that was so out of character for Emily was the one I call “the Tennessee Williams episode” for my character, when she finds out that her husband’s mother has died and, going through her things, she comes across a letter that her mother-in-law had written to her husband the night before the wedding, begging him not to marry me. That just set me off in some other place where suddenly I’m wearing caftans and drinking in the day, and that’s why I called it that, because it was so out of character for Emily. She completely lost it and I enjoyed that one so much because it was so bizarre. 

GRAHAM I have a lot of memories being up late with Kelly Bishop in a scene in their house, and Kelly coming from the theater and sharing stories of how they started out. Alexis and I, when we would get kind of loopy, would sing and sometimes we would sing the Minnie Riperton song, “Lovin’ You.” I don’t know why; we would just sort of break into song to keep ourselves awake. We would get really punchy and silly. It was always great to be on that backlot. That was when there weren’t tours yet, so I’d ride my bike back and forth between sets and my trailer, and we had those late nights like West Wing had — it was a really fun time in television. 

Graham and Kelly Bishop in season four.

Everett Collection

PATTERSON There was a scene outside Luke’s Diner at night. I’m wearing a black leather jacket. I don’t have the hat on, we’d gone on a date and Lorelai breaks down. It’s a very brief scene where I have to comfort her. I remember after we shot it, especially the close-up because it requires Lauren to emote on a very deep level, and it’s very difficult and specific and scary. It doesn’t matter how talented you are or how easily you wear your heart on your sleeve, you’re doing this in front of 30 people and it’s midnight and cold and everybody’s tired. I just remember after we finished, I held her head and wrapped her in my arms a little bit — none of that was scripted. Of course, you’re going to do that as a supportive potential boyfriend or somebody who really cares about somebody — and she whispered in my ear, “Thank you so much for being such a great scene partner.” It was a very sweet moment that I’ll always treasure because that’s the soul of acting; it’s really just supporting each other. 

“It Was Always Going to Be Complicated, and That Is the Best Kind of Relationship”

In a small town like Stars Hollow, the relationships and dynamics between characters, including romantic and platonic ones, are really highlighted. And that’s why the cast and creator were very specific about how they all played out throughout the seasons.

SHERMAN-PALLADINO When I pitch a show, I pitch it with five seasons in mind. I always knew where I wanted the show to end in terms of where the girls were to each other and where they were in their lives. With Lorelai’s relationship, I always knew Christopher [David Sutcliffe] was going to be in and out and a person she couldn’t rely on. I did not put Luke in to be her love interest. I just put him in because I liked the character and they worked well together. It was fun to see her with a guy not as a romance, and we were actually really nervous about the romance because that can fuck everything up, but we waited long enough and there was enough history there. The great thing about that romance was they were both such stubborn people and so stuck in their own way of living, because they had crafted their lives without an extra person there; their relationship was never going to be easy, and that is the best kind of relationship. You want to see people working through their shit with other people. 

PATTERSON Story-wise, not up to me [on whether Lorelai and Luke are endgame], but ultimately, maybe I did have something to do with it because I really did feel a certain way and I acted upon those feelings. If there’s a chemistry between two people, the more you try to mask it, the more powerful it becomes, the more you express it, the more the fans are disappointed because it’s too much too soon. The brilliance of it was dragging it out for four seasons because it was apparent right away, and I felt it the very first time we rehearsed that very first scene in the diner in the pilot. I liked her as a person and then as an actor, [and] you can only hope you get somebody who’s going to hit the ball over the net with as much velocity as you want them to, and there she was. 

Graham and Scott Patterson in season five.

Everett Collection

GRAHAM We were truly under the radar then. Those teams [Luke vs. Christopher] evolved later in the rewatching and in the reruns. We’re that rare show who’s gained more people, [and] I don’t know that I felt like it was up to me to say anything [back then]. I figured [Luke and Lorelai] would ultimately get together, but it became more of a team sport later on (laughs). 

BISHOP There seems to have been a little competition ongoing about your favorite person to be with Rory. I didn’t realize it was a little battle with the fans, but I’d always said Logan. I thought they were all really good, but the Logan character, and Matt Czuchry too, I just enjoyed his work so much, that it seems like the obvious thing. Then later, I said to someone I hadn’t really put it together, but that of course that’s who Emily would have wanted. He came from a very good family, so that would have been a logical thing. But there was something about the way [Matt] delivered his lines when he was with Rory that was just very appealing to me. 

GRAHAM Lorelai-Emily is almost like the Lorelai-Luke [dynamic], but even more contentious. They really don’t speak the same language, but there’s a lot of love in there and a lot of each one trying to be seen by the other. Except for that one season where we were in a fight, the Lorelai-Rory [dynamic] is just pure fun. It’s joyous, like all the inside jokes you share with your best friend. It was a relationship that had very little tension. And it’s a nod to the writing that it was fun enough that you really didn’t need them to be having an issue. You wanted them to be in on things together. I think everybody relates to going to their childhood home and feeling like a kid once they walk in the door no matter how old you are. You go back to whatever the dynamic was that you had when you were living there. 

PATTERSON I do particularly like that one scene when it was [Rory’s] birthday and [Luke] made her a cake and had balloons and [said], “Go sit over there,” kind of gruffly. But you have to walk a fine line; you can never pop at Rory or get angry at her unless it’s an extreme situation. But it was an opportunity to bounce off these characters in different ways. The Kirk dynamic is different than the Rory dynamic, which is different than the Lane [Keiko Agena] dynamic and much different than the Paris dynamic. It’s the beauty yet again of a creator drawing up distinctive voices. 

Keiko Agena and Alexis Bledel in season seven.

Everett Collection

“We Had a Sense That We Were Doing Something Special” 

The show actually wasn’t an instant cult classic, but rather slowly grew in popularity and expanded its fanbase. Then Gilmore Girls took on a life of its own once Netflix acquired the streaming rights in 2014, becoming a fall staple as it typically sees a streaming boost during that time of year.

SHERMAN-PALLADINO We had a sense we were doing something special even if only we knew it, so then you have to keep that bar high. My actors were so good. Lauren is so good that my fears of sending a script that wasn’t as good enough was very deep. Lauren would come in to block a scene at 7 in the morning, go to the makeup trailer, and she didn’t know her dialogue for the day; and she would learn 10 pages of dialogue in the time she had hair done. I don’t know how she did it. I don’t think she’s human because that’s impossible, but she did it. Then she came and performed and acted, and she elevated everything to a crazy level.

Liza Weil and Alexis Bledel in season two.

Everett Collection

GRAHAM There is probably some connection to it being the start of the school year and whether you were a teen watching or if you are now. There’s something fun and nostalgic about the back-to-school feeling. I remember when we did early press upfronts, someone saying the town is a character and the seasons are characters. I didn’t really understand what they meant, but I think part of what people fall in love with is this idyllic small town and the way they celebrate the seasons with the Heydale Maize or with various festivals. There’s such a craving for those kind of celebrations and community, and just enjoying simple sort of elements of being part of a small town. 

 “The Cliffhanger Was Intentional”

Nearly a decade after the original show wrapped in 2017, the majority of the cast reunited for the 2016 four-part miniseries, Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life. Sherman-Palladino recalls how they made it happen with everyone’s busy schedules and why she ended it on a cliffhanger, while the cast reveals if they’re open to returning to Stars Hollow again in the future.

SHERMAN-PALLADINO We all had a tiny sliver where we were all available. We were just in the right place at the right time, and as far as what I wanted to accomplish, I was not there for season seven and I’ve never watched season seven. I only know what happened because when we were writing the movies, I said to my assistant, “Just tell me, did this happen in season seven because I won’t put it in if it already happened.” But the lucky thing was the major plot points of where I wanted the two girls to land for the series, they hadn’t touched. I was like, “Great, I can now go in and end the show the way I want.”

The cliffhanger was intentional because the story was about history repeating itself and about mothers and daughters. It really to me was much less about who the boy was, but more about what the circumstance was. My thing was: Always focus on what the girls are doing, and what’s the story between the mother and the daughter because that’s what the show is. We have wonderful boys and all the romances were wonderful. I know people are very invested in them, and all the boys are extremely handsome and delightful to stare at, but honestly, the show is about the girls. If neither one of them had a boyfriend in six years, it still would have been fine. In my mind, I know who the father was and I know what the baby was, but that stays in my mind. 

Bishop, Graham and Bledel in Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life.

Everett Collection

BISHOP [Years before the minseries], I would have said that Emily and Richard would be pretty much exactly in the same place, but I said he’s not here now [as Herrmann died in 2014], so Emily is a widow. That’s a completely different life. Then when we ended up doing [the miniseries], it was incredible to be able to revisit that. We all miss [Herrmann] so much. He was so good to work with, and he and I became friends. I remember going on the set in the Gilmore living room and looking at that big picture over the fireplace. We were all there and I said, “Ed, I hope you’re with us. I hope you’re watching us and hanging around here. Maybe you can let us know?” All the lights went out and then they all come back on. I said, “OK, you’re here! Great!” In a way, sad as it is, it gave my character a lot of information and actually a very good storyline, where many of the other people were pretty much close to the same. 

PATTERSON We just drank it up [getting to reunite for the minseries] because when [the original show] ended in 2007, we were all scattered to the four corners of the earth. I was on a movie set in Toronto when I got a call from my manager saying it was all over, and other people found out in similar ways. And nobody got closure. We didn’t get to say goodbye. So there was no real ending and this was a way to do it right, if in fact it was going to be the last one, which I don’t think it will be. 

GRAHAM I’m always open to [returning and reprising Lorelai]. There’s no reason why I wouldn’t be. Of course, you always want to give people what they want and also make sure you’re honoring the legacy and not doing anything to mess it up. I’ve always said a Christmas movie seems like a way to revisit the characters. That wouldn’t have to be a full series and I think would make sense for dressing up the town and having a holiday-themed gathering. So that’s what I’ve been saying, but I’m not in charge. 

BISHOP I would be open to it, but it would require the main players there again: Lauren, Alexis and certainly Amy. I’m also wondering if it would be better as a movie, rather than trying to do four more episodes or something like that. 

Scott Patterson and Lauren Graham in ‘Gilmore Girls’ season one.

Everett Collection

PATTERSON It’s the great role of my life. It doesn’t matter what I do the rest of my career, nothing’s gonna match that. I know it, fans know it, I embrace it, and it’s a miracle that lightning ever struck once, right? And when it does, man, grab it, cause it ain’t gonna happen again. I’m just very grateful. 

[Myself and WB] formed some kind of loose partnership where on the holidays they were going to rebuild Stars Hollow and call it “Holidays Made Here,” and bring in snow and giant Christmas tree and do lightings and set up Doose’s sweet shop and Doose’s market, Luke’s Diner and Kim’s Antiques and the Dragonfly and Lorelai’s house and Sookie’s house and all. And so they start doing that [and] it’s just turned into this massive annual event in a very short period of time [at the Warner Bros. lot]. And I will tell you that this year, it’s going to be even bigger and better than it’s ever been, if you can imagine. 

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Where was Frauds filmed? Location guide for ITV drama
TV & Streaming

Jodie Whittaker and Suranne Jones on their ‘fresh’ new ITV thriller

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

If you’re over 55 and want to access the value built up in your home, equity release might be just the thing you need to turn your retirement plans into reality. Each year thousands of homeowners access tax-free cash that’s tied up in their property, and one of the best parts – you don’t need to sell your home to get it!

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in Ballard
TV & Streaming

Cast, Plot, Premiere Date, and More Details

by jummy84 October 6, 2025
written by jummy84

Looks like fans of Ballard won’t be left in the lurch after Season 1’s bombshell cliffhanger: The detective drama has officially been renewed.

On Monday, October 6, Prime Video announced that Ballard will return for a second season. Starring Maggie Q as Detective Renée Ballard and based on Michael Connelly‘s best-selling novels, the hit series has reached audiences in more than 240 countries and territories worldwide.

“We’re so grateful to have the chance to continue Ballard’s story. It’s a pleasure to dive deeper into these characters and this world, and seeing audiences resonate with their stories is incredibly rewarding, said Michael Alaimo and Kendall Sherwood, Ballard co-showrunners and executive producers. “We get to work with such a talented, dedicated team who bring this universe to life – and we’re thrilled to be able to continue doing just that. Can’t wait for everyone to see what we’ve cooked up!”

Here is everything we know so far about Season 2 of the hit Prime Video show.

Patrick Wymore/Prime

What is Ballard about?

A spinoff from Bosch: Legacy, the first season of Ballard follows Renée Ballard (Maggie Q), a former homicide detective who’s reassigned to run a tiny, underfunded cold case unit composed largely of volunteers and reserve officers after speaking out against her sexual assault and being punished for her efforts. Soon, Ballard and her team uncover a serial killer operating in the shadows of Los Angeles. As Ballard and her crew dig deeper, they encounter corruption and cover-ups within the LAPD itself.

How did Ballard Season 1 end?

In the finale, the season ended on a cliffhanger: Ballard’s attacker, Detective Robert Olivas (Ricardo Chavira), was found dead under unclear circumstances, and Ballard, despite being hailed as a hero for her work on closing the high-profile cold case, was hauled away by police as their top suspect.

Executive producer and author of the Ballard novels Michael Connelly stated: “It’s a great privilege to have my characters brought to life on screen season after season, and it’s thanks to the fans continuing to tune in that we’re able to do so. I’m especially grateful to Maggie Q for embodying Renee so perfectly, honoring the character as we take her into the next stage of her journey.”

John Carroll Lynch (Thomas Laffont) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) inBallard

John Carroll Lynch (Thomas Laffont) and Maggie Q (Renée Ballard) in BALLARD. Tyler Golden/Prime Video

Who stars in Ballard?

Maggie Q continues to portray the role of Detective Renée Ballard, who heads the cold case division of the LAPD. The character is also a recurring figure in Michael Connelly’s novels, including The Dark Hours, Desert Star, and The Waiting.

The show draws on the novels for her character and backstory as it creates a complicated portrait of the detective.

In addition to Q, the cast includes Courtney Taylor as Samira Parker, a former officer who returns to the force at Ballard’s request. Also on board is John Carroll Lynch as Thomas Laffont, a retired former police partner who returns to help Ballard run the cold case department.

Rounding out the cast is Rebecca Field as Colleen Hatteras, an eccentric volunteer who believes her “intuition” could help solve cases, Victoria Moroles as Martina Castro, a sharp legal intern who is eager to prove her worth, and Amy Hill as Ballard’s grandmother Tutu.

When will Season 2 premiere?

That is unknown at the time, but please check back for updates.

Is there a trailer?

Not yet! But please check back.

Ballard, Season 2, TBA, Prime Video

October 6, 2025 0 comments
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