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Laura Dern as Linda Shaw/Penelope Rollins in Palm Royale season two.
TV & Streaming

‘Palm Royale’ Creator Breaks Down the Carol Burnett Season 2 Scene

by jummy84 December 15, 2025
written by jummy84

With Palm Royale, creator and writer Abe Sylvia has crafted a bright, boisterous dramatic comedy pitched perfectly to the charms and talents of its star, Kristen Wiig (who plays aspiring socialite Maxine Dellacorte-Simmons). But just under the surface of the series’ high comedy, high society and high hair lie hard truths about being a woman of ambition: what it means to be a “have-not” in the glamorous world of “haves,” and the cost of getting all you’ve ever wanted — and what some are willing to do to hold on to even a handful of it. In season two of the series, which also stars Carol Burnett, Laura Dern, Allison Janney and a coterie of notable faces that includes Julia Duffy as fellow socialite Mary Davidsoul, Sylvia ups the ante, putting his characters in direct conflict as they stake even more entitled claims to things that were never theirs. Old frictions become new frays in the very first episode as Norma (Burnett) and Linda, née Penelope (Dern), collide in a tête-à-tête dispensing new secrets and poignant credos after the explosive season one finale that left Robert (Ricky Martin) shot and Linda cuffed.

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

After Carol Burnett’s Norma spent much of season one mumbling or unconscious in the background, Sylvia wanted her front and center, driving action in season two. “I really wanted to take the opportunity to introduce the audience to Norma in her full power, as only Carol Burnett could embody her,” Sylvia says. “This season, we wanted to leave nothing on the table in terms of the wondrous powers of our actors. And so right out of the gate, we wanted Norma to be driving the first episode.”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

When talking about harsh societal realities, Sylvia distills the ethos of the entire show through Norma in this quick exchange. “She’s saying a real truth there: ‘You have agency, you have your own money and you have conviction. You are the poster girl for the enemy within,’ ” Sylvia says. “It’s set against this ridiculous story, but what woman in this country hasn’t felt that way? Look at what happens to women in this country who have ambition and how they’re vilified. Linda’s an idealist and Norma’s a realist. These women of society, even though they had money, still faced all the misogyny and barriers that women have always faced.”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

“I like to say, nothing is ever wasted in our show. For all the planning you do, there are some decisions that you make along the way and we won’t always know why we did it until much later, and it totally pays off,” Sylvia says. “Case in point, even though Norma paints a really vivid and convincing picture of how they could pin [the shooting] on Maxine, I was sitting in the writers room and I was like, ‘We need one more piece of evidence. It isn’t enough that she invited Nixon to the ball. It isn’t enough that she had been hanging out with Linda in the feminist bookstore in season one. Like, we need a piece of hard evidence.’ And then I realized that the real culprit we had named Mary Davidsoul, and she has the same initials as Maxine. Those little things, you know. It’s like a puzzle sometimes.”

It’s not only Wiig’s accent and diction, familiar to fans of her work on SNL, that gives Palm Royale its comedic sense of heightened reality, “There’s a very sort of singsong rat-a-tatness to our dialogue that heightens the whole series. But we then also have these actors that can play [up the writing] style, but still do it in a really grounded way,” Sylvia says. But writing for the show means also knowing when to pull back, and Sylvia says he empowers the actors to tell him when enough seems like enough. “I had this one line in this scene … I think at the start it was, ‘just a confluence of convenience,’ which seems very fitting for the show,” Sylvia says. “And Carol goes, ‘Now that’s just even too wordy for us.’ And I said, ‘OK, fair enough.’ ”

Erica Parise/Courtesy of Apple TV+

Comparing how this scene plays out to what was written on the page highlights that so much of what the actors do was never written into the character or the script, Sylvia says. “There’s a beautiful moment later in the scene where, for a moment, Linda considers [Norma’s proposition]. And we didn’t put that in the dialogue, that at the last moment, Linda almost goes along with it,” Sylvia says. “But I remember that when we were doing this scene, I went up to Laura, and she’s one of our greatest living actresses, and I said, ‘Why don’t we put in this moment at the end?’ And when you watch the scene, you’ll see for a moment she realizes that Norma is right, that she is going to fry for this. And you just watch it in Laura’s eyes. There’s a passing moment where she goes, ‘Oh, maybe, maybe I will.’ ”

Sylvia and the writers, up to this point, have breadcrumbed distinct mysteries that they lurch into full steam through the dialogue here. For many viewers, it might raise an intrigued eyebrow to hear Norma saying to Linda that being born rich ruined her. “Norma’s had to hustle. Norma wasn’t born rich,” Sylvia says. “Linda doesn’t know that Norma wasn’t born rich. The origin story begins in the finale of season one, and by episode three of season two, more is revealed — or the story we already know, we get to watch play out.”

This story first appeared in a December stand-alone issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. To receive the magazine, click here to subscribe.

December 15, 2025 0 comments
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'Boondocks' Creator Aaron McGruder Joins 'Last Friday' Writers Room
Music

‘Boondocks’ Creator Aaron McGruder Joins ‘Last Friday’ Writers Room

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

In an exciting turn for fans of the Friday film franchise, legendary cartoonist and writer Aaron McGruder has joined the writers’ room for the long-rumored final installment of the series, tentatively titled Last Friday.

Actor and comedian Mike Epps, who has featured in the franchise’s previous entries, revealed the news during his recent interview with Big Boy.

“I just was with Ice Cube, DJ Pooh, and Aaron McGruder, sitting in the room writing this movie,” Epps said of the addition of McGruder, creator of the cult­-savvy comic strip and subsequent animated series The Boondocks. “We’re writing it right now, and it’s gonna be crazy.”

Aaron McGruder arrives at the ESPYS Awards Pre Party held at the Roosevelt Hotel on July 10, 2007 in Hollywood, California.

Maury Phillips/WireImage

Epps further noted that the occasion was the first time that all of the writers of the film were in a room together to trade ideas about the script. “This is the first time we all got together,” the Indiana native said while providing the latest update regarding Last Friday.

McGruder’s arrival is significant: his groundbreaking work began with The Boondocks comic strip—debuting in the student newspaper of the University of Maryland and later syndicated nationwide—then evolved into a sharp, socially conscious animated series for Adult Swim.

Known for its biting commentary on race, politics, and culture, The Boondocks earned a dedicated and critically appreciative fan base. McGruder’s unique voice and fearless satire have long earned him a reputation for mixing humour with provocative reflection.

Aaron McGruder

Aaron McGruder during The Academy of Television Foundation’s College Television Awards at The Culver Studios in Culver City, CA, United States.

Alexandra Wyman/WireImage

At the same time, the Friday series’ lead—Ice Cube—has been waging a protracted battle in the background.

Although the original film premiered in 1995 and spawned sequels Next Friday (2000) and Friday After Next (2002), Cube has repeatedly lamented that he cannot bring the new movie to fruition because the studio currently holding the rights, Warner Bros. (via New Line Cinema), continues to stall.

“I don’t know. Warner Bros is weird right now… They don’t know what they’re doing. We’d love to have it back,” Cube said in a 2022 podcast appearance, adding bluntly: “I ain’t putting sh*t up for it. F**k no. They need to give it to me.”

Ice Cube

Ice Cube visits SiriusXM Studios on July 10, 2023 in New York City.

Santiago Felipe/Getty Images

He also revealed that two scripts for Last Friday had been submitted and rejected, further fueling speculation that the project was mired in development limbo. Earlier this year, it was confirmed that the film is moving forward under the production of Warner Bros. and New Line Cinema.

With Aaron McGruder now at the table alongside Cube, DJ Pooh and Mike Epps, the new draft for the film appears to be gaining fresh momentum. Epps also took a moment to honour Cube’s legacy.
“Shouts out to Ice Cube, the Don Mega,” the comic said while saluting his longtime co-star.

Mike Epps

Mike Epps attends the screening of Paramount+’s “On The Come Up” at Snoop Dogg’s Compound on September 13, 2022 in Inglewood, California.

JC Olivera/Getty Images

“I always give Ice Cube his props, man, because not only did he walk me in the business, but he walked a lot of young brothers and sisters in the business.”

In short: a landmark cultural creator is stepping into a landmark franchise at a crucial juncture — and if this latest writers’ room has its way, fans of both The Boondocks and Friday might finally get the chapter they’ve awaited.

Watch Mike Epps speak on Aaron McGruder joining the Last Friday writer’s room below.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Watch Timothée Chalamet and Tyler, the Creator in New Official Trailer for Marty Supreme
Music

Watch Timothée Chalamet and Tyler, the Creator in New Official Trailer for Marty Supreme

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

Marty Supreme, director Josh Safdie’s new A24 film starring Timothée Chalamet and Tyler, the Creator, comes out next month. Today, there’s a new trailer that sets up what to expect from table tennis star Marty Mauser (Chalamet) as he strives to become the best athlete in the sport. Watch it below.

Marty Supreme features a score by longtime Safdie collaborator Oneohtrix Point Never. Rounding out the cast are Gwyneth Paltrow, Fran Drescher, Abel Ferrara, and others. Josh Safdie co-wrote the movie with Ronald Bronstein, a writer on Good Time and Uncut Gems, and will show off his solo directorial skills—it’s his first feature film not to be co-directed with his younger brother, Benny, since his 2008 debut, The Pleasure of Being Robbed.

Out in theaters on December 25, Marty Supreme is the first big project from Timothée Chalamet since he played Bob Dylan in 2024’s A Complete Unknown.

While Tyler, the Creator is a longtime visual storyteller and has acted in numerous roles over the years, ranging from his own TV series Loiter Squad to cameos in shows like The Mindy Project and Big Mouth, this Marty Supreme casting is his first major film role. Of course, the rapper is always plenty busy onscreen in the form of music videos, too, including for his Don’t Tap the Glass single “Sugar on My Tongue.”

Read about Tyler, the Creator’s Bastard at No. 94 in “The 100 Best Rap Albums of All Time.”

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Paramount, David Ellison Haven't Censored 'South Park,' Creator Says
TV & Streaming

Paramount, David Ellison Haven’t Censored ‘South Park,’ Creator Says

by jummy84 November 11, 2025
written by jummy84

When South Park creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone locked in a reported $1.5 billion five-year deal with Paramount at the eleventh hour before their Season 27 premiere, the comedy duo were looking to assert their agency in an environment that would soon be upended by new parent company Skydance and CEO David Ellison. The result? A scathing debut aimed at President Donald Trump — whose approval was, ahem, paramount to the completion of the merger. Since that inaugural episode in late July, a steady stream of blistering satirical installments has not let up on the POTUS and key White House officials, from VP JD Vance to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem.

In a new interview with the New York Times, Stone explained of the decision to mock the GOP leader: “We just had to show our independence somehow.”

The scribe added that although audiences may assume some level of censorship behind the scenes — especially in a hostile media environment where Paramount’s CBS canceled The Late Show with Stephen Colbert (defended by top brass as a purely financially motivated decision, the timing of which came after the host went after his home network) — that isn’t the case.

“I know with the Colbert thing and all the Trump stuff, people think certain things, but they’re letting us do whatever we want, to their credit,” Stone said of the lack of pushback. (In turn, Colbert has praised South Park for its censure of Trump, calling the show’s deepfaked PSA video of a naked Trump “an important message of hope for our times.”)

Naturally, the White House was seething over the matter, with Assistant Press Secretary Taylor Rogers telling Deadline post-premiere: “This show hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years and is hanging on by a thread with uninspired ideas in a desperate attempt for attention. President Trump has delivered on more promises in just six months than any other president in our country’s history – and no fourth-rate show can derail President Trump’s hot streak.”

Unfortunately for Trump and his administration, however, the relentless deluge of jokes has led to a ratings bump and renaissance of sorts for the long-running animated show.

It’s a winning formula that Parker and Stone will be sticking by for the time being.

“There’s no getting away from this,” Parker told the Times. “It’s like the government is just in your face everywhere you look. Whether it’s the actual government or whether it is all the podcasters and the TikToks and the YouTubes and all of that, and it’s just all political and political because it’s more than political. It’s pop culture.”

November 11, 2025 0 comments
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Fans react to Tyler, the Creator, Doja Cat, Janelle Monáe, and Killer Mike's Outkast tribute – and André 3000 not performing
Music

Fans react to Tyler, the Creator, Doja Cat, Janelle Monáe, and Killer Mike’s Outkast tribute – and André 3000 not performing

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Performances from Tyler, the Creator, Doja Cat, Janelle Monáe, and Killer Mike for last night’s OutKast tribute at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame have drawn mixed reactions.

  • READ MORE: Listen to Romy and Sampha team up to cover André 3000’s ‘Me & My (To Bury Your Parents)’

Back in April, it was announced that the hip-hop duo were set to be inducted alongside names including The White Stripes, Cyndi Lauper and Soundgarden. At last night’s (November 8) ceremony, André 3000 and Big Boi were introduced by Donald Glover, who lauded them for their part in creating a “music Mecca” in Atlanta.

Despite being in attendance at the ceremony, André 3000 didn’t perform. Instead, Doja Cat, Killer Mike, J.I.D., Tyler, the Creator, and Janelle Monáe joined Big Boi for a medley of the duo’s classic hits, which has proved divisive on social media.

The performance kicked off with ‘ATLiens’ with Big Boi joined by J.I.D. This was followed by Doja taking on ‘Ms. Jackson’, however, as many X/Twitters users have pointed out, she appeared to lose her thread halfway through the song and miss lyrics.

“Absolutely disrespectful to show up to someone’s tribute and not know their verse,” one viewer wrote. Many seemed to be in agreement, saying Doja had “messed up the best part”.

Doja Cat, Janelle Monáe, and Tyler the Creator share the stage in tribute to OutKast at the 2025 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction Ceremony pic.twitter.com/MyaQ5M67eu

— 🎸 Rock History 🎸 (@historyrock_) November 9, 2025

Doja Cat performs “Ms. Jackson” as part of the Outkast tribute for the 2025 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony pic.twitter.com/T74a4bNRpS

— 🎸 Rock History 🎸 (@historyrock_) November 9, 2025

However, some leapt to her defence, instead blaming the DJ. “Whoever that DJ is who has the nerve to be rapping super loud and the wrong fucking lyrics at that… he completely ruined a legendary moment,” added one user. “So,” asked another, “did she not know the words, or was he just rapping over her?”

While Tyler’s rendition of ‘B.O.B.’ went down well, Monáe’s take on ‘Hey Ya’ – in particular her choice to take on a strange vocal affectation and crawl across the floor. One highly unimpressed viewer later took to social media to write: “Put Janelle Monae in jail for what she did to Hey Ya.”

The medley continued on with ‘The Way You Move’ featuring Sleepy Brown, and closed out with Killer Mike joining all other artists on stage for ‘The Whole World’. You can check out more social media reactions to the tribute performances below.

I wish Andre 3000 was in the mental space to want to perform at the rock and roll hall of fame, but if he wasn’t then I’m glad he didn’t. The night is about celebrating the legendary duo, not for them to perform in their 50s for OUR entertainment. I hope he’s enjoying his flute.

— Bernie (@JoshBerniee) November 9, 2025

Kinda bummed that Andre 3000 didn’t perform with Big Boi while getting inducted in the Rock N Roll HOF

— JROC4LYFE🤙🏽 🔜Magfest 2026 (@HawaiianPunchuh) November 9, 2025

OutKast deserved better. We all deserved better. And that’s no slight on Doja but there was no coordination https://t.co/HqXlQE3rw2

— Senior Man (@Ydot_K) November 9, 2025

Put Janelle Monae in jail for what she did to Hey Ya

— Ags (@loganags24) November 9, 2025

Nah they played Outkast with their tribute performance. Doja Cat and Janelle Monae were trash. Everybody else was good though. #RockHall2025

— Julian (@Ju_JustGetsIt) November 9, 2025

i wanna think that whoever else on the mic with her threw her off bc his mic damn near louder than hers but knowing doja… she could very well be up there with no idea of what that man says during that verse smh lol

— That Guy (@KendrickDuh) November 9, 2025

In fairness to her, I think the backup rapper coming in louder than her and also beefing the first line of that verse just completely threw her off 😂

— Joel Nixon (@GoodMorningJoel) November 9, 2025

Shoulda had Tyler the Creator do the whole thing. He had the energy it deserved.

— Marcie Jill (@marciemeow) November 9, 2025

who thought this was a good idea in the 1st place?

— ART VANDELAY © (@mr_artvandely) November 9, 2025

Doja cat performance was terrible… so was Janelle monae… they couldn’t find nobody else???? #Outkast #HallofFame pic.twitter.com/5dOYJtujsl

— 🫶🏽 (@HoneyJaxx_) November 9, 2025

Tyler performed a way harder song and didn’t choke as bad as Doja

That was pathetic

— Snacktar Donutsk 🍩 (@KennySloth253) November 9, 2025

Meanwhile, last December, André 3000 said that OutKast were “further away” from making new music together “than we’ve ever been”.

“I’ll say maybe 10, 15 years ago, in my mind, I thought an OutKast album would happen,” he said. “I don’t know the future, but I can say that we’re further away from it than we’ve ever been.”

“It’s hard for me to make a rap, period, you know? And sometimes I’m in the belief of, ‘Let things be’”, he told Rolling Stone.

He continued: “[OutKast] was a great time in life, and our chemistry was at a certain place that was undeniable,” he said, brushing against the notion that “something has to last forever”.

In May this year, he released a surprise solo EP ‘7 Piano Sketches’, a series of improvisations on piano mostly recorded at a house in Texas.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Jermaine Dupri Speaks Out After Creator Of AI Artist Xania Monet Defends ? Emerging Shift In Music Industry
Celebrity News

Jermaine Dupri Speaks Out After Creator Of AI Artist Xania Monet Defends ? Emerging Shift In Music Industry

by jummy84 November 7, 2025
written by jummy84

Screenshot

Jermaine Dupri Speaks Out After Creator Of AI Artist Xania Monet Defends Emerging Shift In Music Industry

It’s a no for #JermaineDupri.

The Grammy-winning producer is making it very clear where he stands on AI artists entering the music industry. Responding to a recent interview Mississippi poet Telisha Nikki Jones, the mastermind and lyricist behind AI artist #XaniaMonet, did with #GayleKing defending her creation, Jermaine wrote on X, “So let me get this right, years ago the industry found out that Milli Vanilli weren’t really the voices on their Grammy winning record and they were stripped of their Grammy, but now we’re getting ready to accept people who can’t even sing, creating songs for a fake person?” He ended with, “How is this any different than Milli Vanilli?”

During her sit-down, Jones acknowledged that she can’t sing but said Xania Monet still feels real to her. “I wouldn’t call it a shortcut, because I still put in the work,” she shared. Jones continued defending Xania Monet and where the industry is headed: “Anytime something new comes about and it challenges the norm and it challenges what we’re used to, you’re going to get strong reactions behind it. And I just feel that AI is the new era that we’re in. I look at it as a tool, as an instrument. Utilize it!”

Do y’all agree with Jermaine, or is AI the future of the entertainment industry whether we like it or not?

CBS Mornings


November 7, 2025 0 comments
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The Lowdown Ethan Hawke as Lee Raybon.
TV & Streaming

‘The Lowdown’ Creator Sterlin Harjo Explains Season 1 Fnale

by jummy84 November 5, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains spoilers for “The Sensitive Kind,” the season finale of The Lowdown on FX.]

A lot of dark things have happened over the course of The Lowdown, including a host of murders; a man being literally tarred and feathered by a white supremacist cabal; and the death of an elderly Native man (played by Graham Greene) that series protagonist Lee Raybon (Ethan Hawke) inadvertently caused. That’s all in keeping with the kinds of noir stories that influenced creator Sterlin Harjo.

The season finale of the FX series, however, breaks from the often despairing endings of many noir tales by giving the good guys some victories — albeit at a cost. After doggedly investigating the shady dealings of Oklahoma gubernatorial candidate Donald Washberg (Kyle MacLachlan) and the death of Donald’s brother Dale (TIm Blake Nelson), Lee prepares one final exposé about how Dale really died.

But after laying out the tale to Donald, he pivots, making a deal with Donald to return some Washberg family land — which Donald, through a group of business leaders, was set to sell to the aforementioned white supremacists known as One Well — to an Indigenous nation within Oklahoma. Lee, in turn, publishes not a damning takedown of the Washbergs (though he doesn’t pull punches) but a tribute to Dale that he titles “The Sensitive Kind” (which is also the name of the finale and was a working title for the series before it became The Lowdown). It even closes with a wedding, as Lee attends the marriage of his ex-wife Samantha (Kaniehtiio Horn) and her fiancé Johnny (Rafael Casal) and tries to explain to his daughter (Ryan Kiera Armstrong) why she’ll be better off living with Samantha and Johny full-time.

“I’m very proud of the finale,” Harjo, who directed and co-wrote the finale with Liz Blood, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “I think it encapsulates everything that I like about doing this show. We were trying our best to land the plane, and I think that we did it.”

Harjo talked with THR about why he chose to move away from a bleaker ending, why Donald Washberg isn’t really a bad guy, his thoughts about possible future seasons — and how a conversation with rock legend Robert Plant inspired one of the funniest scenes in the episode.

One of the things that really struck me about the finale is that it ends on a more upbeat note than a lot of noir stories do. I’m curious why you chose that way to go for rather than the “Forget it, Jake” route.

It’s obviously not as grim as Chinatown is. But I think that there is a conflict at the end that we have to recognize, which is everything that Lee has said that he believes in as a truthstorian, he kind of has to go against by writing this article and not writing [a version of it] that he claims is going to get the Pulitzer Prize.

It’s a measure of, are you a good man? That’s something Betty Jo [Jeanne Tripplehorn] says early on the pilot, she’s talking about Dale like “He was a good man. He was good man.” Then we cut to Lee, and the question is superimposed over him as well. That’s, in the end, what he has to figure out. Is it worth bruising your ego and not writing this amazing article? Is that more important? Is that good? Is what’s righteous more important than that? There’s that conflict.

I don’t like happy endings, per se. I like them sliding right in the middle. I feel like it could have been happier, but it could definitely have been a lot more bleak. But also, it’s a show, and I feel like after taking people on this ride, I want to give them something [positive].

People have been saying to Lee throughout the show that his self-perception is not the way he comes off to other people, but after Chutto [Mato Wayuhi] throws the brick through his window and they have their conversation about how Lee caused Chutto’s grandfather’s death, it seems to be the moment where it finally sinks in that his crusade is not uniformly making the world a better place.

I think there’s a question of, as journalists, who are you writing for? Because [Lee] is not listening to the people around him that he supposedly cares about. Chutto has told him this is only going to cause problems, and he didn’t listen, and he got somebody killed. So who is truly writing for? Where does his passion lie? Is it really just to make a name for himself, or is it to tell the truth and to try to be as pure as you can in your endeavors. He kind of committed the worst sin as a journalist, because he was getting involved, and it got somebody killed. I mean, that’s one of the more bleak things. Yes, he has some personal triumphs and the show ends on an upbeat note, but man, there’s a dude dead because of him. That’s gonna weigh on you, and it’s going to probably make you question your line of work and what you’re doing, which I think had an effect on what he chose to do next, and why he chose to write the article about Dale.

Once Lee lays out the whole story of Dale’s death for Donald, he seems to really recoil from everything going on with One Well and says he didn’t really know the details. He just wanted the money. How much of that is genuinely true and how much of that is calculated on Donald’s part?

Oh, it’s politics, baby.

He does say that to one of his backers, but he seems to stride the line between genuinely being upset at learning about how involved his benefactor Frank [Tracy Letts] and Betty Jo were in Dale’s death and also a calculation that will help his election chances.

Without batting an eye, Donald can pivot and use this to help his endeavors to become governor. But I also think he does care about his brother and the truth, but what’s caring if you can’t also use it to better yourself and your family? I think that’s how Donald feels about life in general. He can walk away from Betty Jo easily for his career. And there were obviously feelings there, and I hope that it comes across that he probably has some real tears in there, and he’s inherently good, I think, but he’s not above using it for political gain.

You cast several people who are from Tulsa or other parts of Oklahoma — Jeanne Tripplehorn, Tim Blake Nelson and Tracy Letts most prominently — and I’m assuming that was not a coincidence. Why did you want to have some folks with ties to your location in the series?

I knew that they would be passionate about it, and I knew that they would understand the world. I think that when people watch the show, it feels like a very unique world to some people from the outside. You’ve got Native bodyguards that are guarding the store that just got out of prison, who are interacting with the guy that has the vinyl shop and the lawyer. You’ve got Cyrus, who’s got this quote-unquote booty rag — all of these people, and that’s very Oklahoma. It’s a very working-class state, and everyone that came here was in a bad situation, whether it was the Trail of Tears, freed slaves, an outlaw trying to find oil. Most of us come from people who were having to fight their way for survival. There is an ease and there is a sort of level playing field here, that I think people who are from here could understand. We all grew up together. Not that there aren’t problems, and not that there’s not division, but I feel like people from here understand the dynamics.

Also, I just wanted to celebrate them. They inspired me as a young filmmaker. I never left here, really. I’m from rural Oklahoma, and I was always really excited to see that people from here could be artists, and people from here could be in movies. I wanted to celebrate that and sort of reclaim them a bit and say, “Yeah, you’re ours” and give them that respect, because they’ve been out there doing things for so long. It was like, what if we do something at home? How would you feel about that? Everyone was really excited.

Ethan Hawke and Keith David in ‘The Lowdown.’

Shane Brown/FX

The finale has one of the funnier scenes I’ve seen in a while when Marty [Keith David] either gets grazed by a bullet or cut by broken glass as they’re leaving One Well and he’s screaming at Lee about the cow pills Lee gives him to dull the pain. I don’t know that I’ve ever seen Keith David go that over the top funny before.

It was so fun. I’ll tell you where that came from — it’s a crazy story. The musician who does the score for the show, JD McPherson, he also plays guitar for Robert Plant and Alison Krauss and tours with them. One day he calls me up and says, “Sterlin, how would you feel about driving Robert Plant to the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve and going to see some free-range buffalo?” It’s up in Osage country. So I was like, of course, are you kidding me? I’ll drive Robert Plant anywhere. So I end up driving him to the Tallgrass Prairie with JD in the back. He’s the loveliest guy. He’s telling stories, and we’re just talking, chatting the whole time. I was really nervous about what music I would play while he’s in the car, and that was a nerve-wracking thing. I decided to play kind of old country, which he’s into.

We’re driving up there, and he starts telling this story about bovine vagina relaxant pills and how someone in [Led Zeppelin] — I’m not going to say the name, but do the math — someone in the band got into some of these one time. They were tuning up before the show, and they heard what was coming out of the person’s instrument, and Robert said, “I looked at Jimmy [Page], and I said, Jimmy, this is going to be an acoustic set.” Apparently, they’re very strong. He told me this story, and it just stuck with me. I was like, I’ve got to find a way to get that in there.

Then I thought, I haven’t seen Keith David go wild like that, and I want to see it, so I wrote it. Filming it was so funny. I couldn’t hold it together. There’s just something about Keith David frustrated and cursing. That is some of the funniest things. He’s got the best line readings of anyone when he’s cursing, I believe. It was one of my favorite days of shooting.

When Marty brings Donald to meet with Lee at Cyrus’ [Mike “Killer Mike” Render] place, I thought it was a really nice echo of the cop blowout in episode five — I assume that was intentional as well?

It was definitely an exact mirror, like a smaller, more intimate mirror of that scene. Lee probably told Cyrus about it, and, Lee’s like, “Man, I’m gonna fuck with this guy too. I’m gonna give it back to him.” It was so fun shooting that, because everyone was so excited. I went in and talked to everyone that was in the scene. I had cousins in the scene and stuff. I said, “Look, here’s who Donald Washergn is. This is what we’re doing. Feel free to give them attitude.” We’re mirroring this scene where they took [Lee] to a cop party, and it was very intimidating. I was like, “I want you all to intimidate the shit out of [Donald]. Do what you need to do.” [laughs] It was supposed to mirror that and not be just a cute coincidence. But also, it represents Cyrus and his neighborhood, and it’s a place where Donald’s really out of his comfort zone, because he’s not politicking. I think that it really shows his vulnerability — and Donald’s not a bad guy, you know? Earlier [in episode seven], when the Native protesters come to him when he’s doing the land grab [re-enactment], I made sure in the script that he addresses the protester as Irene. He knows her, and he knows her so well, it’s a first-name basis. I don’t think he’s a bad guy. He’s probably talked to her, he’s dealt with her, and he knows who she is. He’s not an inherently racist guy, but he’s also, without even knowing it, participating in something that is systemically racist. Those nuances were really important for me to tell.

FX hasn’t made the call on a second season yet, but where would you want to see the show go from here?

I mean, I’ve thought about many seasons of this show. I’ve thought about other projects — there was always an idea of going deeper into Oklahoma and some of these relationships that Lee has made in the first season. And you look at your show and see how people are responding. People love Waylon [Cody Lightning], so I wonder what [there is to explore with him]. And Cyrus — Killer Mike is amazing. Sometimes that stuff guides it. I have ideas. I was telling somebody, The Rockford Files did it every episode. We could do every season.

Interview edited and condensed.

November 5, 2025 0 comments
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Creator Camp and Attend Want to Make Online Audiences Ticket Buyers
TV & Streaming

Creator Camp and Attend Want to Make Online Audiences Ticket Buyers

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Most creator projects still live (and die) online. Creator Camp wants to change that.

The Austin-based creator collective distribution arm, Camp Studios, signed a three-picture theatrical deal with Attend Theatrical Marketplace, the Fithian Group company that connects filmmakers directly with movie theaters, streamlining the process of booking and releasing films.

The first title, rom-com “Two Sleepy People,” opens November 14 in 20 markets. It’s directed by Baron Ryan, who co-wrote it with Caroline Grossman; they both star. (More here.) The premise is very TikTok-adjacent: Two distant co-workers wake up every morning as strangers, but every night they’re married.

Robert Longstreet in Todd Rohal's "Fuck My Son!"; Baron Ryan and Caroline Grossman in Ryan's "Two Sleepy People"

The real bet is if creators already know their audience, why can’t that audience show up to a cinema?

Creator Camp says its network of 300 digital-native filmmakers accounts for over 3B annual views. They’ve already been pressure-testing theatrical demand: the film premiered at Creator Camp’s flagship Austin event, where 1,000 attendees generated $150,000 in ticket sales. A four-city micro-tour followed in Seattle, Los Angeles, San Francisco and New York, averaging $10,429 per screen.

Attend is led by NATO veterans Jackie Brenneman, John Fithian, and Patrick Corcoran, with the ambition to use data and AI to directly match films with theaters and audiences.

So, in theory: Attend wants to make theatrical distribution transactional and demand-based; Creator Camp has creators who can actually deliver audiences.

“Today’s filmmakers grew up online and they understand their audiences because they engage with them constantly, which has allowed them to build massive, loyal communities,” said Creator Camp founder and CEO Max Reisinger. “That direct connection solves a huge challenge in theatrical distribution. Instead of relying on outdated models that guess who will show up, our creators can bring fans to theaters they’ve already cultivated online, turning digital engagement into real-world box office success.”

Brenneman sees it as smart math. “Movie theaters are vital places for community. When the movies are there, so are audiences. In partnership with the innovative approach of Creator Camp, we can build on the enthusiastic followers of filmmakers online, connect them directly to theaters, and with Attend create demand-driven theatrical releases.”

For all the existential dread around the theatrical business, it’s a forward-looking model that relies on conversion and community.

That’s a little different from “finding an audience”; it’s believing that the audience is already here; you just need to point them at a screen. It suggests that the future of filmmaking might not be “online vs theatrical”; it could be online to theatrical, when the community wants it.

“Two Sleepy People” opens November 14; more markets are contingent on demand signals. Tickets and theater requests at twosleepypeople.com.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
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Freelance Content Creator — Chillhouse (NYC Based)
Fashion

Freelance Content Creator — Chillhouse (NYC Based)

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84


Location: New York City (in-person availability required) Compensation: $25/ hrWeekly hour requirement: 15 hoursAbout ChillhouseChillhouse is a modern and fast growing nail care brand redefining self-care through a celebration of self-expression, design-driven products, and innovative …

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October 23, 2025 0 comments
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At the Academy Gala, Old Hollywood Meets the Creator Economy
TV & Streaming

At the Academy Gala, Old Hollywood Meets the Creator Economy

by jummy84 October 21, 2025
written by jummy84

Saturday night was the fifth annual Academy Gala, the glamorous fundraising event that also serves as a de facto soft launch of Oscar season. At the Academy Museum cocktail party preceding it, the awards circuit still had its new-car smell; everyone seemed a little more excited to slip into their tuxedos and gravity-defying gowns (or, in the case of Kim Kardashian, a head-encompassing beige silk scarf).

This year’s event also carried an element of nostalgia. Whether it’s film festivals, conferences, or awards shows, all circuits are Groundhog Days where participants may get annoyed by repetition but are ultimately won over by community and familiarity. Same as it ever was — only now, when LA production continues to drop and jobs are scarce everywhere, it’s not.

TELLURIDE, COLORADO - AUGUST 31: Ethan Hawke attends the 2025 Telluride Film Festival on August 31, 2025 in Telluride, Colorado. (Photo by Vivien Killilea/Getty Images)

The Academy knows it, too. It selected Amelia Dimoldenberg, creator of YouTube’s “Chicken Shop Date,” as the night’s emcee for the Academy’s social interviews, where she spoke with the likes of Quinta Brunson, Charli XCX, Rachel Zegler, Jeff Goldblum, Jesse Eisenberg, and Anna Kendrick. She did a great job, tweaking the celebrities — some of whom have been on her YouTube show, or want to be. It’s become a must-stop for promotional tours.

Oddly, none of the Academy’s Instagram or YouTube posts from the evening utilized Dimoldenberg as a collaborator. (Across platforms, Dimoldenberg has over 5 million subscribers — equal to the Academy.) Whether oversight or strategy, it reflects a dilemma facing Hollywood now. Everyone knows that change isn’t just coming, it’s here, but there’s real confusion (or denial) in acting on it.

I sought some clarity from Ben Woods, an analyst at entertainment research firm MIDiA and an author of its recent report, “The New Hollywood.” Among the findings: If you’re younger than 34, broadcast is a distant third to social and streaming. Even in the oldest cohort (those 65 and older), broadcast barely holds the majority at 55 percent. (It’s currently unclear if the 2026 Oscars will be available on streaming; this year, it streamed on Hulu.)

The report also offered a strategic playbook for traditional media, but it’s not what anyone at the Academy cocktail would want to hear. Recommendations include hiring digital natives, lean production cycles (citing Dhar Mann’s $1,000 per minute), repackaging back catalogs into multiple FAST or social channels, and adapting to vertical, scrolling content. Bottom line: Traditional players must adopt creator-driven, social-first strategies or risk irrelevance.

Clockwise from top left: Quinta Brunson, Dave Franco and Alison Brie, Anna Kendrick, and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas

At an evening honoring Oscar contenders and their stars, like “Jay Kelly” (George Clooney, Adam Sandler, and Laura Dern), “Sentimental Value” (Elle Fanning, Renate Reinsve, and Inga Ibsdotter Lilleaas), and “Deliver Me from Nowhere” (Jeremy Allen White, Scott Cooper, Jeremy Strong, and Bruce Springsteen), social cutdowns weren’t top of mind — but they may be the format in which (parts) of these films are most widely seen.

Woods knows his report doesn’t necessarily deliver a popular message. He often gets variations on this question: With a hazy monetization strategy, exactly why should companies do this? The answer, so much as there is one, is don’t kill the messenger.

“Is it better to be able to offer [brands] that holistic message whereby you can say, ‘We can reach audiences — our classic audiences through our broadcast channels, through our streaming channels, and also by the way, we manage the relationship for all of the social audiences and we know exactly what they look like and how they differ?’ I think that’s a powerful message that you’re going to want to try and control rather than not,” Woods said.

And if you don’t — well, nature hates a vacuum. “If you don’t embrace it, you’re going to see situations which we’re already seeing whereby brands are going direct to consumers with entertainment content, whether that’s Dick’s Sporting Goods, whether that’s the Waitrose supermarket in the UK with its really popular video podcasts, whether that’s the Tinder dating app creating a reality TV series akin to ‘Love Island,’” he said. “I think the creator economy has created a license to entertain for anyone.”

No one would equate a supermarket podcast with an Oscar contender, but that’s also beside the point.

A supermarket podcast or dating-app reality series doesn’t belong in the same conversation as Clooney or Springsteen. And the Academy Gala has stolen bragging rights from the Academy’s own Governors Awards as the season’s first must-attend event.

It was also proof that the industry can’t believe tradition is enough. Will Hollywood be able to embrace the creator economy and keep its place at the center of culture — or will the next generation of audiences decide that center lies somewhere else?

October 21, 2025 0 comments
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