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Kristen Bell’s 2-in-1 Boots Are So Versatile for Winter—and They’re On Sale
Fashion

Kristen Bell’s 2-in-1 Boots Are So Versatile for Winter—and They’re On Sale

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Tall or short, knitted boots like Bell’s are only one of several fall boot trends that Glamour is currently obsessed with. Western-inspired styles, such as the cowboy boots favored by Bella Hadid for all of 2024, continue to be a thing. In particular, we’re seeing a ton of Frye boots, which we like to style with everything from preppy skirts to barrel jeans. We’re also seeing the return of the moto-boot trend, which always adds a touch of edge to an outfit (10 points to you if you kept your Chloe Susanna boots from way back in the 2010s). Oh, and also slouchy boots, and riding boots, and Ugg boots. Basically every boot that was popular in the ’00s and ’10s is popular again now.

But don’t get carried away, now, and start thinking you need every style of boot in your closet. Maybe you actually only need one pair of boots at all. After all, look at Kristen Bell.


October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Trump country music dancing
Music

Trump Country Music’s March of the Cowboy Boots » PopMatters

by jummy84 October 20, 2025
written by jummy84

Donald Trump’s political base has been regularly fortified by a demographic raised on this century’s country music. Moreover, country music has grown so big that pop stars are now gravitating to it in the same way country stars once gravitated to pop in the 2010s. Just listen to recent material by Beyoncé, Post Malone, Ed Sheeran, Lana Del Rey, and Sabrina Carpenter. Inadvertently, their cachet has helped normalize and mainstream the ethos of both country music and Trump.

Bro-country still lingers, too, its testosterone-fueled songs now sounding like manifestos for the stereotypical Trumpian male. Despite “backlash” subgenres like neo-traditional and boyfriend country emerging, the industry sees little reason to deviate too far from bro’s macho imagery, now marketed and manifested throughout the nation. The more politicized male acts have been given particular attention, coalescing into a sub-subgenre one might call “Trump country”.

Like Merle Haggard for Richard Nixon and Toby Keith for George Bush Jr., Trump has his own country music star representative in Jason Aldean. Now an old-school bro with a John Wayne image and demeanor, Aldean measured and manipulated the rising tide and temperature of Trumpism with “Try That In a Small Town” (2023).

Trump Country Music’s March

Calculated to create controversy and clicks by its co-writers, Kelley Lovelace, Neil Thrasher, Tully Kennedy, and Kurt Allison, the song’s anti-liberal message was framed as a vigilante fantasy of small-town (code: white conservative) America responding to urban protesters (code: Black Lives Matter). Its effect was far-reaching, helping stir and rally the Republican base just in time for the 2024 presidential election.

The contentious aspects of the song, though, had less to do with the lyrics—which differed little from any number of songs by Charlie Daniels, Hank Williams Jr., and Kid Rock—than the video, which propelled the song from a minor to a major hit. Against a backdrop of rioters that suggests lawless American cities, Aldean threatens the similarly inclined with “try that in a small town”, inferring that calling the police would not be his first line of response.

Other scenes show the singer and band performing in front of the Maury County Courthouse in Columbia, Tennessee, the infamous site of 18-year-old Henry Choate’s lynching in 1927, and the Columbia Uprising in 1947.

Reactions to the video from within country music culture were immediate, with Jason Isbell, Sheryl Crow, and Margo Price condemning its endorsement of vigilante justice, and Travis Tritt, Cody Johnson, and Brantley Gilbert defending the clip for its law and order message. Released at the same time various Republican presidential candidates were vying for their party’s nomination, co-option fever broke out. Vivek Ramaswamy and Nikki Haley both used the song at campaign rallies.

A product built to exploit emotions of fear and anger, Aldean’s song was ideal for politicians seeking to outflank Trump on the right. When Country Music Television and other outlets pulled the video from rotation, this enabled the far right’s cherished victim role to be played. Then South Dakota governor Kristi Noem feigned shock that anyone would want to “cancel” the song, while her Arkansas comrade-in-performative outrage, Sarah Huckabee Sanders, argued that the urban left should spend less time trying to ban songs and more time trying to stop criminals and looters.

Trump soon added to the chorus, posting on his Truth Social account, “Jason Aldean is a fantastic guy who just came out with a great new song. Support Jason all the way. MAGA!!!”

Trump, of course, went on to win the nomination and the 2024 election, supported by appearances along the campaign trail by Aldean. The atmosphere of anger and outrage the singer had helped create across red America perhaps helped the president-elect even more. Aldean got what he asked for, too, as Trump’s regime now applies the kind of unconstitutional treatment of civil protesters the singer would no doubt welcome.

Another song co-opted relentlessly by the far right in the same year, 2023, was “Rich Men North of Richmond”, by Oliver Anthony. Sounding more like Appalachian folk than bro-country, Anthony’s song came out of left field but soon landed on the political right’s plate. Bypassing the Nashville superstructure, “Rich Men North of Richmond” signaled a return to roots music after decades of country rock and pop dominance. It also evoked the same feelings of anger, grievance, and nostalgia Aldean had in “Try That in a Small Town”.

Like that song, Anthony’s struck a chord with heartland America, and it, too, shot to the top of the national Trump country music charts. Both songs tapped into populist appeals, and both spoke to and stoked working-class resentments by targeting perceived elites.

Early in the song, the populism appears to come from the left as the singer rages against low pay and greedy politicians in Washington. Then, though, the lyrics take a rightward turn as Anthony shifts the blame to a section of the poor by calling out “the obese milking welfare”, an update of Reagan’s “welfare queen” scapegoat. 

By the time of the Republican primaries in 2023, Anthony’s song had gone viral, becoming a topic of national discussion. It was brought up in the first question of the primary debate on August 23rd when moderator Martha MacCallum of Fox News said, “As we sit here tonight, the number one song on the Billboard chart is called ‘Rich Men North of Richmond.’ It is by a singer from Farmville, Virginia, named Oliver Anthony. His lyrics speak of alienation, of deep frustration with the state of government and of this country.”

MacCallum then asked why the song was resonating so strongly, noting that Washington, D.C. is approximately 100 miles north of Richmond. This set up the participants to co-opt the song by aligning it with their own proposals for less government and less welfare spending.

Georgia U.S. Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene later jumped on the bandwagon, giving the song a nationalistic spin by calling it “the anthem of the forgotten Americans who truly support this nation.” In the ensuing weeks, it seemed that “Rich Men North of Richmond” was embraced by as many far-right influencers as MAGA voters.

Dismayed by the political exploitation of his song, Anthony’s protestations of misinterpretation and misappropriation were ultimately drowned out by the tsunami of far-right voices—as right-wing political strategist Steve Bannon would say, flooding the zone. Progressive country songwriter Nick Shoulders summarized, “It’s a song about the people who were trying to present [Anthony] as one of them, and it shows how insidious and intense the far right is when it attempts to co-opt country music and rural grievances.”

When co-opting country artists as their own, the far right gives them protected status. Thus, just as Trump is always pardoned for his “sins” and his indiscretions rationalized, so country singer Morgan Wallen was treated similarly when TMZ posted footage of him shouting out racial slurs. Although initially condemned within the industry, the singer was soon cast as a victim of the “gotcha” left.

Furthermore, Trump’s America rallied around the country star such that sales of his music shot up 339% the day after the incident. As with Aldean’s song, purchasing became part of the protest against cancel culture, a way of showing which side you are on. Trump country music, like Trump himself, essentially means that as long as your hurtful words or actions provoke or “own” the liberals, you will not face negative consequences for them. In fact, those moral failings can boost your career and make you a hero of the MAGA masses.

Hick-Hop’s Bro Country Beat

One subgenre of Trump country music that has made divisive resentment politics its primary appeal is country rap, or “hick-hop”. As both rap and country music have gradually drifted to the right in recent years, each increasingly driven by a monetary incentive, it was inevitable that they would cross paths despite their historic antipathy to one another. Bro-country integrated elements of rap and introduced some unlikely collaborations, Ludacris teaming up with Aldean for the remix of “Dirt Road Anthem” (2011) and Florida Georgia Line featuring Nelly on the “Cruise” (2012) remix. All concerned benefited commercially from the mergers.

Country rap departs from these past ventures by going all-in on both genres, giving full recognition to the reality that most young people raised on country music this century were also raised on rap. Colt Ford is a key figure in this subgenre, producing his own country rap in the late 2000s while introducing others via his Average Joes Entertainment label. His tentacles of influence reached into bro-country, too; it was he who first penned and performed “Dirt Road Anthem” in 2008. Bubba Sparxxx was also an early innovator, his Deliverance (2003) album drawing attention to Georgia as the hub of country rap activity.

Common to this subculture is a hard-right bent that takes the topics of bro-country—trucks, mudding, drinking, and pretty girls in boots ‘n’ jorts—then adds images with a more political identity: guns, “rednecks”, and Confederate flags. Without support from Nashville’s Music Row or country radio, country rap operates much like Ku Klux Klan-funded country did during the 1960s; in the shadows and on the periphery of society.

There, greater space and autonomy enable an extreme and full-throated version of conservative country, one more appealing to militia types than mainstream Republicans. Among the ranks of these rap warriors are the Lacs, who host their own annual festival in Blackshear, Georgia, where bro-country fantasies are lived out and Trump is branded on shirts and hats. Their song, “Let Your Country Hang Out” (2012), advocates flying the Confederate flag in your front yard, a gesture that posse member “Uncle Snap” Sharpe justifies as satiating fans that identify with this symbol of southern pride and liberal trolling.

Other acts include Big Smo, who channels his inner Hank Jr. with “Rednecks Got It Right” (2015), and Upchurch, a comedian turned social media star who has maximized his profits by playing to hard-right white supporters who care little for rap but a lot for the messaging. In “Bloodshed” (2018), Upchurch offers a Trumpian take on the 2017 Charlottesville “Unite the Right” rally with the lines, “Hate groups throwin’ piss ‘cause they’re mad at a monument / …You fuckin’ degenerate, get your lazy ass off the grass / This ain’t a statue of slavery.”

MAGA rapper Forgiato Blow survives through the online sale of Trump-loving and liberal-hating music and merchandise. As a committed activist rapper, he serves an important role for his political hero, keeping his followers in a perpetually elevated state of anger and aggression, in the process herding them into a de facto private army ready and prepared to intimidate or attack any dissenters or detractors.

Trump Country Music’s Tuning Fork

All authoritarians seek to legitimize their regimes by establishing a subservient cultural wing. With its vast majority of fans voting Republican, Trump country music is a genre suited for the current administration to court, cultivate, and co-opt. As sociologist Tressie McMillan Cottom recently noted, “Our nation’s politics…have gone white nationalist. That makes country music, and Nashville, a good fit for the moment.” ( She continues, “Trumpist power brokers want to turn Nashville into the right wing’s Hollywood. They want Nashville for the same reason they want universities and the Kennedy Center.”

To achieve this goal requires willing participants and alliances, artists and industries prepared to accept, express, and promote the requisite politics. In Trump country music, the far right has found that those involved are either drawn in by ideology or incentivized by the financial rewards available. Today’s country music culture has become a quid pro quo zone in which all involved parties are rewarded for their graft and exploitation.

For this to flourish, a network of communications is needed, an echo chamber where the voices of far-right country bounce into far-right media, which bounce into far-right politics, all ultimately bouncing back to the country fans that finance them all. Those consumers are (unwitting) contributors, prompted with values-based propaganda by their cultural representatives to buy the ideologically right music (e.g., Aldean) and to boycott dissenters (e.g., the Chicks).

For this circular flow of Trump country music to run smoothly, all artists are obliged to tow the party line. Thus, when country superstar Zach Bryan recently had the audacity to include lyrics in a song that critique the activities of ICE, he immediately incurred the wrath of both Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary of public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security, and its secretary, Kristi Noem.  Surveying what is currently happening elsewhere across America’s cultural landscape, one might ask: Will country music be next to experience the threats, bribes, and shakedowns necessary to create a Trump-friendly world of entertainment?


Works Cited [underway]

Barnette, Emma and Egwuonwu, Nnamdi. “Haley and Ramaswamy play Jason Aldean song ‘Try That In A Small Town’ at campaign events”. NBC News. 20 July 2023.

Cox, Bradley. “Shooter Jennings Says ‘Try That In A Small Town” Shouldn’t Be Considered For A Grammy Because It’s A Crappy Song’”. WhiskeyRiff. 3 November 2023.

Sforza, Lauren. “Noem ‘shocked’ over attempts to ‘cancel’ Jason Aldean, his song and beliefs”. The Hill. 19 July 2023.

Zemler, Emily. “Sheryl Crow Slams Jason Aldean’s ‘Try That in a Small Town’: ‘It’s Just Lame’”. Rolling Stone. 19 July 2023.

(https://thehill.com/blogs/in-the-know/4110225-republicans-rush-to-defend-jason-aldean-and-try-that-in-a-small-town/)

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HFIBpVMoxWs)

(https://www.seattletimes.com/entertainment/newly-released-country-song-rich-men-north-of-richmond-from-unknown-artist-instantly-becomes-right-wing-anthem/)

(https://jacobin.com/2023/09/country-music-white-rural-working-class-south-civil-rights-challenge-injustice) 

(https://www.businessinsider.com/morgan-wallens-music-sales-skyrocketed-racial-slur-controversy-2021-2)

(https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/rhymes-from-the-backwoods-the-rise-of-country-rap-205828/)  

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/18/opinion/country-music-beyonce-lana.html)

(https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/08/arts/music/zach-bryan-song-kristi-noem.htm

October 20, 2025 0 comments
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Burgundy Boots Are Somehow Even More Versatile Than Black or Brown This Fall
Fashion

Burgundy Boots Are Somehow Even More Versatile Than Black or Brown This Fall

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84

Burgundy Boots are the solution you didn’t know you needed.

You see, it’s been hard to see beyond all the brown boots this season. The color has been dominating every fall trend mood board, especially when it comes to accessories. But there are other options! Burgundy boots are another color option that’s also trending this year, and they offer a nice alternative to black and brown.

Glamour’s burgundy boots wish list

Burgundy shoes are just as classic as black or brown, but come with a singularity that makes them stand out even more. The reddish tinge elevates almost any other tones it’s paired with, from browns and beiges to a high contrast blue. It is so versatile that if there was only one shoe to recommend buying for fall, there’s a strong case to be made for burgundy boots.

We’re seeing trendy maroon boots on and off the runway and in all sorts of styles, from shiny patent leather to ones with an architectural heel. Buy them in bootie format or with a snakeskin finish. Wear them tucked in or out of your pants—the options for styling are limitless. (That said, two pieces that work especially well with burgundy boots are skirts and dresses.)

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

burgundy boots

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

burgundy boots

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

burgundy boots

Edward Berthelot/Getty Images

Street style looks suggest playing with color is the way to go. Wear a matching maroon dress with a colorful scarf, for example. Pastel pink is another tone that works very well and offers a nice contrast to shoes with lots of texture. Another styling tip is to go with basic black or dark gray—these look quite sophisticated when paired with a wine red tone.

If you’re wearing a skirt, one styling hack is to include maroon in another piece in the look such as a sleeveless top, turtleneck sweater, or bomber jacket. And even though burgundy boots are technically on trend, they feel so timeless that you can pair them with other en vogue pieces—like a lingerie skirt or fringe—without it feeling like you’re chasing fads.

The good news? Most retailers are offering options that work for all tastes and budgets. If you prefer flat and sensible boots, you’ll find what you are looking for. Those who want a daring platform or a sophisticated kitten heel will have no trouble finding the right shoe, either. We’ve even shopped out some of our favorites for the season, below.

Reformation Gaelle Knee Boots

Le Monde Beryl Luna Boots

A version of this article was previously published in Vogue Spain.

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Leandra Medine Cohen on Her Favorite Fall Boots and Why Tights Are an Outfit Secret Weapon
Fashion

Leandra Medine Cohen on Her Favorite Fall Boots and Why Tights Are an Outfit Secret Weapon

by jummy84 October 19, 2025
written by jummy84


What’s the opposite of gatekeeping? Welcome to “Payment Processing,” in which we ask stylish, generally cool people who’ve tried it all about their favorite fashion and beauty buys. Though it may seem like Leandra Medine Cohen has less of a ubiquitous presence than in her seminal Man …

Continue reading

October 19, 2025 0 comments
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Netflix’s ‘Boots’ Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga – Hollywood Life
Hollywood

Netflix’s ‘Boots’ Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga – Hollywood Life

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Image Credit: Patti Perret/Netflix © 2024

Boots became one of Netflix’s most popular TV series in 2025. Following its October release, viewers were gripped by its emotional and witty adaptation of Greg Cope White’s 2015 memoir, The Pink Marine. Leading the cast is 13 Reasons Why alum Miles Heizer.

According to Boots‘ tagline, Miles plays a “bullied gay teen [who] joins the Marine Corps with his best friend despite risks. In boot camp they experience profound personal change amid danger, as their platoon confronts both literal and figurative landmines.”

Below, meet the main cast of Boots and learn where you’ve seen each actor before.

Netflix's 'Boots' Cast From Miles Heizer to Vera Farmiga: Meet the Actors
Credit: Alfonso “Pompo” Bresciani/Netflix

Miles Heizer – Cameron Cope

As previously noted, Miles is recognized for his performance as Alex Standall in Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why. He also starred in NBC’s Parenthood, playing the character Drew Holt. Miles has also appeared in multiple movies, including The Stanford Prison Experiment and Love, Simon.

Though there’s been no word of a second season for Boots yet, Miles told Variety in October 2025 that there were still “a lot of stories to tell, from more of Greg’s different experiences in the Marines to ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ to when it was repealed.”

“I would do it for 10 seasons if they let us,” Miles added.

Liam Oh – Ray McAffey

Liam plays the role of Cameron Cope’s straight friend in Boots. The series is the actor’s breakout role, and he previously appeared in The Thing About Henry and an uncredited role in Code 3. 

Vera Farmiga – Barbara Cope

Vera plays Cameron’s mother, and the actress is best known for her long-standing portrayal of Lorraine Warren in The Conjuring universe. She has also starred in films such as Orphan, Source Code and Godzilla: King of the Monsters.

Max Parker – Sergeant Liam Robert Sullivan

Max stepped into the shoes of a sergeant for the series. He’s been seen in a multitude of films and shows, such as Casualty, Emmerdale and Vampire Academy. 

Cedrick Cooper – Staff Sergeant Marcus McKinnon

Cedrick also plays a sergeant in the series and has been seen in the series Will Trent in addition to the films The Comeback and Wallbanger.

Ana Ayora – Captain Denise Fajardo

Ana plays the strong female captain in Boots and has appeared in a slew of TV shows, including Lincoln Heights, Banshee, MacGyver and In the Dark.

Angus O’Brien – Thaddeus Beau Sterling Hicks

Angus is gaining traction in his career so far, and Boots isn’t the only series he’s appeared in. The actor has also been seen in Night Sky, The Path, Hightown and the short film The Pass.

Dominic Goodman – Isaiah Nash

Dominic has been on TV for a few years, having appeared in other shows such as Young Rock and First Kill. 

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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T-Pain And Crocs Bring “Boots With The Fur” To Life With Shoe Collab
Music

T-Pain And Crocs Bring “Boots With The Fur” To Life With Shoe Collab

by jummy84 October 14, 2025
written by jummy84

T-Pain is making sure fans can literally step into one of his most memorable lyrics.

The 41-year-old rapper and singer has teamed up with Crocs for their Croctober collection, unveiling the “Unfurgettable Leopard Knee High Boots.” The shoe-boot is a playful nod to his line from Flo Rida’s 2008 hit “Low,” where he raps: “Shawty had them Apple Bottom jeans, boots with the fur.”

In the campaign, the modern Godfather of Autotune wears lab goggles and red & blue layered button-downs under a crisp white scientist coat while holding up the boot.

Crocs

“Croctober is our love letter to the fans,” said Carly Gomez, Crocs’ chief marketing officer. “They’ve always been the heartbeat of our brand, and this year, we’re celebrating their creativity, individuality, and boldness in ways they have truly only dreamed of.”

According to a press release, the Unfurgettable Leopard Knee High Boot officially drops on October 23 — dubbed “Crocs Day” — and is set to be Crocs’ tallest silhouette ever, standing at 35.4 inches (90 cm).

The boots are covered in a plush, vegan leopard-print fur, decked out with Jibbitz charms, chains, and embellishments. The new design also features a backstrap, clip, and metal loop rivet, giving fans multiple ways to personalize their look.

Crocs

For a limited time, the boots will be available on Crocs’ official website and at the Crocs SoHo store in New York City.

Check out the boot above and revisit T-Pain and Florida’s “Low” below.

October 14, 2025 0 comments
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Norman Lear’s Swan Song 'Boots' Shines Light on Military Homophobia 
TV & Streaming

Norman Lear’s Swan Song ‘Boots’ Shines Light on Military Homophobia 

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

Norman Lear’s last credit before his death in 2023 was executive producer of “Boots,” an eight-part adaptation of Greg Cope’s memoir “The Pink Marine.” Based on the latter’s experiences as a closeted U.S. Marine Corp in an era when it was illegal for homosexuals to serve in the military, the Netflix original may be set in 1990, but in the wake of Donald Trump’s transgender ban and Pete Hegseth’s claims that gay recruits are part of a Marxist agenda, it proves that even as a 101-year-old, the sitcom pioneer possessed the uncanny ability to stay ahead of the societal curve.   

Unlike Amazon’s underrated “Clean Slate” (the last Lear project to be completed in his lifetime), in which Laverne Cox’s trans woman is largely welcomed home with open arms, “Boots” is less warm-fuzzies and more cold-blooded aggression. The cast must have required a boxful of Chloraseptic by the shoot’s end, considering how a good third of the dialogue is shouted at intense decibel-shattering levels.  

The view from Trilith Studios

Created by Andy Parker (“Tales of the City”), “Boots” centers on Cameron Cope (Miles Heizer), a sensitive gay teen cajoled into joining Marine boot camp by his supportive straight best friend Ray McAffey (Liam Oh) during a summer in which possibilities can seem both excitingly infinite and depressingly limiting. While the latter quickly takes to military life, motivated by the desire to please his overwhelmingly stern war veteran dad (the father figures here are uniformly awful), the former immediately starts ruing the day he signed up.   

“Boots” gets plenty of comic mileage from this fish-out-of-water scenario. “We’ve only been here one day?,” a crestfallen Cameron queries following a baptism of fire in which he’s forced to shave his head, scavenge leftovers from the trash, and contend with superiors gleefully proclaiming they’ll “snap your head off and s**t down your neck.” In a narrative device which, while gimmicky, helps to signal his shift in personality, he also regularly converses with the slightly more effeminate, ever-disapproving alter-ego he spends 13 weeks desperately trying to mask.  

It’s a shame this side doesn’t appear more often.

While it’s impressive that Heizer can still convincingly pass as an 18-year-old at age 31 — this isn’t a Ben Platt in “Dear Evan Hansen”-style embarrassment — his performance feels a little too muted to connect. Sure, we get why Cameron would repeatedly stifle his true self in front of the drill sergeants who bark the “other” F-word like it’s going out of fashion. Likewise with the emotionally stunted bros whose idea of entertainment is a toilet-based challenge dubbed the Brown Bomber (don’t ask). But even in the scenes with Ray, the only person he’s outed himself to, he’s something of a blank canvas. And when he does assume a little more agency later on, his actions — particularly his willingness to drink the Kool-Aid — make him difficult to root for. 

Luckily, his fellow tryouts are a little more charismatic. Having spent his entire life in the shadow of Cody (Brandon Tyler Moore), the far more athletic twin brother primed for combat by their sadistic dad, John (Blake Burt) cuts a far more sympathetic figure. Late transfer Jones (Jack Cameron Kay) serves as the anti-Cameron, a confident almost-openly gay man who treats all the ultra-macho machinations with the contempt they deserve. Kieron Moore provides the necessary boo-hiss factor as Slovacek, a Czech-American meathead who accepts the comparisons to Ivan Drago as a badge of honor. 

BOOTS. (L to R) Liam Oh as Ray McAffey and Miles Heizer as Cameron Cope in Episode 102 of Boots. Cr. Alfonso
‘Boots’Alfonso “Pompo” Bresciani/Netflix © 2023

“Boots” also fails to convey exactly why Cameron would subject himself to the whims of such a toxic environment. Unlike his comrades, his family life is more dysfunctional than deeply troubled. Although mom Barbara (a sadly under-utilized Vera Farmiga) takes several days to realize her son hasn’t just popped out for some milk, she’s no Norma Bates-esque monster. She undoubtedly cares — see how she castigates the world’s most brightly-colored recruitment office for signing up someone so transparently ill-equipped (“These aren’t boys to you… they’re cannon fodder for when the country needs a good distraction”). While a heartfelt late-in-the-day monologue, the kind which may have graced an Emmy clip had her character been more fleshed out, expresses regret at how she’s handled raising such a sensitive soul.   

In fact, the show’s messaging is muddled throughout, as if it’s never quite sure whether it’s serving as a Marines recruitment ad or an active deterrent. The sergeants act so relentlessly inhumane they make the “Full Metal Jacket” lot look as menacing as Pee-wee Herman. Yet there are occasions when the show appears to justify their extreme “man up” approach as a means to an end, as if all the wayward recruits needed was some racial and homophobic epithets to whip them into shape.  

Furthermore, the one issue you’d expect to take front and center is often relegated to the background. Indeed, Cameron’s desires are barely addressed beyond a few furtive glances in the shower (anyone looking for a clandestine romance to ship should stick to “Heartstopper”). And other than ignoramus Slovacek, the recruits seem an unusually tolerant bunch with no qualms about leaning into the naturally homoerotic.

Instead of sticking the boot into military homophobia, the show initially seems determined to tiptoe around it. It’s only when delving deeper into the backstory of Sgt. Sullivan (Max Parker), a cartoonishly humorless ex-Recon who takes Cameron under his incredibly warped wing, that it starts exploring the hardships of an era when even the Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy seemed enlightened.

It’s also here where “Boots” finally appears to find its stride, hitting just the right balance of sitcom-esque quips and emotional beats while also posing an arsenal of tough questions. Let’s hope that Netflix gives the show a chance to reveal the answers. The closing scene’s breaking news of the Iraq War certainly gives plenty of scope for a second season. And with a bit more spit and a bit less polish, it might even be fit enough to tie the laces of Lear’s finest.  

All eight episodes of”Boots” Season 1 are now streaming on Netflix.

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Boots ending: Cast share hopes for season 2 following cliffhanger
TV & Streaming

Boots ending: Cast share hopes for season 2 following cliffhanger

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

That’s the story behind Boots, a new Netflix drama inspired by The Pink Marine, a memoir written by former US Marine Greg Cope White.

13 Reasons Why star Miles Heizer plays the lead and he’s joined by Liam Oh as Cameron’s best friend, Ray McAffey.

Together, they fight to find their place in the marines, overcoming physical and emotional obstacles spearheaded by Sgt Sullivan (Max Parker), a decorated Marine who hides a secret of his own.

Boots ending explained

By the end of season 1’s eight episode run, Cameron has finally proved that he has what it takes. Even Sullivan gives him his dues, revealing that he was only so hard on Cameron because he wanted to help make him stronger. The fact he’s also closeted might have had something to do with it too.

“You ready, Cope? You’re a Marine now.” And with that, Sullivan leaves. Where he goes, we don’t find out, but it’s easy to see why he left when he did. Prison looms following a bar fight that went bad and the Marines are also questioning him to find out if he’s gay too, because it was illegal to be homosexual and join up at the time.

Meanwhile, Cameron celebrates the end of his training in a bar with the other Marines, overjoyed that they’ve all made it. But he and Ray couldn’t have picked a worse time to join, because a newscaster has just announced that Iraq has invaded Kuwait, which means they’ll soon be needed on the front lines.

With Sullivan gone AWOL, Cameron suppressing his sexuality, and Ray… Well, Ray’s found love, all three characters are in a very different place to where they started this season.

Ahead of the show’s launch, RadioTimes.com asked Parker, Heizer and Oh what they hoped to see for their characters next in a potential second season of Boots.

“There are so many ways it could go for all of our characters,” said Parker. “I love that moment at the end where I hand over the walkie talkie to Cameron and let him know that he’s ready now… Just this battle of what’s right and what’s wrong.

“That moment of handing over the baton for him to carry on… He could be handing himself in, he could be running away, he could do anything.”

Logan Gould as Mo Mason, Max Parker as Sgt Sullivan, Rico Paris as Santos and Miles Heizer as Cameron Cope. Alfonso “Pompo” Bresciani/Netflix

Heizer would like to see Cameron enjoy some romance after things didn’t work out so well for him on that front in season 1.

“It would be interesting to see him navigating that, especially in this military world,” he continued. “That would be cool. But like Max said, there’s so many different directions and so many things I would love to see. But just for fun, I’d like to see a little romance.”

For Oh, Ray’s future is very open moving forward: “He ends the season in this interesting spot of really questioning the path that he’s been on for the first time since he was a kid. I would like to see him continue to interrogate the choices that he’s made in his life, or the choices that he hasn’t made, that have been made for him by his father, by this sense of duty that he has.

“I want him to really find out what he believes for himself.”

Whatever happens, there’s plenty of story left to mine from that cliffhanger, switching things up from training to real-life combat. Because if being gay in boot camp was tough, imagine how hard it will be for Cameron to stay true to himself while fighting in Kuwait?

Let’s just hope Netflix laces up and marches ahead with a much-needed second season so we can see where this might take us.

Boots is streaming now on Netflix. Sign up for Netflix from £5.99 a month. Netflix is also available on Sky Glass and Virgin Media Stream.

Check out more of our Drama coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more from the biggest stars in TV, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

October 9, 2025 0 comments
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‘9-1-1’ Expands to Nashville, ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Goes Boom, Marine ‘Boots’ Camp, All About Victoria Beckham and Saquon Barkley
TV & Streaming

‘9-1-1’ Expands to Nashville, ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Goes Boom, Marine ‘Boots’ Camp, All About Victoria Beckham and Saquon Barkley

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

ABC

9-1-1

The long-running first-responder drama opens its ninth season with a tribute to the 118’s fallen leader, Bobby Nash (Peter Krause), as the crew prepares to dedicate the firehouse in his memory. But duty never stops calling, and they snap back into action for an emergency involving a billionaire tech giant in critical peril.

Golden Bachelor

The Golden Bachelor

The second season of The Golden Bachelor is available Wednesdays on ABC and streaming next day on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. It’s the senior spin on the beloved dating reality show, with 66-year-old former NFL linebacker and lawyer Mel Owens searching for his later-in-life lover. This season is hosted by Jesse Palmer, a former Bachelor and NFL player himself. Fingers crossed he can help Owens find love.

Chris O'Donnell as Don — '9-1-1: Nashville' Series Premiere

Disney/Jake Giles Netter

9-1-1: Nashville

It’s a sign of the times, and the state of broadcast TV, that ABC’s only new scripted series this fall is that most reliable of standbys: a spinoff. Chris O’Donnell, who starred in one of TV’s most successful spinoffs (NCIS: LA), leads the ensemble as Captain Don Hart of Fire Station 113. In the premiere, he and his crew respond to a franchise favorite — a weather emergency — when a tornado rips through Music City, threatening a country-music festival. Jessica Capshaw (Grey’s Anatomy) co-stars as Don’s wife Blythe, whose well-heeled family brings a Dynasty vibe to Don’s working-class world when a scandalous family secret is revealed.

GREY’S ANATOMY - “Only the Strong Survive” - After the catastrophic hospital explosion, Grey Sloan’s staff scrambles to save not only their patients’ lives but also their own. Confronted with impossible surgical decisions and emotional turmoil, they fight to preserve life amid devastation. THURSDAY, OCT. 9 (10:00-11:00 p.m. EDT) on ABC. (Disney/Anne Marie Fox) ELLEN POMPEO, MICAH MCNEIL

Disney / Anne Marie Fox

Grey’s Anatomy

Another year, another cliffhanger to resolve. Which is how Grey’s Anatomy kicks off its 22nd season, TV’s longest-running prime-time medical drama. The opener is in full crisis mode, and it’s all hands on deck as Grey Sloan’s staff scrambles in the wake of an explosion on the surgical floor. Link (Chris Carmack) appeared to be the doctor most immediately in danger, but we’ll know soon enough who gets to operate another day.

Miles Heizer as Cameron Cope and Liam Oh as Ray McAffey in 'Boots' Season 1 Episode 4

Netflix

Boots

“This is not like summer camp,” laments Cameron Cope (Parenthood‘s Miles Heizer), a closeted gay man who follows his best friend Ray (Liam Oh) into the Marines in 1990, when homosexuality was strictly forbidden (even predating “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell”). Cameron also soon realizes that the “buddy system” isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be in a system designed to break down recruits and shape them into soldiers. This eight-part dramedy, based on Greg Cope White’s memoir The Pink Marine, has moments of whimsy — especially when Cameron’s anxiety-ridden inner self speaks out — but is also unexpectedly compelling in its coming-of-age story as Cameron makes unexpected alliances in his quest to discover what it is to be a man. “I’m such a Rose,” this Golden Girls fan sighs — which is probably something he should keep to himself for the time being.

Victoria Beckham in Netflix's 'Victoria Beckham' docuseries, 2025.

Netflix/YouTube

Victoria Beckham

The road from musical stardom as Posh Spice to celebrated footballer’s wife to being accepted as a fashion designer hasn’t always been easy, says Victoria Beckham in a three-part documentary profile. “I have never forgotten where I come from,” she says, revealing her insecurities and desires as she prepares for “the biggest fashion show I have ever done.”

Saquon Barkley, Philadelphia Eagles

Sarah Stier / Getty Images

Saquon

With Martin Scorsese as executive producer, an intimate documentary spotlights Saquon Barkley, the Super Bowl champion running back for the Philadelphia Eagles. The film covers his career highs and lows (injuries) while also following him off the field as a devoted husband and dad. “It’s not who you are when you get knocked down,” says the resilient superstar athlete. “It’s who you are when you stand back up. That’s why I play the game.”

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Tecovas Cowboy Boots Are A Western Fall Staple
Fashion

Tecovas Cowboy Boots Are A Western Fall Staple

by jummy84 October 7, 2025
written by jummy84

I’m a sucker for suede boots, so I was excited to try new styles. The Annie in suede is very classic, but the new distressed charcoal color is a bit more fresh. The Sadie is also available in suede, and this pair features intricate braiding that I found really beautiful.

Now, onto the boot I couldn’t wear: The Abigail. I generally have to order wide-calf boots for myself, so I was skeptical about trying the brand’s knee-high and over-the-knee styles. While The Annie is offered in wide-calf options, others are not, so I couldn’t quite slip The Abigail all the way up. But pro tip: every Tecovas store offers free boot stretching. I witnessed this service in person when a worker stretched the shaft of a boot up to an extra inch wider. This is a huge perk if you’re able to make it into a store so that your boots fit perfectly.

October 7, 2025 0 comments
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