Lee Pace wore a leather coat & a Canadian tuxedo for the NY premiere of Running Man. You guys, I still think the ‘stache is a bad idea. [RCFA]
What is Pluribus about and what does it say about apocalypse politics? [Pajiba]
Jonathan Bailey still wants to become a father. [Socialite Life]
Jennifer Lawrence mocked a Real Housewife’s face work. [LaineyGossip]
Photos from the Baby2Baby gala. [Go Fug Yourself]
Betty Boop is now public domain. [OMG Blog]
Billy Bob Thornton wrapped his arms around Ali Larter. [Just Jared]
Weird Al Yankovic & Will Forte love covering Chappell Roan. [Seriously OMG]
Re: Mar-a-Lago Face, I always wonder if they’re all going to the same guy, or whether every cosmetic surgeon in Florida just does this work now? [Jezebel]
What to know about Marty Supreme. [Hollywood Life]
Northern Lights across America. [Buzzfeed]
Canadian
Rock and roll legends AC/DC coming to 4 Canadian cities in summer of 2026
Hells Bells! Rock ‘n’ roll fans better get ready to be shook all night long, because one of the biggest acts on earth is returning to four Canadian cities in 2026.
AC/DC has announced more dates for its ongoing Power Up tour (named for the band’s album of the same name that came out in 2020) that includes stops at some of the biggest stadiums in North America.
In Canada, the Australian rock band will perform with The Pretty Reckless in Vancouver, Edmonton, Toronto and Montreal.
Their first stop will be in Edmonton at 56,400-seat Commonwealth Stadium on Aug. 9, 2026.
“We’re thrilled to host rock star legends AC/DC at Commonwealth Stadium, the largest venue of its kind in Canada,” said Heather Seutter, director of Commonwealth Stadium.
“Events like this draw in people from across the city, the province and beyond and demonstrates that Edmonton is a concert destination of choice for major artists.”
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AC/DC previously left fans Thunderstruck in Edmonton in 2015 and 2009.

The AC/DC Comeback That Saved 2020: ‘What Makes People Happy is the Music Itself’
After Edmonton, AC/DC will perform at Vancouver’s BC Place on Aug. 13, 2026.

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After shows south of the border, AC/DC will then head to Montreal for a show at Parc Jean-Drapeau on Sept. 12, 2026. The park on the Saint Lawrence River that can hold up to 65,000 people is set to also host Iron Maiden the week before AC/DC’s arrival.
Their last Canadian date is Sept. 16 at Rogers Stadium in downtown Toronto.
Tickets for all Canadian stops go on sale to the public on Friday at 10 a.m. local time on Ticketmaster.
AC/DC has been one of the leading rock and roll bands for over four decades, with more than 200 million albums sold worldwide.
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One of the most influential rock bands in history, AC/DC played their first show on Dec. 31, 1973 at a nightclub in Sydney, Australia.
By 1980, the band was on a roll, known for its high-energy performances and predictably hard-charging songs. Their album Highway to Hell was certified gold in America and made it into the top 25 Billboard album charts.
The band was founded by brothers Angus and Malcolm Young; the latter died in 2017 at the age of 64 after suffering from dementia for several years. Angus remains the only continuous member of the band.

AC/DC co-founder Malcolm Young dead at 64
The Power Up tour will see Angus Young on lead guitar, vocalist Brian Johnson, rhythm guitarist Stevie Young, drummer Matt Laug and bass player Chris Chaney
AC/DC was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2003.
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
TORONTO – When Drake was a teenager, he’d stand outside Toronto’s long-gone Escape Nightclub handing out flyers just to get inside and lose himself in Vybz Kartel’s music. On Sunday night, he came full circle, recalling that memory on stage as he welcomed the dancehall star for his first-ever Canadian concert at Scotiabank Arena.
Kartel, dressed head to toe in Blue Jays gear, kicked off night one of three sold-out Toronto shows at the venue, becoming the first Jamaican artist to achieve the milestone.
“Look at all these people right here, how much time we’ve spent with this man’s music right here,” Drake told a frenzied crowd.
Moments earlier, the Toronto rapper made a surprise appearance, performing a string of hits — including 2016’s “Controlla” and this year’s “Nokia” — from a balcony in the arena’s lower level.
“We’ve been waiting to see you our whole [expletive] lives. Welcome home — we’re so happy to have you,” Drake told Kartel before asking permission to play some songs.
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The Toronto shows, presented by Drake’s company OVO, have been long-awaited by Canadian fans. Born Adidja Palmer, Vybz Kartel is one of dancehall’s most influential — and controversial — figures. He rose to prominence in the early 2000s with hits blending dancehall and hip-hop, and continued releasing music even after his 2014 murder conviction and life sentence. Several albums, including 2016’s Billboard-charting “King of the Dancehall,” were recorded covertly from prison.
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Kartel’s conviction was overturned in March 2024 due to juror misconduct, and he was released last year. Since then, the 49-year-old has earned a Grammy nomination, embarked on a world tour and released a steady stream of new music.

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Drake has long credited Kartel as one of his biggest influences, referencing him in interviews and on social media. Drake invited Kartel to join him on stage at London’s Wireless Festival over the summer, and their collaboration continued on Canadian soil Sunday.
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The crowd thundered when Kartel took the stage to his remix of Akon’s 2004 hit “Locked Up,” wielding a baseball bat and wearing a powder-blue Blue Jays jersey with “Worl’ Boss” — one of his nicknames — stitched on the back.
“Canada, we’re here!” he declared. “Yo, big up Blue Jays.”
Despite pushing 50 and battling Graves’ disease, Kartel’s energy was turned to 11 for the entire show. Pumping his knees and bounding down the stage like a one-man parade, he unleashed hits including “Romping Shop,” “It Bend Like Banana” and “Go Go Wine,” the audience gyrating and belting along to every word.
At one point, Kartel became emotional while recounting landing in Toronto earlier in the day.
“I tell you, tears came to my eyes because I’ve never been here before and I know the people want to see me,” he shared.
“I literally cried. Me, a grown-ass man. I said God is the greatest.”
Several attendees said they never thought they’d see the day Kartel performed in Canada.
Daniella Mcleary said she’s been listening to the dancehall star since “before I was old enough to be listening to him,” and scrambled to get tickets when the shows were announced.
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“I think everyone that’s Caribbean was trying to get here today. Toronto has such a big Caribbean community, especially Jamaican, so we’re all going to come together and vibe,” she says.
“He could have sold out the Rogers Centre, too, easily.”
Brittney Sinclair, who was born in Jamaica, says Kartel is embedded in Caribbean culture.
“I view him as a national hero, and I think it’s a miracle he’s here today,” she says, noting that it’s all the more remarkable given his time behind bars.
Sharda Persaud says she’s been waiting for Kartel to play Canada for as long as she can remember.
“I feel like every memory in high school goes back to a Kartel song,” she says.
“His music also instantly transports me to Caribana. It’s everything.”
Sherry Singh credits “Romping Shop” for bringing her and her partner together.
“It was playing at a club and it led to some good loving,” she laughs. “15 years later, we’re still grinding to it.”
Still, she believes dancehall has been overlooked by the Canadian mainstream, despite its importance to the Caribbean community.
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“To see Vybz here, on our home turf, means a lot,” she says.
“This is a good first step, but we need to see more.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 27, 2025
© 2025 The Canadian Press
This Idyllic Canadian Island Is the Pacific Northwest’s Best-Kept Secret
Back on property, guests tuck into Southeast Asian dishes at the pop-up Lola restaurant, helmed by Filipino-Canadian chef Elmark Andres, where the menu is written in a blend of Tagalog and English, the seafood is locally sourced, and seasonal produce comes from the Bodega Ridge farm. Or they can head to the cedar-shingled Pink Geranium, a bright, sunny all-day café and specialty food store launched in 2024, where lunch might be a warming bowl of tom kha soup (coconut, red pepper, green onion, shimeji and king oyster mushrooms) and freshly baked focaccia with rosemary and garlic confit. Regular community programming runs the gamut from poetry readings to queer opera, and a large stone inglenook fireplace invites curling up with a book and a coffee on brisk winter afternoons.
Food has an outsized importance on such a lightly populated island as Galiano, home to standout restaurants like Oxeye and The Crane and Robin—though most islanders would agree that the fine-dining temple Pilgrimme near Montague Harbour is Galiano’s most sought-after table. At the helm is Winnipeg-born chef Jesse McCleery, who opened the restaurant in 2014 after a stint at Copenhagen’s groundbreaking Noma, alongside his partner, chef Melanie Witt.
Photo: Jarusha Brown

Photo: Courtesy of Pilgrimme
Tucked in a dense forest that looks straight out of a children’s storybook, the restaurant occupies a log cabin decorated with hanging lanterns, antler accents, shearling throws, and a reproduction of Vladimir Tretchikoff’s “Chinese Girl.” It’s cozy and unpretentious, with room for just 16 diners, putting the spotlight on seasonal dishes served on sculptural dishware by local ceramicists like Ilana Fonariov.
The 12-course tasting menu is a love letter to Galiano’s bounty: foraged kelp, sea buckthorn, aronia berries (“I’ve never seen them grow outside Scandinavia,” muses McCleery), and Sichuan pepper leaves. Wild-ferment vinegars made from salal berries and grand fir needles stand in when yuzu, kaffir lime, or other Japanese citrus isn’t readily available from a grower on neighboring Salt Spring Island. True to Galiano form, almost all the fruit comes not from professional farms but from local neighbors and residents.

Photo: Courtesy of Pilgrimme

Photo: Courtesy of Pilgrimme
“There are so many people here with hobby gardens and orchards,” McCleery notes. “People drop by with a massive box of plums or apples, which we’ll trade for a pizza,” he says, referencing his other Galiano project, Charmer Pizza, a pop-up restaurant specializing in 48-hour wild-ferment sourdough made with organic British Columbia grains.
Original Rush band members Geddy Lee and Alex Lifeson announced that they’re planning a reunion tour for the iconic Canadian band in 2026.
It’s the band’s first shows since the R40 tour in 2015 and drummer Neil Peart’s death in 2020.
The tour, called the Fifty Something Tour, will celebrate Rush’s music and legacy as well as Peart’s life, according to the band.
“It’s been over 10 years since Alex and I have performed the music of Rush alongside our fallen bandmate and friend Neil,” said Lee. “A lifetime’s worth of songs that we had put our cumulative hearts and souls into writing, recording and playing together onstage. And so, after all that has gone down since that last show, Alex and I have done some serious soul searching and come to the decision that we f–king miss it, and that it’s time for a celebration.
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“So in 2026 my BFF Lerxst (Lifeson) and I are going to hit the road once again to pay tribute to our past and to Neil by performing a vast selection of Rush songs in a handful of cities. No small task, because as we all know Neil was irreplaceable.”

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Lee said that Peart’s place behind the kit will be filled on tour by “incredible” German drummer Anika Nilles.
“We are thrilled to support the Fifty Something tour, celebrating a band whose music has resonated and inspired fans for generations, and to honour Neil’s extraordinary legacy as both a drummer and lyricist,” Carrie Nuttall-Peart and Olivia Peart, Peart’s widow and daughter, said in a joint statement.
“As the band enters this new chapter, it promises to be truly unforgettable. We are excited to see how their new vision unfolds, and to hear this legendary music played live once again.”
Rush will perform multiple shows in seven cities across Canada, the United States and Mexico, beginning June 7, 2026 at the Kia Forum in Los Angeles.
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These special “evening with” shows will find the band playing two sets each night. Each show will feature a distinct selection of songs and Rush will build each night’s set list from a catalogue of 35 songs, including their greatest hits and fan favourites.
Fans will be able to participate in the Rush Artist Presale by signing up by Thursday, Oct. 9 at 11:59 p.m. ET.
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General onsale begins online on Friday, Oct. 17 at noon local time in Canada.
Tour dates
Sun, Jun 7 — Los Angeles, CA, Kia Forum
Tue, Jun 9 — Los Angeles, CA, Kia Forum
Thu, Jun 18 — Mexico City, MX, Palacio de los Deportes
Wed, Jun 24 — Fort Worth, TX, Dickies Arena
Fri, Jun 26 — Fort Worth, TX, Dickies Arena
Thu, Jul 16 — Chicago, IL, United Center
Sat, Jul 18 — Chicago, IL, United Center
Tue, Jul 28 — New York, NY, Madison Square Garden
Thu, Jul 30 — New York, NY, Madison Square Garden
Fri, Aug 7 — Toronto, ON, Scotiabank Arena
Sun, Aug 9 — Toronto, ON, Scotiabank Arena
Thu Sep 17 — Cleveland, OH, Rocket Arena
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© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Morrissey Cancels Concerts as Canadian Man Is Charged With Online Death Threats Against Him
Canadian authorities have charged a 26-year-old Ottawa man whom they accuse of posting death threats against Morrissey online, the Ottawa Citizen reports. The man, Noah Castellano, is being charged with uttering threats to cause death or bodily harm, and he was released from custody on $5,000 bail, according to the report.
According to court documents obtained by the Ottawa Citizen, investigators believe that Castellano is behind a Bluesky post from September 4 that reads: “Steven Patrick Morrissey when you perform at TD Place here in Ottawa next week on the evening of September 12th, 2025 at about 9pm, I will be present at the venue in the audience and I will attempt to shoot you many times and kill you with a very large gun that I own illegally.”
Morrissey toured the United States, the United Kingdom, and Europe earlier this year, and he began his latest North America tour in Montreal on September 10. He played his September 12 show in Ottawa without incident, and continued his tour in Toronto and New York. Nevertheless, he has canceled tonight’s show, in Mashantucket, Connecticut, and tomorrow night’s, in Boston, citing “recent events and out of an abundance of caution for the safety of both the artist and band.”
Kneecap launch legal attack on Canadian MP Vince Gasparro for “wholly untrue and deeply malicious” comments as band barred from entering Canada
Kneecap have launched a legal attack on Canadian MP Vince Gasparro after being barred from entering Canada.
The Irish rap trio were banned from entering Canada earlier this week, with Canadian officials saying they had “made statements that are contrary to Canadian values” that “have caused deep alarm”.
Announcing the ban on Monday (September 15), Canadian Liberal MP and Parliamentary Secretary for Combating Crime Vince Gasparro said in a video on X/Twitter that the group has “amplified political violence and publicly displayed support for terrorist organisations such as Hezbollah and Hamas.”
“These are not expressions of art or legitimate political critique,” Gasparro said. “They are dangerous endorsements of violence and hate.”
Mo Chara is currently facing terrorism charges levelled against him in May for allegedly displaying a Hezbollah flag on stage at a London show last November. Chara appeared in court last month, where the case was adjourned until September 26.
Kneecap have consistently denied supporting either Hamas or Hezbollah, and said that they do not incite or condone violence. They have also argued that the footage at the UK shows had been taken out of context, and described the legal action as a “carnival of distraction”.
They were due to perform in Toronto and Vancouver in October. A Jewish organisation in the country has been pushing for the government to deny them entry since June.
On behalf of the Government of Canada I am announcing that on the advice of our officials, we have deemed the group Kneecap ineligible to enter our country.
Our government will not tolerate the advocating of political violence, terrorism or Anti-Semitism and hate more broadly. pic.twitter.com/3KOf84G3bZ
— Vince Gasparro (@vgasparro) September 19, 2025
Kneecap have now responded to Gasparro’s comments in a post on Instagram today (September 19), saying his statements are “wholly untrue and deeply malicious” and threatening legal action.
“We have today instructed our lawyers to initiate legal action against you,” the group said. “We will be relentless in defending ourselves against baseless accusations to silence our opposition to a genocide being committed by Israel.
“When we beat you in court, which we will, we will donate every cent to assist some of the thousands of child amputees in Gaza,” they added.
They also issued a message to their fans in Canada, saying, “We have played in Canada many times with zero issues and a message of solidarity and love.
“We are sorry we cannot be with you next month but we will not be silenced and will always oppose genocide. Use your voices in Canada – stand up and speak out.”
Last night (September 18), Kneecap played their biggest England gig to date at the 12,500-capacity OVO Wembley Arena.
Massive Attack and Ben Jamal introduced them to the stage, describing them as “a band who refused to be silenced for their solidarity with the Palestinian people”.
NME caught the gig and gave it a glowing five-star review, which read: “You don’t pull off a gig like that on controversy alone. You need bangers and you need a culture to fill this room. Kneecap have all that, and they’re a fucking good laugh. There’s no call for violence, there’s nothing that should land someone in front of a judge, just solidarity and a rave against the dying of the light. Just 24 hours earlier in this same room, Together For Palestine put on all-star fundraiser for the cause, the biggest of its kind.
“It’s significant like gigs like this should happen at a time like now. The state may try to crush them, but Kneecap have a power of their own. As they spit on ‘It’s Been Ages’: “Controversy won’t phase us, we hold all the cards and they’re aces, try to protect your kids but they’ll hear us.”
Kneecap have announced a live-streamed performance for fans after being forced to cancel their US tour due to the “close proximity of [their] next court hearing”. They will then head out on a 2025 UK headline tour in November. Find any remaining tickets here.
In other news, Kneecap are among Fontaines DC, Amyl & The Sniffers, and over 400 other artists to have joined the No Music For Genocide campaign, while Massive Attack, who are involved in the campaign, have committed to fully boycott Spotify.
Other artists, who are largely on independent labels, participating in the campaign include Rina Sawayama, MIKE, Primal Scream, Faye Webster, Kneecap and Japanese Breakfast. They are joined by the likes of Yaeji, King Krule, MJ Lenderman, Mannequin Pussy, Wednesday, Soccer Mommy and MØ.
To join the coalition, the artists involved have edited their own release territories or sent geo-block requests to their distributor or label. They are encouraging major label groups Sony, UMG, and Warner to follow suit, particularly as they blocked their entire catalogues from and closed operations in Russia a month into their invasion of Ukraine.
Robert Munsch, Canadian children’s author, says he’s been approved for MAID
Robert Munsch, the beloved Canadian children’s author of books like The Paper Bag Princess and Love You Forever, says he has been approved for medical assistance in dying (MAID) after he was diagnosed with dementia and Parkinson’s disease.
In a New York Times profile of Munsch, the author said that he applied for MAID — a practice that was legalized in 2016 — and his application was approved.
Munsch, 80, joked to the outlet that his application said, “Hello, Doc — come kill me! How much time do I have? Fifteen seconds!”
He said he had watched one of his brothers die slowly from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or Lou Gehrig’s disease, a nervous system disease that affects nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord and gets worse over time.
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“They kept him alive through all these interventions. I thought, ‘Let him die,’” Munsch said.
The author said he doesn’t want to “linger that way” and added that he thinks he will choose to go “when I start having real trouble talking and communicating. Then I’ll know.”
Robert Munsch at Dufferin St. Clair library Jan 14, 2010.
Michael Stuparyk/Toronto Star via Getty Images
Under MAID laws in Canada, Munsch must be able to actively consent on the day of his death.

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“I have to pick the moment when I can still ask for it,” Munsch explained to the Times.
Munsch told his wife, Ann, that if he misses the opportunity, she’s “stuck with me being a lump.”

Terminally ill Edmonton senior chooses MAID
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The author, who has published more than 70 books over his career, said he doesn’t want to be here “when I can’t recognize the people I love.”
For now, he said his old stories have survived his diagnoses and remain with him.
“I notice that the stories are mostly free from the problems I have with speech,” he said.
In Canada, a person who wishes to receive MAID must meet eligibility criteria that include being at least 18 years of age, having decision-making capacity, being eligible for publicly funded health-care services and making a voluntary request that is not the result of external pressure.
The person must also have a serious and incurable illness, disease or disability, be in an advanced state of irreversible decline in capability and enduring and intolerable physical or psychological suffering that cannot be alleviated under conditions the person considers acceptable.
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Munsch was inducted into the Order of Canada in 1999 and received a star on Canada’s Walk of Fame in 2009.
Robert Munsch attends Canada’s Walk of Fame at the Four Season Centre of the Performing Arts on Sept. 12, 2009 in Toronto.
George Pimentel/WireImage
After the New York Times profile was published, Scholastic Canada shared a statement on Instagram, writing, “As proud publishers of Robert Munsch’s beloved books, we are grateful for all the stories he’s shared, including his own. We love you forever.”
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“This New York Times article by Katie Engelhart offers a powerful glimpse into the man behind the stories, and we join those who have expressed profound gratitude for this chance to understand and connect with Robert Munsch in a new way,” the publishing company wrote.
“It’s an incredibly generous act to open up like this, and it reminds us, once again, why Robert’s work continues to touch many generations.”
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
‘John Candy: I Like Me’ trailer — Canadian actor’s life explored in documentary
Fans of the late Canadian comedian John Candy will get an intimate look at the beloved actor’s life and legacy in upcoming documentary John Candy: I Like Me. The trailer dropped on Thursday, right before its world premiere at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival (TIFF).
The documentary, directed by Colin Hanks, shares never-before-seen home videos and candid recollections from his collaborators to help paint a bigger, more complete picture of the iconic actor.
“I’ve made winning my whole life,” Candy says in the clip. “And when you make winning your whole life, you have to keep on winning.”

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Candy’s Stripes co-star Bill Murray begins the trailer, saying, “I can’t tell you what was right about John Candy, or what was wrong. But he was my friend.”
“And … I don’t wanna cry, but when you see him, when you see his face…” Murray continues as he begins to tear up.
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The trailer offers a glimpse of Candy’s childhood in Toronto and memories recounted by his family, and features Cynthia Erivo‘s original recording of Every Time You Go Away.
“Even though John did distinctly different characters, John was always there,” Catherine O’Hara says.
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The emotional trailer also includes heartfelt testimonies from Candy’s co-stars and friends, including Steve Martin, Eugene Levy, Tom Hanks, Martin Short, Dan Aykroyd and Macaulay Culkin.
The doc is set to kick off the 50th TIFF. Candy’s family will walk the red carpet alongside the opening-night film’s executive producer, Ryan Reynolds, and director Hanks.
‘John Candy: I Like Me’ launches globally Oct. 10 on Prime Video.
—
— With files from The Canadian Press
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
Canadian comic Veronika Slowikowska joins ‘SNL’ cast ahead of Season 51
Saturday Night Live is getting ready for its 51st season, and the sketch comedy show has added Canadian comic Veronika Slowikowska to its lineup.
The Barrie, Ont., native will be one of five new cast members joining the iconic sketch comedy show this fall.
Slowikowska, 29, announced the news on Instagram, writing, “dream come true. See you Saturdays.”
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The actor has gained attention for her viral sketch comedy videos on TikTok and Instagram, and for her recurring role on FX comedy What We Do in the Shadows.

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She has also appeared in Shane Gillis’ comedy series Tires, the 2023 Canadian dramedy I Like Movies and Christmas rom-com Exmas.
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Slowikowska is not only the sole Canadian performing on the iconic Studio 8H stage, but also the only woman among the new cast, which includes Tommy Brennan, Jeremy Culhane, Ben Marshall and Kam Patterson.
The new cast announcement follows a major shakeup with several SNL stars revealing their departures from the hit series just last week.
Devon Walker addressed his exit after three seasons in an Instagram post, writing, “Me and baby broke up.”
Walker’s post was followed by the announcement that Emil Wakim, Michael Longfellow and Heidi Gardner will also not be returning to the show.
‘Saturday Night Live’ Season 51 premieres on Sat., Oct. 4 at 11:30 p.m. ET on Global.
— With files from The Canadian Press
© 2025 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.













