celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » TV & Streaming » Page 97
Category:

TV & Streaming

Chelsea v Liverpool Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Chelsea v Liverpool Premier League TV channel, live stream, kick-off time

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Arne Slot will be desperate to see his side get back to stop the slide and get back on track ahead of the international break.

The Blues head into the game on the back of consecutive Premier League defeats but battled for a midweek win against Benfica in the Champions League.

They are still without talisman Cole Palmer due to injury, though the good news is that Joao Pedro will be available despite getting a red card against the Portuguese side.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Chelsea v Liverpool on TV and online.

Read more football features: Best players in the world | Best players of all time | Live football on TV today

When is Chelsea v Liverpool?

Chelsea v Liverpool will take place on Saturday 4th October 2025.

Check out our live football on TV guide for the latest times and information.

Chelsea v Liverpool kick-off time

Chelsea v Liverpool will kick off at 5:30pm.

What TV channel is Chelsea v Liverpool on?

You can watch the game live on Sky Sports Premier League and Main Event from 5pm.

Sky Sports can be added to any Sky TV package for just £22 per month for all nine sports channels, or you can pick up the complete sports package plus Netflix for £43 per month.

Sky Sports + will feature more than 1,000 EFL games throughout the season and is included as part of Sky Sports packages.

How to live stream Chelsea v Liverpool online

Sky Sports customers can live stream the game via the Sky Go app on a variety of devices including most smartphones and tablets as part of their subscription.

You can also watch the match via NOW with a day membership (£14.99) or month membership (£34.99).

NOW can be streamed through a computer or apps found on most smart TVs, phones and consoles. NOW is also available via TNT Sports.

Listen to Chelsea v Liverpool on radio

You can listen to the match on BBC Radio 5 Live.

BBC Radio 5 Live is available on DAB radio, MW 693 kHz, 909 kHz and 990 kHz, or you can tune into the station via most TV packages. You can also listen to Radio 5 Live online via the BBC website or BBC Sounds app.

Advertisement

Chelsea v Liverpool odds

In working partnership with the Radio Times, bet365 has provided the following betting odds for this event:

bet365 odds: Chelsea (9/5) Draw (14/5) Liverpool (13/10)*

Bet Boost: Liverpool to win, Chelsea most cards, Liverpool most corners, Liverpool most shots, Liverpool most shots on target – 18/1 20/1

For all the latest football odds and more, visit bet365 today. Bet £10 & Get £30 in Free Bets for new customers at bet365.

Min deposit requirement. Free Bets are paid as Bet Credits and are available for use upon settlement of bets to value of qualifying deposit. Min odds, bet and payment method exclusions apply. Returns exclude Bet Credits stake. Time limits and T&Cs apply.

*Odds subject to change. 18+. T&Cs apply. GambleAware.org. Note – The bonus code RT365 does not change the offer amount in any way.

Check out more of our coverage or visit our and to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to .

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Liam Payne, Louis Tomlinson, and Zayn Malik
TV & Streaming

Louis Tomlinson, Zayn Malik Reunite for Netflix Docuseries

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

A year after the tragic death of former bandmate Liam Payne, One Direction alumni Louis Tomlinson and Zayn Malik are set to star in a road trip documentary series for Netflix.

In the forthcoming three-part TV show, the title of which is yet to be announced, Tomlinson and Malik will travel across the United States. And during that reunion, they’re expected to discuss their grief around Payne’s death, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

The series will be “a rare look inside the world of two of the most famous — and most private — men on the planet opening up about life, loss, and fatherhood,” according to a synopsis the singers’ representatives offered to the outlet.

Nicola Marsh will direct the series, having previously helped Child Star, Song Exploder, and Stay on Board: The Leo Baker Story. And the series comes from Campfire Studios, the production company behind Unknown Number: The High School Catfish, SmartLess: On the Road, and America’s Sweethearts: The Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders.

One Direction formed on the U.K. reality competition The X Factor in 2010 and went on to become one of the most successful boy bands of all time. Their five studio albums all went Platinum, four out of the five hit No. 1, and they had 29 songs chart on the Billboard Hot 100. Sony Music notes One Direction sold more than 200 million records worldwide and ranks as the first band in Billboard 200 history to have their first four albums reach No. 1.

Malik left the band in 2015, and the group went on indefinite hiatus in 2016.

Payne died on October 16, 2024, in Buenos Aires, Argentina, after falling from a hotel balcony. He was 31 years old.

In an Instagram statement at the time, Malik said he felt “beyond devastated,” as he had “lost a brother” whom he loved and respected dearly. “I hope that wherever you are right now you are good and are at peace and you know how loved you are,” he added.

And in another Instagram tribute, Tomlinson said, “Liam was, in my opinion, the most vital part of One Direction. His experience from a young age, his perfect pitch, his stage presence, his gift for writing. The list goes on. Thank you for shaping us, Liam.”

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Alejandro G. Iñárritu on 'Amores Perros' and His New Tom Cruise Movie
TV & Streaming

Alejandro G. Iñárritu on ‘Amores Perros’ and His New Tom Cruise Movie

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s opening day of Paul Thomas Anderson’s “One Battle After Another,” and Alejandro González Iñárritu is worried about how it will play with audiences. “I just cross my fingers that people go in millions,” he told me. “I hope, because it’s so important.”

We are talking on Zoom, and of course, Iñárritu is rooting for PTA: He’s a fellow auteur who makes expensive original movies with movie stars. (BTW, the $130-million movie opened to $22 million.) For his part, Iñárritu just wrapped principal photography in April on an untitled comedy ensemble led by Tom Cruise and produced by Legendary for Warner Bros.

The Mexican filmmaker is directing his first English-language movie since 2015’s “The Revenant,” which won “One Battle After Another” star Leonardo DiCaprio his first Oscar. The untitled Cruise comedy, shot in 35-millimeter VistaVision by three-time Oscar-winner Emmanuel “Chivo” Lubezki, should come out sometime next fall. The director is in the editing room.

ANEMONE, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, 2025. © Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collection

“We’re going to finish in February, March,” he said. “We still have a long way [in] post-production.”

Even though both Iñárritu and Cruise are powerful, controlling perfectionists on a movie production, “it was the most amazing, unexpected, sweet, gentle relation that I have had on a set,” Iñárritu said. “His manners, his understanding, his passion, and his integrity, and the way he prepares. He loves the process. Filmmaking has been his life for 40 years. I have never seen somebody so devoted. I was happy to share with him that passion. And at the same time, we built an incredible relation of mutual trust. He will surprise the world. People will see a new kind of thing. It was blessed, and not only him, but all the cast: Riz Ahmed, Sandra Hüller, John Goodman, and Jesse Plemons. We had a blast. It was challenging, but it was wild comedy. And we laugh a lot. We have a wild time.”

AMORES PERROS, (aka LOVE'S A BITCH), Director Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, Emilio Echevarría, 2000. (c) Lions Gate Films/ Courtesy: Everett Collection.
Alejandro González Iñárritu and Emilio Echevarría on set of ‘Amores Perros‘©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection

But we are not Zooming to talk about Cruise. This May, to celebrate the 25th anniversary of “Amores Perros,” Iñárritu’s daring triptych debut feature, shot in Mexico City and introducing Gael García Bernal, the director screened the restored 4K version at Cannes to a packed house. The movie holds up: It’s vivid, loud, assaultive, and violent, from the visceral dogfights (no animals were harmed) to the glam model (Goya Toledo) who is forever mutilated in a car crash. A brand-new 5.1 surround sound mix by Jon Taylor at NBCUniversal StudioPost enhances the intensity.

The director hesitated to watch the film at the Cannes Classics showing. He had undergone the painstaking Criterion restoration for the 20th anniversary in 2020 with cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto, but had only watched the film in bits and pieces.

“I hadn’t seen the film complete in 25 years,” he said. “The film was shot in a bleach-bypass process, or silver retain, which is a very corrosive thing, because the silver stays in the negative. So we have to restore a lot of things. [I thought] what young man did that? And all the effort that it took for all of us who did the film, the amount of work, considering the little money we have, and so little time. What I can tell you is that I was impressed by the muscle. It hasn’t become a flaccid film.”

Gael Garcia Bernal, Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu, and Martha Sosa t the
Iñárritu at the Cannes restoration premiere of ‘Amores Perros’ in May 2025Anne Thompson

“Amores Perros” played Cannes 25 years ago, but not in Competition, where it was roundly rejected before it went to the selection committee. Luckily, it was invited to Critics’ Week, won the Grand Prix, and landed a North American release in 2001 from Lionsgate. The rest is history. It launched the careers of Iñárritu, 19-year-old García Bernal, and Prieto, among others. After the screening, a grateful and teary García Bernal said, “It’s a film that we all were transformed, and even the way in Mexico we were perceived, the films were transformed.”

“Even when we were a very small independent film in a very small section that is not even official, it became the film that everybody wanted to see,” said Iñárritu. The film was nominated for the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar; the writer, director, and producer went on to win Best Director for “Birdman” and “The Revenant,” and Original Screenplay and Best Picture (“Birdman”).

When they made “Amores Perros,” the filmmaker explained, the Mexican film industry was producing only five to seven local films a year from the same few directors, with a nationalistic flavor, subsidized by the government. Maybe one would wind up in theaters. “Every director that I knew at that time, they [had] just made one film,” he said. “And they were already 50 years old. A film was considered a one-time opportunity, and you better make sure that you put all you have to say there.”

AMORES PERROS, (aka LOVE'S A BITCH), Vanessa Bauche, Gael Garcia Bernal, 2000. (c) Lions Gate Films/ Courtesy: Everett Collection.
‘Amores Perros’©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection

Also based in Mexico City, novelist Guillermo Arriaga wrote the screenplay for “Amores Perros,” “an incredible, solid, complex script,” said Iñárritu. “Mexico City is a complex city with incredible ancient culture with visual traditions. It has the third most museums in the world. And we were middle-class, educated. So we can see and observe: low, high, wherever. We were having access to many things.”

The “Amores Perros” team had been working together making commercials and videos for seven years. They were already quite sophisticated. “We were all Chilango, so we knew exactly how that city smells and feels,” said Iñárritu. “There was a new government coming, that threw out the party dictatorship of 70 years. So there was hope and a feeling that we need[ed] to shake who we were, how we talk about ourselves, how we see ourselves. This film came into the right moment.”

Iñárritu has written an essay about making the film for Mack Books’ just-published “Amores Perros” book, which also showcases unseen set photography, critical essays, and production documents. And “Sueño Perro: Alejandro G. Iñárritu’s Celluloid Installation” is making the rounds, starting at Fondazione Prada in Milan and LagoAlgo in Mexico City, and then moving in February to LACMA in Los Angeles.

Back in 2020, “Amores Perros,” which runs two hours and 37 minutes, was edited down from 1 million feet of material. “That means 15,000 feet of film of 35 millimeters,” said Iñárritu, “so 985,000 feet were left out. I was experimenting with handheld and lenses, and Rodrigo and I were on fire.”

AMORES PERROS, (aka LOVE'S A BITCH), Gustavo Sanchez Parra, 2000. © Lions Gate / Courtesy Everett Collection
‘Amores Perros’©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection

The director found out that his 1 million feet of dailies were in storage in Mexico’s National Autonomous University archive. “I started exploring,” he said. “It was beautiful to see how, when I start seeing all [that] was left out, how many films were there within the film, and watching this material with a new gaze. When I was editing, I was watching with the function of finding the pieces of the puzzle to serve the narrative. But now I was seeing the flow and the beauty itself of the images, so without the dictatorship of the narrative, I start collecting. And that’s the beginning of this installation. It’s 35-millimeter projectors in a labyrinth of dark rooms, with these big guys projecting material like a magic lantern. It’s very dreamy. People are touched by it because it’s not an homage to the film. It’s a resurrection. It’s a reinvention itself, and it stays completely detached from the film.”

The essay reveals the context of the “Amores Perros” production, the director’s aesthetic and philosophy of filmmaking, and how he creates cards for each sequence in a movie. “My obsession is the grammatical film language,” he said. “Those cards integrate everything that I should know when whatever challenge of the film comes — in crisis, in production, in depression. Those are my bricks that sustain some clarity during [filming], and it helped me out. It’s an exercise that takes me days and months to get it all, but it’s homework that goes deep for me to understand what I’m dealing with. What is the purpose of the scene? What is the purpose of that character, what does the other guy want, and what will be the conflict?”

Mubi will re-release the film this month in theaters all over Latin America, and make it available globally on its streaming platform on October 24. While the filmmaker never made any money on the film, which he invested in, he now owns about 75 percent. “Mubi is buying the rights for the next 10 years,” he said. “They’re one of the few streamers that are supporting independent filmmakers. We are in the right hands.”

While the life of a filmmaker is peripatetic at best, Iñárritu and his wife, with their two children out of the nest, are trying to decide where to live. They’ve been residing in Los Angeles. “We are gypsies,” he said. “I did ‘Bardo’ in Mexico. So I lived in Mexico City for one year and a half. Then I finished shooting the last film at Warner Bros. It’s a difficult moment in the world, and that decision is important for us. Things have changed a lot, as you know.”

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Fest Rio Announces China Focus in 2026, Premieres CMG's 'Shenzhou 13'
TV & Streaming

Fest Rio Announces China Focus in 2026, Premieres CMG’s ‘Shenzhou 13’

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil — The Rio International Film Fest will feature China as its country focus in next year’s edition, as part of the 2026 China-Brazil Cultural Year, said Walkiria Barbosa, Rio Fest’s executive director and int’l marketing.

The governments of the two countries announced in Nov. 2024, during a visit of China’s president Xi Jinping to Brazil, that the  2026 China-Brazil Cultural Year will feature a broad programming element, currently in preparation.

“China is the largest film market in the world. Our intention is to have in the 2026 edition of Rio Fest the main Chinese film production companies, streamers and exhibitors for a big business meeting and screening of Chinese films,” Barbosa told Variety.

The China Media Group (CMG) made a presentation Oct. 3 in RioMarket, the business section of Rio Fest, with the presence of the company’s Latin America chief bureau Zhu Boying, as well as of China’s consul in Rio, Tian Min.

Following the presentation, CMG premiered the feature “Shenzhou 13,” the country’s first 8K film shot in space, which was theatrically released nationwide in China Sept. 5.

The film depicts the routine of astronauts Zhai Zhigang, Wang Yaping, and Ye Guangfu on the Shenzhou-13 mission, which was launched Oct. 16, 2021. The crew spent a total of 183 days in orbit, setting a new record for the longest continuous spaceflight by Chinese astronauts.

The film reveals awe-inspiring cosmic vistas and glimpses of daily life in orbit, captured with 8K ultra-high-definition cameras. Most of the footage was filmed by astronauts, with Wang’s perspective guiding the story.

The main Brazil-China co-production now in course is produced by Rio-based LC Barreto and CCTV Animation, a subsidiary of CMG. They are developing a TV animation series and an animation feature, both with Panda HoHo, a well-known character starring in other CMG productions.

“Hoho & The Tropical Sound Clash” is a 3D animated series aimed at preschoolers. The series is due to have four seasons, each with 13 episodes running 10 minutes in length.

Series showrunner Joao Amorim told Variety the first season is expected to open in the second half of 2026 on free-to-air TV channels TV Cultura in Brazil and CCTV Animation in China. Zhang Fan is the series’ animation director.

In the series, Panda HoHo will form part of a trio of Brazilian animals, with a Golden Lion Tamarin, a symbol of Brazilian biodiversity, and Capy, an adventurous capybara. In each episode, the trio will embark on adventures across Brazil, discovering unique biomes, cultural traditions and important lessons about environmental preservation and the power of collaboration.

The second LC Barreto-CCTV project, “Amazonika – The Origin” is a 3D animated feature about the recreation of the Amazon Rainforest, presented as an ancient link between Asian and Brazil’s Indigenous cultures. Panda HoHo will help Zo, a young man who can communicate with nature, and Nika, a bold princess warrior, to restore harmony in a world on the edge of collapse.

“We are working with two Indigenous Brazilians as consultants for the projects. Benki Piyãko is of the Asháninka original people and Zezinho Yube is of the Huni Kuin people,” Amorim said.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Louis C.K. Had "Mixed Feelings" Before Riyadh Comedy Festival Gig
TV & Streaming

Louis C.K. Had “Mixed Feelings” Before Riyadh Comedy Festival Gig

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Louis C.K. is the latest comedian to address his decision to perform at Saudi Arabia‘s inaugural Riyadh Comedy Festival.

As the comedian appeared Friday on Real Time, he explained he had “mixed feelings” about participating in the controversial festival, but has come to see it as “a positive thing,” despite backlash from many of his comedy peers.

“I’ve been talking to them, the comedians who’ve been there, and they’ve been really surprised by what’s going on,” he told host Bill Maher. “There’s a woman who’s a lesbian and Jewish, who did a show there, and she got a standing ovation. So, there’s stuff going on that’s unexpected in this thing.”

C.K. continued, “People have been playing Saudi Arabia for years. Comedians have been going and playing Arab countries, there was a film festival there recently, it’s kind of opened up. But I’ve always said no to Arab countries. I do shows everywhere … and when this came up, they said there’s only two restrictions; their religion and their government, and I don’t have jokes about those two things. It used to be when I got offers from places like that, there would be a long list, and I’d just say, ‘No, I don’t need that.’ But when I heard it’s opening, I thought, that’s awfully interesting. That just feels like a good opportunity. And I just feel like comedy is a great way to get in and start talking.”

Noting he plans to go to a comedy club his first night in Saudi Arabia and meet local comedians, C.K. said, “I love stand-up comedy, and I love comedians. So, the fact that that’s starting to open up and starting to bud, I wanna see it, I wanna be part of it. I think that’s a positive thing.”

Later in the interview, C.K. added, “I think the whole discussion is worthy. I’m glad these guys brought this stuff up, I’m glad that people are challenging this thing, because you shouldn’t just pretend it’s something it’s not.”

“I had mixed feelings about it too. I struggled about going once I heard what everybody was saying,” he confessed. “There’s some good in it, maybe some bad in it. But for me, I think it cuts toward going. That’s my decision, and I know where it’s coming from, because I can see right inside myself.”

Other comedians have recently called out their peers who have agreed to perform, noting Saudi officials’ roles in 9/11 and the 2018 assassination of journalist Jamal Khashoggi, as well as the human rights abuses committed by Saudi minister of entertainment, Turki Al-Sheikh, who is behind the festival.

Human Rights Watch researcher Joey Shea explained to CBS News, “The Saudi government has invested billions into high profile entertainment events like these in a deliberate effort to whitewash the country’s human rights record and deflect from the egregious abuses that continue to happen inside of the country.

“These investments are a part of the broader strategy to… have people thinking about a comedy event, for example, rather than the soaring number of executions that are happening inside of the country,” added Shea.

Since Deadline exclusively announced the initial lineup in July, the Riyadh Comedy Festival has grown to include Kevin Hart, Aziz Ansari, Dave Chappelle, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Pete Davidson, Hannibal Buress, Jack Whitehall, Zarna Garg, Gabriel Iglesias, Jim Jefferies, Jo Koy, Bobby Lee, Jeff Ross, Andrew Santino, Tom Segura, Chris Tucker and more.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Louis C.K. Defends Performing at Riyadh Comedy Fest
TV & Streaming

Louis C.K. Defends Performing at Riyadh Comedy Fest

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Louis C.K. is explaining why he decided to take part in Saudi Arabia‘s Riyadh Comedy Festival.

During his Friday appearance on Real Time With Bill Maher, he defended his choice to perform at the comedy festival that has stirred up controversy since it kicked off last Friday. The topic of comics being prohibited to not make jokes about certain themes came up in his conversation with Bill Maher, to which C.K. said the fellow comedians he know who have been at the fest have “been really surprised by what’s going on.”

“When I’m talking to the other comedians who have been there, they’ve been really surprised by what’s going on. There’s a woman who’s a lesbian and Jewish, who did a show there, and she got a standing ovation. So, there’s stuff going on that’s unexpected in this thing,” he said. “People have been playing Saudi Arabia for years. Comedians have been going and playing Arab countries. There was a film festival there recently, it’s kind of opened up. But I’ve always said no to Arab countries.”

C.K. continued, “And when this came up, they said there’s only two restrictions — their religion and their government, I don’t have jokes about those two things. It used to be when I got offers from places like that, there would be a long list, and I’d just say, ‘No, I don’t need that.’ But when I heard it’s opening, I thought, that’s awfully interesting. That just feels like a good opportunity. And I just feel like comedy is a great way to get in and start talking.”

Riyadh Fest began Sept. 26 and will end Oct. 9. Alongside C.K., Bill Burr, Dave Chappelle, Jimmy Carr, Kevin Hart, Pete Davidson, Whitney Cummings, Russell Peters, Gabriel Iglesias and Andrew Schulz, among others, are featured on the lineup.

Last week, Atsuko Okatsuka shared details from her offer to appear at Riyadh, which outlined “censorship rules” against performing jokes on outlined topics. David Cross, too, slammed those who chose to perform, writing on his website, “I am disgusted, and deeply disappointed in this whole gross thing. That people I admire, with unarguable talent, would condone this totalitarian fiefdom for…what, a fourth house? A boat? More sneakers?”

Before that, Marc Maron spoke out against those participating in the comedy festival.

“I mean, how do you even promote that? You know, like, ‘From the folks that brought you 9/11. Two weeks of laughter in the desert, don’t miss it!’” Maron said. “I mean, the same guy that’s gonna pay them is the same guy that paid that guy to bone saw [journalist] Jamal Khashoggi and put him in a fucking suitcase. But don’t let that stop the yucks, it’s gonna be a good time!”

The Emmy winner acknowledged the wider conversation about the festival. “I had mixed feelings about it too. I struggled about going once I heard what everybody was saying,” C.K. said. “There’s some good in it, maybe some bad in it. But for me, I think it cuts toward going. That’s my decision, and I know where it’s coming from, because I can see right inside myself.”

C.K. added, “I love stand-up comedy, and I love comedians. So, the fact that that’s opening up and starting to bud, I wanna see it, I wanna be part of it. I think that’s a positive thing.”

The six-time Emmy winner is slated to perform at Riyadh Fest on Monday alongside Carr.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Man Utd v Sunderland Premier League TV details and kick-off time
TV & Streaming

Man Utd v Sunderland Premier League TV details and kick-off time

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Manchester United host Sunderland at Old Trafford in the Premier League on Saturday – with the pressure on Ruben Amorim close to fever pitch.

Last weekend’s disastrous defeat away at Brentford has left the Portuguese coach fighting for his job and offered the Black Cats a blueprint at how to unravel his side’s defences.

Amorim remains at the helm, but another loss might see a change made during the upcoming international break.

Sunderland head to Old Trafford hunting their first win at the Theatre of Dreams for more than a decade.

Regis Le Bris’s side have impressed in their first season back in the Premier League, but victory on Saturday would be a new high under the Frenchman.

RadioTimes.com has rounded up everything you need to know about how to watch Man Utd v Sunderland on TV and online.

Read more football features: Best players in the world | Best players of all time | Live football on TV today

When is Man Utd v Sunderland?

Man Utd v Sunderland will take place on Saturday 4th October 2025.

Check out our live football on TV guide for the latest times and information.

Man Utd v Sunderland kick-off time

Man Utd v Sunderland will kick off at 3pm.

What TV channel is Man Utd v Sunderland on?

Unfortunately, this game has not been selected for broadcast in the UK.

You can catch up with the latest match highlights during Match of the Day every Saturday night and Match of the Day 2 on Sundays.

Is there a Man Utd v Sunderland live stream online?

Likewise, this game will not be shown on any live streaming platforms in the UK.

Check out Match of the Day and Match of the Day 2 on BBC iPlayer as well as teams’ official YouTube channels after matches for all the highlights.

Listen to Man Utd v Sunderland on radio

You can listen to the match on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra.

BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra is available on DAB radio or you can tune into the station via most TV packages. You can also listen to Radio 5 Live online via the BBC website or BBC Sounds app.

Advertisement

Man Utd v Sunderland odds

In working partnership with the Radio Times, bet365 has provided the following betting odds for this event:

bet365 odds: Man Utd (1/2) Draw (15/4) Sunderland (19/4)*

For all the latest football odds and more, visit bet365 today. Bet £10 & Get £30 in Free Bets for new customers at bet365.

Min deposit requirement. Free Bets are paid as Bet Credits and are available for use upon settlement of bets to value of qualifying deposit. Min odds, bet and payment method exclusions apply. Returns exclude Bet Credits stake. Time limits and T&Cs apply.

*Odds subject to change. 18+. T&Cs apply. GambleAware.org. Note – The bonus code RT365 does not change the offer amount in any way.

Check out more of our coverage or visit our and to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to .

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Show Boss Explains Sarah's Decision to Join 'The Dark Side' (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Show Boss Explains Sarah’s Decision to Join ‘The Dark Side’ (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for The Rainmaker Episode 8.]

Sarah Plankmore (Madison Iseman) had a choice to make on Friday’s (October 3) new episode of The Rainmaker. After being confronted with the truth about what her client did — covering up the murder of multiple patients by a nurse — Keeley (Hugh Quarshie) offered her an off-ramp from the case, and she steered right away from it. Instead, she embraced her place as the zealous advocate for the client, no matter how problematic he is or how consequential his ills, painting a new narrative for what he did.

Show creator Michael Seitzman calls their exchange one of his “favorite scenes of the whole season.”

“It’s incredibly dynamic. I mean, it’s her last temptation, right? Every step of the way, Sarah has been offered these offerings… Rudy offers her another one. He says, ‘You haven’t done anything illegal yet. Do the right thing.’ She keeps getting offered a way out. And so each one of these moments is a character-defining moment for her. What decision is she gonna make? And I think, for me, the character has to have those moments because she has to make a decision. She can’t be forced into anything. She can be cajoled and nudged and seduced, but she can’t be forced into it,” Seitzman told TV Insider.

“She has to be given these moments where she’s really offered a way out. And that scene with Keeley, what I love about it is that he’s all conscious in that scene. Here’s a guy who’s made some really big mistakes, but in that scene, you get a view of his real conscience, the man he would have been had he not made these decisions, the man he was. She sees it, too,” he continued. “And when he says, ‘I’m going to offer you something that nobody offered me,’ she doesn’t take it.. The scene ends as he says, ‘Are you going to be there?’ She says, ‘Of course, I’m your lawyer.’ Well, that’s as big a declaration as any she has in the whole season. She’s not just saying, ‘I am your lawyer.’ What she’s saying is, ‘I know what I’m doing right now, and what I’m doing is making a conscious choice to cross over the dark side.’”

Sarah isn’t the only one who had to make a big decision in the episode, either. Jackie Lemanczyk (Gemma-Leah Devereux) was also sprung from her storage facility prison by the private investigator hired by Leo Drummond (John Slattery) and had to decide whether to trust Rudy Baylor (Milo Callaghan) enough to testify in Dot Black’s court case and put herself back into public view after being imprisoned by Melvin Pritcher (Dan Fogler) for so long.

We’ll have to wait until next week’s episode to find out what’s next for Jackie, but if you’re wondering whether she would’ve died in Pritcher’s custody without her unexpected rescue, according to Seitzman, the answer is no.

“I thought about it a lot when we were working on it. I thought, ‘Why doesn’t he kill Jackie?’ And the answer is… in Episode 3, when he says, ‘I always admired you.’ There was something about it, that there’s something about that moment, both on the page and also the way Dan Fogler delivers it that felt so real,” he explained. “He liked her, and he admired her, and he’s trying to avoid killing her. You even see it in the moment in five when he’s interrogating her in the cabin before she escapes… When she says that she was on the tissue committee, and he says, ‘You were on the tissue committee?’ There’s something so innocent in the way he says it, like he’s both impressed and jealous at the same time.”

“I think the thing about Melvin is, he’s clearly a bad guy who does really bad things, but he doesn’t think he’s doing bad things,” Seitzman continued. “He thinks of himself as heroic. As twisted as it is, he thinks of himself as heroic. So you have these moments with him that are incredibly earnest. We never wanted the character to be mustache-twirly. We never wanted him to be a cold or overtly psychopathic killer. We wanted him to be the guy next door who’s the killer. The one who you see at the mailbox and say hello to, but little do you know, he’s done really terrible things.”

For what it’s worth, the actor portraying the character does think Jackie would’ve been a goner if not for her timely rescue. “Yeah, I think that he was tying up loose ends. I think that. But you know what? A little secret. I think he maybe had a thing for her. That’s why she lasted so long,” Fogler said. “It’s like he couldn’t bring himself to really hurt her.”

Elsewhere in the episode, Bruiser (Lana Parrilla) welcomed home her father, only to have him reclaim his seat at her throne — er, desk — and demand that they settle the case with Leo for $1 million. Instead, though, Rudy quit the firm and signed the client over to his solo care, and Bruiser sent Deck (P.J. Byrne) packing right alongside him. We also learned more about the woman who died in her dad’s care — or how Prince (Tommie Earl Jenkins) is involved — but the scenes of her leaning on Bruiser for help were heartrending to say the least.

The Rainmaker, Fridays, 10/9c, USA Network

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The 7 Most Famous Midnight Movies Ever Made
TV & Streaming

The 7 Most Famous Midnight Movies Ever Made

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

There’s probably a classier metaphor I could use to describe the feeling you get when you realize you’re watching a real midnight movie and not some cheap imitation. And yet, like the famous censorship decision passed down by the 1964 U.S. Supreme Court — a notoriously feckless group that was somehow still more fun than our current justice system — I must say, “I know it when I see it.” 

You can’t really tell someone they’re in a cult unless they’re ready to leave one, and you can’t really claim to have made a cult film until your movie behaves like that. From the ever-growing list of “genre” and “midnight” shorts competitions on the festival circuit, to the awe-inspiring grassroots campaigns that have followed feature indie triumphs like Mike Cheslik’s “Hundreds of Beavers,” bawdy counterculture has managed to stay explosive and hopeful even over the toughest times this year.

ANEMONE, from left: Daniel Day-Lewis, Sean Bean, 2025. © Focus Features / courtesy Everett Collection
Alejandro González Iñárritu at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival

More entertainers are pushing the envelope to match the extreme feel of daily life, and Hollywood’s top decision-makers are taking note of a trend IndieWire’s Dana Harris-Bridson is already reporting. In some cases, where and when filmmakers find their niche audiences is as important as how and why studios decide to distribute their art. Did you come with a party, or did you ask Hollywood to throw you one?

Think of it like an amateur open mic night, where novice comedians are required to sell tickets or buy a certain number of drinks if they want to perform. Some indie creatives say you’ve got a better shot at convincing the industry to give you multiple seats at the table for films with social scenes already attached — than they are inviting backers to dream up a culture with them on still-emerging IP. That’s easier said than done, of course, and playing a movie at midnight does not a midnight movie make. 

Listed in chronological order, these essential cult classics will guide you through the history of the format and teach you some of the most important lessons in theatrical buzz-building the art world has ever known. From the Pope of Trash and all that Divine goodness in 1972’s “Pink Flamingos” — to Tommy Wiseau’s melodramatic “The Room,” a so-bad-it’s-good gem that’s been tearing us apart since 2003, these are the timeless midnight masterpieces you’ve got to study if you want your film to hit after dark.

1. “Reefer Madness” (1936)

What a movie actually is  and how people experience it are two very different things. Released in 1936, this morality tale against marijuana was financed by a long-defunct church group called the Motion Picture Guild. Something like the cinematic Sinclair Broadcasting of its day, the footage from this public service announcement, originally titled “Tell Your Children,” was recut and redistributed under a slew of different names throughout the 1930s and 1940s. 

Weed wasn’t the brick-and-mortar phenomenon it is in some U.S. states today, and the drug’s popularity wouldn’t seriously grow among Americans until the 1960s. Thanks to producer Dwain Esper, the black-and-white exploitation flick was also known as “Love Madness,” “Dope Addict,” “The Burning Question,” and more self-righteous monikers that made it easy to mock during that dormant period. When versions of the film started appearing on roadside attractions and college campuses, word-of-mouth spread and the promise of seeing the footage out of context helped the eventized version of the project soar even higher. This isn’t really the first midnight movie in earnest — that’s up next — but the sideways journey it took laid essential groundwork.

REEFER MADNESS, 1936
“Reefer Madness” (1936)Courtesy Everett Collection

Legalization activist Keith Stroup eventually co-opted the public domain film and used it to rebelliously bolster his own movement. Directed by Louis J. Gasnier, “Tell Your Children” gained more popularity at charity screenings where flecks of the call-back comedy culture that would later define “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” widened the “Reefer Madness” appeal. It would come to be widely known by that name in part thanks to the musical stage adaptation from 1988. That was made into a Showtime special starring Alan Cumming and Kristen Bell in 2005, and “The Good Place” actress appeared in the live show in Los Angeles for the 25th anniversary last year.

2. “Night of the Living Dead” (1968)

George A. Romero’s “Night of the Living Dead” almost didn’t make this list. Still, there’s no denying that horror is integral to the midnight movie, and the late Father of Zombies is widely credited with giving both genres their progressive political reputations. (Plus, this thing whips in every way a movie can whip. It isn’t even a scary scene, but the line, “They’re coming to get you Barbara!” lives in my head rent free. Gimme an edit where the bass drops!) 

An unrated effort from 1968, Romero’s very first feature was a true-blue indie with a weak distro plan that he financed and shot himself. At first, it was marketed like a normal horror release. But after reports of some disastrous screenings, including one Chicago matinee attended by critic Roger Ebert and a pack of hysterical children, “Night of the Living Dead” was increasingly considered “too scary” to show during the day. That PR gold helped launch Romero as a beloved cult film director, although he rarely shared in the profits of the revolutionary works he made. Not yet bested today, the most exquisite zombie movie ever created demanded to be seen by more audiences, and using late-night slots at drive-in theaters and rep cinemas as a cheap way to build out its reputation was brilliant. 

NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, Duane Jones, 1968
“Night of the Living Dead” (1968) Everett Collection / Everett Collection

Released against the backdrop of the Vietnam War, the terrifying existential statement Romero was making properly snaps into focus through the performance of Duane Jones. The Black actor was a revolutionary casting choice for Romero’s final guy, and the cutting indictment of racism in America blanketed the country only after nightfall. “Night of the Living Dead” served as a jangly prelude for the existential dread David Lynch would stir up in movie-goers with his debut, “Eraserhead,” less than a decade later.

3. “El Topo” (1970)

In light of “Reefer Madness,” it’s fun to imagine what the prudish Motion Picture Group might have said about the violent psychosexual odyssey that is “El Topo.” Maybe… “Oh, holy fuck!” 

Alejandro Jodorowsky was a Chilean-French filmmaker and the patron saint of acid cinema whose shoestring Western — shot over six harsh months in Mexico’s Chihuahuan Desert — brought unprecedented surrealism to cinema. He insisted on doing everything practically, dragging his team to remote locations and killing real animals for a “more truthful” effect on screen.  Commingling incendiary psychedelic imagery with the extreme conditions that impacted the “El Topo” cast and crew, the final viewing experience is transformative anywhere you see it. 

The poster for “El Topo” (1970)

You can almost feel the extreme heat and cold radiating off the screen as Jodorowsky, who also stars as the titular El Topo (translated to mean The Mole in English), wanders the white-hot landscape contending with the infinite paradoxes of personal philosophy. As he pursues enlightenment, the repeated clashes El Topo has with various enemies along his winding journey mount an existential lesson that caught the attention of John Lennon among others. 

Jodorowsky is frequently credited as the “father of the midnight movie,” and while he indeed made an extraordinary film, if anyone deserves that title for their work on “El Topo” it’s Ben Barenholtz. The owner of New York City’s Elgin Cinema made the historic decision to screen it when he did — establishing the very notion of midnight as a ritual worth having at the movies.

4. “Pink Flamingos” (1972)

Not only did John Waters and drag queen Divine help make midnight movies more queer, but they also bravely tested the limits of shock cinema and passed with flying, pastel, and dog shit-stained colors. Before Ben Barenholtz left the Elgin and began the next phase of his career as a producer (he’s credited on “Miller’s Crossing,” “Requiem for a Dream,” and more all-time releases throughout the years), he programmed “Pink Flamingos” and catapulted Waters’ reputation from challenging underground artist to internationally renowned provocateur. 

The best movies extract emotions from us, and watching the most objectionable material in Waters’ masterpiece from 1972 can feel like trying to hold puke back behind your eyeballs. But advertised as a transgressive “exercise in bad taste,” that’s what the Elgin was selling, and even despite themselves, audiences ate it up. If “El Topo” established the midnight format as assaulting and transformative, then “Pink Flamingos” anointed it a place of spectacle. The midnight screen became a no-holds-barred arena for freedom of expression through Waters — one that could turn trash into treasure and make filth feel at once frightening and fun. 

PINK FLAMINGOS, Divine, 1972
“Pink Flamingos” (1972) Courtesy Everett Collection

Also known as Harris Glenn Milstead, Divine should have monuments in every city. Fans could start by showing the late legend even more love in Baltimore, Maryland, where “Pink Flamingos” was made guerilla style and the notorious production gained its earliest reputation filming on the public street. The legendary porn movie “Deep Throat” came out that year too, but people loved Divine because she turned their judgment of her depravity into a source of joy. That megawatt charisma steered midnight movies deeper into the drag world. It also laid an essential foundation for the fearless Club Kids that would emerge around the time Divine died in 1988. 

In the film, the eventual “Hairspray!” star plays Babs Johnson, the “filthiest person alive.” That’s a more coveted title than you’d think living in her candy-colored trailer park, and Waters escalates the battle of depravity that follows through a list of gross-out gags including incest, cannibalism, and that oh-so-whimsical canine feces eating. “Pink Flamingos” never gained the popularity of the next major midnight movie to sweep the nation, “Rocky Horror,” but it put Divine in the running for mainstream cinema’s most impactful drag performer. That’s an accolade she’d no doubt hate, and to quote the queen herself, “The world of the heterosexual is a sick and boring life.” But the stunts got her and Waters talked about constantly — a trick that’s harder to pull off than it looks and cheap copycats fail at all the time.

5. “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975)

A group of batshit musical theater kids hit Hollywood in 1975, and midnight was never the same. Having opened “The Rocky Horror Show” on the West End two years earlier, director Jim Sharman and writer Richard O’Brien dreamed a new version of their glam-rock musical — about a conservative couple with a flat tire, who ask for help from a sexy mad scientist in a castle down the road — that would dominate the silver screen for the next 50 years. Eventually. 

Up against “Jaws” and more obsession-worthy movies at the box office that summer, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” had a hard time getting out of the gate. The story had been a smash hit on stage in London, and the cast and crew had delivered the fiendish nightmare they’d promised their backers. But finally unleashed on the mainstream American public, “The Rocky Horror Picture Show” took about a year to find its sea legs. Fox had already lost about $500,000 on the adaptation when executive Tim Deegan had the brilliant idea to “take the movie midnight,” a move that not only recouped the studio’s money but also made “Rocky Horror” the single longest-running theatrical release ever made.

ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW, Tim Curry, Barry Bostwick, Susan Sarandon, 1975. TM and Copyright © 20th Century Fox Film Corp. All rights reserved. Courtesy: Everett Collection.
“The Rocky Horror Picture Show” (1975) ©20thCentFox/Courtesy Everett Collection

Known for its callbacks, prop comedy, shadow casts, and more, the result is a powerful pop culture institution that’s created a mighty network of midnight movie fans. Thousands of people have actively participated in interactive “Rocky Horror” screenings, and millions more have attended — finding solace and safety in the margins of a truly weird and wonderful community that’s still celebrated by Tim Curry, Susan Sarandon, Barry Bostwick, Nell Campbell, Patricia Quinn, and many more. The result has been called “the only good cult in the world,” and its legacy is the subject of several documentaries, including 2016’s “Rocky Horror Saved My Life” and the newly released “Strange Journey: The Story of Rocky Horror” directed by Linus O’Brien, the son of Richard who also played Riff-Raff. 

6. “Eraserhead” (1977)

Even in the warm embrace of an existentially challenged audience, “Eraserhead” was the haunting directorial debut that effectively demanded a hug from the entire midnight-loving world. Developed when he was still a student at AFI, David Lynch’s unconventional approach to filmmaking marked him an artistic talent to watch early but he had trouble distributing his soul-shaking first film.

ERASERHEAD, Jack Nance, 1976
The poster for “Eraserhead” (1977)Courtesy Everett Collection

The affection the arthouse creator had for the midnight format proved invaluable to his success. Boxed out of several locations by “The Rocky Horror Picture Show,” Lynch steadily pushed “Eraserhead” at select locations until it broke through thanks to key offerings at Cinema Village in New York City and the Landmark’s Nuart Theater in Los Angeles. As it grew, the buzz surrounding Lynch became a benchmark few could meet and midnights felt longer when he was alive with them.

Too much has been written about the late Lynch and the countless talents he had as a sensitive filmmaker and human. So, in lieu of any more serious criticism, I’ll take this time to remember him for his handsome ears. What fine lobes that man had! Bravo.

7. “The Room” (2003)

When “Reefer Madness” stopped circulating in the 1940s and 1950s, the early subculture that started to form around it went mostly dormant. The pearl-clutching folks over at the Motion Picture Guild never had a response to their film being used so brazenly, and that was true even as the footage was explicitly recontextualized for the opposite purpose it was intended.

Tommy Wiseau was not so quiet when it came to “The Room.” 

So-bad-it’s-good movies have been a thing for a long, long time. But that kind of rhetoric started to cause more of a stir among passionate genre fanbases when more of them felt empowered to argue both the outrageous art and the community experience they worshipped were extraordinary. Those debates rage on for some of the most vexing combinations of craft and camp — think “Showgirls,” “Striptease,” “Cats.” But “The Room” is a sincere and glorious work of dumb-assery that’s genius by mistake with a mystery at its center that’s still intoxicating today.  

The poster for “The Room” (2003)

How much Wiseau paid to cast himself in a bizarre melodrama about a love triangle has been debated for years, but half the fun when it came out was following the movie’s rise and witnessing the filmmaker’s strange evasiveness whenever he was asked about his background. Larger than life but fabulously incapable of acting, the leading man and self-flagellating auteur behind “The Room” became a kind of walking meme in the 2000s.

Peddling a highly quotable movie and rubbing shoulders with many of the top comedians in Los Angeles at the time, Wiseau went to significant lengths to make sure his movie was Oscars eligible before it was infamously labeled “The Citizen Kane of Bad Movies.” That’s an achievement in its own right, and the legacy of “The Room” lives on in a best-selling memoir about the production and that book’s film adaptation, each titled “The Disaster Artist.”

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
The Release Party of a Showgirl'
TV & Streaming

The Release Party of a Showgirl’

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

“Taylor Swift: The Official Release Party of a Showgirl” has begun unspooling in cinemas nationwide for its limited three-day engagement, and the theatrical event’s behind-the-scenes footage and personal commentary from Swift are giving fans more insight into the hit album it’s promoting.

The hour-and-a-half program (presented in theaters with no trailers or other preliminaries) begins with Swift offering a brief introduction and thanks, then goes straight into the premiere of the elaborate music video for “The Life of Ophelia,” followed by behind-the-scenes footage of the making of the Swift-directed video. Most of the rest of the 90 minutes consists of semi-static lyric videos for the other 11 tracks from the “Life of a Showgirl” album, preceded by Swift offering two or three minutes of commentary about the inspiration for the songwriting in each instance.

More BTS footage from the “Ophelia” shoot is scattered throughout the program, which ends with a reprise of the opening video — with viewers now having more insight into where to look for fun moments that will have gone overlooked on first viewing. (The repeat showing of the music video at the close is also handy for any latecomers to the theater who didn’t believe the part about there being no trailers.)

Discussing the “Ophelia” video, Swift says, “The idea I came up with for this music video was sort of a journey throughout all these different ways in which over time periods, historically, you could be a showgirl… Like, how you would be in the public eye back during the 1800s, when you’d sit for a Pre-Raphaelite painting. Or you could be a showgirl by being a cabaret burlesque club performer. You could be a theatrical actor putting on a performance. You could a Vegas showgirl. You could be one of the girls in the Busby Berkeley screen-siren era of the ‘30s and ‘40s. You could be a pop singer on the Eras Tour.”

Indeed, the time-tripping allows the star to take on several different personas, including a classic showgirl with a Marilyn-Monroe-platinum bob hairdo, a ’60s-style brunette go-go dancer in a nightclub, an Esther Williams-like bathing beauty on a movie set with a giant staircase and a cast of dozens, and a raven-haired theatrical actress. All of these different looks show up later in the lyric videos, via brief video loops that run behind the giant-sized lyric excerpts.

Serious Swifties will enjoy the music video, and especially the copious behind-the-scenes footage, for the many familiar faces that populate these scenes. One of the reasons for her excitement in sharing all this, she says, is that “is that we got everybody back together from the Eras Tour; all of the performers that you saw on that stage are back in this music video, as well as so many of the people who worked behind the scenes to create the Eras Tour.” That includes everyone from the dancers to production designer Ethan Tobman and choreographer Mandy Moore.

It’s not a big spoiler to say that the music video ends with a recreation of the album cover image of Swift mostly submerged in a tub in full glam attire. What many fans may not know is that this was all borrowed from a classic painting.

For the denouement of the “Ophelia” video, she “wanted to match the framing ideally to the album cover and kind of just frame it exactly like that, so that people are like, ‘Oh, so the cover is a reference to the Ophelia painting, and this ending is a reference to the cover.’ So, art history for pop fans!” The painting she’s referring to is a circa-1850 painting of the Shakespearian character Ophelia by British artist Sir John Everett Malais, which portrays the doomed woman floating and singing in the water before she drowns herself, as described by Gertrude but not directly portrayed in “Hamlet.”

“Ophelia drowned because Hamlet just messed with her head so much that she went crazy and she couldn’t take it anymore, and all these men were just gaslighting her until she drowned,” Swift explains. But in her version, “what if the hook is that you saved my heart from the fate of Ophelia? Like. basically you are the reason why I didn’t end up like this, tragic, poetic hero girl, who passed away in a fictional world?”

Admitting that it might sound like “a stupid thing to say,” Swift goes ahead and declares: “I love Shakespeare… It holds up. It’s actually not overhyped! And I love those tragedies so much. I fall in love with those characters so much that it hurts me that they die. … This is now the second song where I’ve gone back in and (am) like, ‘Yo, what if they got married instead of they die?’” (The other one she’s referring to is, of course, “Love Story,” which lets Romeo and Juliet off the hook.)

There’s deeper meaning to some of the other imagery in the music video than might first be intuited by viewers. For instance, that classic movie-musical scene in which she and all the dancers are wearing bathing caps and carrying life preservers… it celebrates the famously swimming movie star Esther Williams, cineastes will now, but it’s also, yes, an Ophelia reference. “Right now we are sitting on the set of what we’re kind of calling our Busby Berkeley-inspired, MGM, screen queen 1930s and ‘40s” motif, she says, “and we’ve got it looking kind of a little bit like a beach/swim/pool thing. And that’s a play on Ophelia.” The character drowned herself, as previously noted, but in that movie-musical homage, “we’ve got these lifesaving devices, which could have prevented that from happening,” she points out, with tongue firmly in cheek.

Viewers also learn, in the behind-the-scenes footage, how a certain very handsome bread came to make a cameo. “Oh, I can bake the bread… Can it be my bread? Can my bread be in the music video?” The next day, she is delighted to add her impressive part to the set design. “This is a really exciting day for me as a baker because my bread is actually a music video star as of today.”

One point that comes up as the dancers learn their choreography: “The Fate of Ophelia” was not actually played on-set, to avoid leaks. And so the dancers required extra direction because of that. “We’re in secret sauce. No one’s hearing this track. All anyone’s hearing in the room is just click. So I also have to be able to inform the dancers, ‘You need to feel this in this moment.’”

As the song explanations proceed, she brings clarity to what has quickly emerged as a fan-favorite song, “Opalite,” and explains the two color distinctions that would be lost on most listeners without her spelling it out.

“Opalite is manmade opal. I’ve always loved opal; my mom has always loved opal; it’s kind of like our thing — one of our many things,” Swift says. “And I loved the metaphor of a manmade opal (as) you had to make your own happiness in your life. You had to get yourself through some difficult times to get to the positive place you’re in now. And I really loved the idea that the manmade gemstone jewel is also a metaphor for choosing your own path to happiness… It didn’t just happen to you. You had to fight for it. You had to work for it. You had to earn it.”

Swift has been highly reluctant to discuss who her songs are about, going back at least to her second album, so she isn’t about to break form with that now and discuss the real-life figures whom Swifties believe are addressed in the diss tracks “Father Figure” and “Actually Romantic.” But she does lend context to her thinking about those tunes.

The singer says her basic love for alliteration is why she was drawn to George Michael’s “Father Figure,” which is the one interpolation on the album, in her new composition of the same name. She felt there was room to work it because “that line in the context of the George Michael song is romantic,” but “I always thought it could be cool to use the line ‘I’ll be your father figure’ as a creative writing prompt and turn it into a story about power, and a story about a young ingenue and their mentor and the way that that relationship can change over time… and betrayal and wit and cunning and cleverness and strategy. Essentially it ends up in a ‘who’s gonna win’ situation — who’s gonna gonna outfox the other?” She doesn’t fully address the change of perspective that happens midway through the lyrics, but says “I can relate to both characters in certain parts of the song.“

As for “Actually Romantic,” which is the talk of the pop-culture internet this weekend because of how it appears to be an answer song to a track Charli XCX put out last year, she describes it “as sort of a love letter to someone who hates you. Sometimes you don’t know that you are a part of someone else’s story, but you are. And then kind of there can be this moment where it’s unveiled to you through things that they do that are very overt.” As she’s gotten older, she adds, “I’ve just started to be like, ‘Oh my God… you did so much with this… it’s flattering. I don’t hate you and I don’t think about this, but thank you for all the effort, honestly. Wow. That is very sweet of you to think about me this much, even if it’s negative. Like, in my industry, attention is affection, and you’ve given me a whole lot of it, so…” She then blows the camera a kiss.

She also gets into the impetus for “Cancelled!,” saying she “wanted to write a song about how you can become wiser for it and how you can become sharper … I definitely judge people a lot less now that I’ve been under the microscope for so long. I just judge people based on who I know to be their actions, not some sort of general consensus where people are like, ‘Step away, they’re radioactive.’ I’m just like: not gonna do that. I’m gonna do that if somebody proves that they’re not a good person.”

Sabrina Carpenter does not appear anywhere in this theatrical program, except for a film clip of a duet during the Eras Tour. But Swift has plenty to say about bringing her on for the album’s sole duet, on the title track.

“We finished writing it and I was like, ‘I want Sabrina to sing on this so bad’ … She’s well-equipped for this career. She is so good at moving through backlash or criticism or people being unfair to her or picking her apart. She has the temperament to pivot and use it as fuel. … I really feel like she’s got the same mentality as what this song (is) about: having a love for the game that overrides how hard this can be. And she was like, ‘Are you kidding? I’m dead. Yes, of course.’ …. And then when she was on tour in Sweden, she took her days off and went and recorded it, and that is a showgirl for you.”

Those producing the “release party” and distributing it have pointedly avoided calling it a “film” — but it is certainly being counted as one for the purposes of box office receipts. “Showgirl” is expected without question to come out on top of the weekend’s grosses, even as the album itself is poised to break records for streaming and sales in 2025, based on first-day results.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

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

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

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

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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