celebpeek
  • Home
  • Bollywood
  • Hollywood
  • Lifestyle
  • Fashion
celebpeek
  • Music
  • Celebrity News
  • Events
  • TV & Streaming
Home » Creators
Tag:

Creators

Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As "Losers"
TV & Streaming

Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

by jummy84 April 3, 2026
written by jummy84

With the fifth and final season of Hacks taking on Hollywood once again, Hannah Einbinder has some thoughts about the role artificial intelligence plays in the industry.

The 4x Golden Globe nominee recently slammed generative AI creators as “losers” who are “trying to rob real creatives” as she tore into the tech trend that continues to divide Hollywood during a press conference for the HBO Max show.

“The people who make this stuff are losers,” she declared, according to SlashFilm. “They’re not artists. They’re not creative. And they’ve wanted their whole lives to be special. And they’re not special.”

Einbinder added, “They’re trying to rob real creative people of our gifts. And you can’t. And even if you try, you will never be cool. You guys suck. No one likes you. Anyone who’s near you is because they crave power and access over any ethical standard. You are a loser. You will never be cool. And you probably had a rolly backpack in high school. I wanna put your head in the toilet and flush.”

Jen Statsky, who co-created the series with Paul W. Downs and Lucia Aniello, agreed that in attempting to make the creative process “easier” with AI, creatives will suffer while execs continue to profit.

Jean Smart as Deborah Vance and Hannah Einbinder as Ava Daniels in ‘Hacks’ Season 5.

WBD/ HBO Max

“I wish that I believed that it was in better hands, but I don’t,” said Statsky. “And until there’s guardrails put on, until there is some stoppage mechanism to make sure that we are protecting the humanity both in art and people’s livelihoods, it ain’t good.”

Season 5 of Hacks premieres April 9 on HBO Max, reuniting Einbinder’s Ava Daniels with comedy icon Deborah Vance (Jean Smart), who plans to sell out Madison Square Garden with her first stand-up show after being legally barred from performing over breaking her late-night contract.

April 3, 2026 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Amanza Smith Lit Up Miami Art Week as the Creators Gala Delivered a Night of Art, Influence, and Luxury
Hollywood

Amanza Smith Lit Up Miami Art Week as the Creators Gala Delivered a Night of Art, Influence, and Luxury

by jummy84 December 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The return of Miami Art Week brought with it a surge of creative energy, and few gatherings captured its cultural pulse more vividly than the 2nd Annual Creators Gala Art Party, presented by Twenty35, Swagger Magazine, Jane Owen Public Relations and Zooz Group. On December 4, 2025, the trio of powerhouse brands once again transformed the One Ocean South residence an architectural jewel in Miami Beach’s South Pointe enclave into a haven for art, fashion, and elevated luxury.

The evening was hosted by Amanza Smith, the multifaceted television personality whose nine-season presence on Netflix’s Selling Sunset had already established her as a global figure in design and entertainment. This time, her artistic voice took center stage. Fresh off sold-out shows at MASH Gallery Los Angeles and Grove Gallery London, Smith unveiled a new art collection that showcased her evolving visual language, rich with texture, movement, and introspective expression. Her transition from model, actress, interior designer, and realtor to exhibiting artist resonated deeply during a week that celebrates creative reinvention.

Smith was joined by a dynamic lineup of creators from Zooz Group’s global influencer roster. Their presence underscored the gala’s identity as a gathering point for emerging talents and established tastemakers across entertainment, lifestyle, and media.

Amanza Smith attends SWAGGER Magazine Creators Gala hosted by Amanza Smith at Miami Art Week in Miami FL on December 4, 2025 (Photo by Udo Salters Photography).

 

Throughout the night, guests experienced the sophisticated ambiance of One Ocean South, beginning with red-carpet arrivals and continuing with curated culinary offerings and elevated mixology. Signature cocktails featured selections from the William Grant & Sons portfolio Milagro Tequila, Hendrick’s Gin, Glenfiddich Scotch, Reyka Vodka, and Monkey Shoulder Whisky while Sommsation presented an artfully assembled array of wines and sparkling varietals that complemented the evening’s “Liquid Art” theme. Premium Italian lager Peroni and Peroni 0.0 added a crisp, refreshing note to the drinks program, rounding out the celebration of artisanal craftsmanship.

Music played a pivotal role as DEOCA, one of Miami’s most exciting emerging producers and DJs, curated the soundscape. Having worked alongside major talents such as J Balvin, Trippie Redd, and David Guetta, and with several Top 10 releases on Beatport’s Tech House charts, DEOCA delivered a high-energy, globally influenced set that amplified the creative spirit of the evening.

Beyond the glamour, the gala also supported a meaningful cause through its partnership with GettingAlong.com, an organization dedicated to empowering future educators and policymakers with resources that foster societal well-being, personal growth, and responsible citizenship. The collaboration added a thoughtful dimension to an event celebrated for its artistry and cultural impact.

Amanza Smith attends SWAGGER Magazine Creators Gala hosted by Amanza Smith at Miami Art Week in Miami FL on December 4, 2025 (Photo by Udo Salters Photography).

The 2nd Annual Creators Gala once again stood out as a defining highlight of Miami Art Week—an experience where contemporary art, digital influence, and luxury living converged seamlessly. With Amanza Smith’s artistic evolution at its heart, a captivating roster of influential guests, and a carefully curated sensory journey, the evening left an indelible impression on attendees and reaffirmed the gala’s place among Miami Art Week’s most anticipated destinations.

As the city’s signature art festivities continued, the Creators Gala distinguished itself as a celebration of vision, creativity, and cultural momentum an unforgettable night where art did more than adorn the walls; it shaped the atmosphere itself.

 

December 10, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Cricket in L1
Lifestyle

Desi Thanksgiving? Creators reimagine the classic American feast

by jummy84 November 26, 2025
written by jummy84

The holiday season has begun, and the one holiday that families and friends look forward to the most this month is relishing a giant feast, sitting together across a table. But long before Instagram tablescapes and Friendsgiving parties went viral, Thanksgiving began in 17th-century America as a harvest celebration — an annual moment of gratitude, good food and community.

Creators reimagine the classic American feast

Over time, Indian households have embraced global festivals in their own way, and Thanksgiving is no different. This tradition has now become a canvas for experimentation, with Indians giving the side dish and even main dish a desi tadka not just it in metro cities, but also taking the trend abroad.

Sheena Padda (@platedbypadda), a California-based creator, has taken her love for Indian street food and given a Thanksgiving twist to the classic sweet potato casserole, skipping the turkey this year. She has created a chaat with different layers of flavours — sweet, tangy, spicy and crunchy — all in one bite. “I swapped the crispy base for roasted sweet potato rounds, topped them with roasted brussels sprouts and butternut squash for a cosy fall flavour,” she shared. Topping it all off with a maple cumin yoghurt and a drizzle of mint chutney, spiced pumpkin seeds and chaat masala for the perfect balance of Indian flavour to the table.

Dolphia Arnstein (@dolphia.n.arnstein), a Boston-based creator, takes the vegetarian route with her Indian-inspired stuffed Koginut Squash, replacing the traditional stuffed turkey. She begins by roasting the pumpkin simply, letting its natural sweetness shine. The filling, however, is where the dish truly turns heartfelt—an aromatic blend of black mustard, jeera, onions, garlic and ginger cooked down with dal and rice into a comforting, khichdi-like mash. Once spooned back into the tender squash and finished with fresh coriander, the dish becomes a celebration of home-style Indian flavours.

Meanwhile, Lavisha Bhatt (@lav.and.spice), based in Washington, D.C., takes the much-loved Thanksgiving potato side in a fun direction by turning tater tots into a chaat. “I’ve never been a traditional turkey-and-mashed-potatoes girl — I love dishes that feel alive, playful, and full of bold flavours. Chaat has always been one of my favourite things to eat because it’s such a beautiful mix of textures and flavours — sweet, tangy, spicy, crunchy, creamy, all in one bite. But making it the traditional way can take forever since you usually have to boil, peel, and chop potatoes. Using tater tots was my little lightbulb moment. They come out golden, crispy, and so fun, and they make the whole dish feel effortless,” she says.

Once her tots were ready, she loaded them up with yoghurt, tamarind and mint chutneys, onions, cilantro, jalapeños, sev, and pomegranate. “It becomes this gorgeous, cheerful, shareable plate that feels festive without being complicated. It’s the kind of dish that instantly brightens the table,” she adds.

On the other hand, in India, Pune-based creator Vasanti Bhadkamkar-Balan (@signatureconcoctions) takes inspiration from cornbread — a staple on Thanksgiving menus — and gives it a Gujarati makeover. “This year, I wanted to bring a little Thanksgiving spirit into my kitchen, so I infused the classic dhokla batter with jalapeños, green onions, and sharp cheddar. The result is a golden, fluffy Jalapeño Cheddar Dhokla with the airy, tangy texture of khaman combined with rich pockets of cheddar and a gentle jalapeño kick, making it a standout addition to any festive spread,” she shared.

What are the chefs saying?

As these creators reshape the traditional American feast, chefs back home are seeing this cross-cultural cooking as a natural evolution of how India embraces global food trends.

Chef Vicky Ratnani notes that even though the festival revolves around turkey, it can be easily substituted with other ingredients like tandoori sweet potato or a cranberry chaat. He recalls the desi Thanksgiving he had previously, which included many such dishes. “I had done a hummus with pumpkin, tiny black raisins, and khakhra crisps, apple and fennel kachumber, masala spiced corn on the cob. For a vegetarian twist, I opted for a maple and chilli tandoori steak made with paneer. You can do a whole lot of experimentation with Indian ingredients, even if you wish to include turkey, like a Hyderabadi-style turkey tikka biryani,” he opines.

For desserts, he says, gajar ka halwa cheesecake, kheer with pumpkin and toasted pecans and chocolate with pecan turnover pie, like a gujiya, work really well.

Adding to the vegetarian vibe, author-chef Anahita Dhondy recalls a recipe that she worked on with the US Embassy, where she roasted a gobhi and served it with cranberry sauce. “This kept the classics alive, along with an added Indian twist. You can always incorporate these twists and also include a variety of Anglo-Indian classics on the table, such as cutlets and puddings, which could be chai-flavoured and spiced with cardamom, like a masala chai crème caramel,” she adds.

Echoing the statement, chef Manish Mehrotra recalls creating a whole desi menu for Thanksgiving in New York once. He had played with sage paneer, chilli tomato glaze, tandoori cauliflower, cranberry kulcha, bacon kulcha, and more. “Indian cooks have always excelled at global dishes without losing their essence. And I think if people can come together for good food, chat, and memories, it works. The framework is familiar, but the flavours are open to experimentation,” he adds.

November 26, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kendrick Lamar, 'South Park' Creators Movie Delayed Indefinitely
TV & Streaming

Kendrick Lamar, ‘South Park’ Creators Movie Delayed Indefinitely

by jummy84 November 22, 2025
written by jummy84

Kendrick Lamar and “South Park” creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone aren’t ready to unveil their mysterious live-action comedy just yet. Paramount has removed the trio’s upcoming feature from its March 20 release date, delaying the theatrical release indefinitely as the project continues to be tinkered.

““It’s true – we’re moving (again). We’re working hard at finishing the movie,” reads a joint statement from Paramount, attributed to Stone and Parker’s production banner Park County and Lamar’s company PGLang.

More to come…

November 22, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Tyler, the Creator's Flog Gnaw Postponed Due To Rain
Music

Tyler, the Creator’s Flog Gnaw Postponed Due To Rain

by jummy84 November 14, 2025
written by jummy84

Tyler, the Creator’s annual Camp Flog Gnaw festival will move on short notice from this weekend to Nov. 22-23 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles due to heavy rain in the area.

“Due to the fact this storm became an atmospheric rain torrential downpour, we had two choices,” the artist wrote on Instagram. “Cancel or move to next weekend. We chose the latter. We understand this is not ideal, so we will offer refunds. For everyone else, we will see you next weekend.”

Beyond the artist himself, the bill will be led by A$AP Rocky, a rare Childish Gambino set, Clipse and Doechii, although some previously announced artists will no longer appear next weekend, including sombr, Clairo, Don Toliver and Men I Trust.

Now in its 11th year, Camp Flog Gnaw will also feature Earl Sweatshirt, GloRilla, Larry June and 2 Chainz, T-Pain, Malcolm Todd and Thundercat.

Flog Gnaw caps a massive year for Tyler, who is up for five awards at the upcoming Grammys, including Album of the Year and Best Rap Album for CHROMAKOPIA and Best Alternative Music Album for DON’T TAP THE GLASS. He’ll return to the road in March for South American headlining dates and appearances at Lollapaloozas in Argentina, Chile and Brazil.

November 14, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
In Development: ZCON Creators Conference
TV & Streaming

In Development: ZCON Creators Conference

by jummy84 November 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Mixed messages are the new normal. Last week saw the Sundance Institute form a union and thousands of layoffs at Paramount and YouTube. It also brought two events that point toward the future: ZCON and Square Peg Social. 

Cognitive dissonance has become an essential skill set. (F. Scott Fitzgerald had a nicer way of putting it: “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.”) This week, I’m choosing to focus on the positive. 

Now in its third year, ZCON is a two-day, invitation-only event in Los Angeles that centers on (yes) Gen Z and the people who love them. That assortment of attendees included creators (of course) as well as CEOs, CMOs, and studio executives. 

Emma Stone stars as Michelle in director Yorgos Lanthimos' BUGONIA, a Focus Features release.
Credit: Atsushi Nishijima/Focus Features © 2025 All Rights Reserved.

Sessions included “Rewriting the Rules of Branded Entertainment” and “The New Hollywood.” Auli’i Cravalho (“Moana”) highlighted her impatience with the old ways (“We are told that we’re too young, to wait our turn”); Owen Thiele (“Adults”) premiered “Girl Room,” a show co-created with Amazon Prime for TikTok and for Instagram; and Paralympian Ezra Frech declared, “Gen Z is the most inclusive generation of all time,” reframing disability as a great way for brands to resonate with consumers. 

Held at the LA Preserve (a lush oasis off Hollywood’s scrabbly St. Andrews, the street made famous by Jane’s Addiction), the space flowed with bright and shiny 20-somethings with energy and agency. This generation isn’t intimidated by the attention of major brands, nor necessarily impressed by it. They expect it. 

For a long time, festivals were ground zero for young people who wanted to prove their value as hot commodities. Seeing so many young creators (and the creator adjacent) echoed similar groups at the Sundance Film Festival and SXSW. Of course, ZCON and Sundance are very different; brand partnerships are the lifeblood here, not distribution, and the event is owned by UTA. 

If Sundance is powered by pick-me energy and SXSW by VC hustle, the invite-only ZCON is doing something else altogether. It isn’t a tentpole so much as an extension of an ongoing conversation between founders and brands. A Gen Z nonprofit already knows that, say, Amazon’s global creative director is dying to know what they’ll do next, and development execs are on watch. 

Overseeing it all is Olivia Frary, a UTA Next Gen exec who came to the agency when it acquired her Gen Z marketing company, JUV Consulting, in 2024. (Of note: She created JUV in 2016, while in high school.) 

“For years, every single person on our team would end a call by just saying, “If there’s someone that you would want us to meet, let us know,” she said. “Even when we were super startup vibes, we would always kind of stress that was the best thing you could do for us, regardless of if you wanted to hire a Gen Z consultancy. A lot of [those connections] are showing up here that knew us when we were those crazy kids.” 

Now those same kids are shaping not only the culture, but also how it’s sold — at least until Gen A comes along. And if history is any guide, nothing will be more cringe to that generation than being called an influencer. 

For now, this cohort is enjoying the primacy so much that ZCON participants eagerly embraced an afternoon “recess” that featured a cavalcade of bubbles and dancing with a live DJ. Cringe to anyone else; here, it’s what happens before the final panel, “What Does a Happier Internet Look Like?” 

I’m going to wrap with a tease about digging into Square Peg Social, the inaugural, invite-only mentorship program created by Lars Knudsen and Ari Aster — a collaboration between established filmmakers and emerging voices.

We previewed it this summer; nearly 1,800 applied. In the end, 37 writers, directors, and producers spent four days in direct mentorship with the creators behind not just Knudsen and Aster’s films (“Eddington,” “Midsommar,” “Beau Is Afraid”), but also “One Battle After Another,” “Iron Claw,” “Roofman,” “Rebel Ridge,” and more. 

Next week, I’ll share both the executive and filmmaker rosters (both are long and impressive; expect multiple stories). It would be the snarky/lazy thing to contrast the differences between Square Peg and ZCON (Art! Commerce!), but in truth they had more in common than not. Both are declarations of community, however self-selected.  

Because no matter where you land in this brave new world, one thing’s certain: No one will make it alone. (Bubbles remain optional.) 

✉️ Have an idea, compliment, or complaint? 
[email protected];  (323) 435-7690.

November 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Taylor Sheridan's New Deal Shows A-List Creators Are Still King
TV & Streaming

Taylor Sheridan’s New Deal Shows A-List Creators Are Still King

by jummy84 October 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Taylor Sheridan may never produce another series as wildly popular as “Yellowstone.” NBCUniversal will not suddenly steal away the rights to “Yellowstone” from Paramount. But the changing of the guard that will result in Sheridan taking his services from Paramount to NBCUni is seismic all the same because his name brand is more valuable than almost any individual IP he’s created.

As Puck first reported on Sunday night, Sheridan intends to strike a new overall deal for both film and TV with NBCUniversal once his commitments to Paramount are completed. Sheridan’s film deal with Paramount expires in March and his new film deal with Universal will begin next year, and he’s tied up with Paramount on the TV side until 2028, at which point he’ll then be able to start making shows for NBCUni. He’ll still be expected to stay plenty busy with Paramount until that time, but his time making a mountain of entertainment for Paramount has an end date.

Nobody Wants This Season 2 stars Timothy Simons as Sasha, Jackie Tohn as Esther, shown holding each other in front of the Hollywood sign

Paramount and NBCUniversal each declined to comment for this story.

It’s a shocking coup for a few reasons. For one, Paramount’s new CEO David Ellison recently fawned praise over Sheridan as his new company’s top creator, calling him a “singular genius” with a “perfect track record.” “My goal is to have Taylor call Paramount his home for as long as he wants to be telling stories,” Ellison told CNBC in August.

Paramount too since it merged with Skydance is the one that has been doing the poaching. One of the new regime’s first major deals was to woo the Duffer Brothers away from Netflix, offering them the chance to make culture-defining movies for theaters in a way Netflix would’ve been reluctant to offer. James Mangold signed an overall deal with Paramount and will now call it home for years to come. It was also unafraid to bring back Will Smith and Johnny Depp from Hollywood jail and make them the face of new franchises. Paramount even locked up “South Park” creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker for $1.5 billion, because it would be a blow if they walked out the door too.

'Yellowstone'
‘Yellowstone’Paramount Network

What Paramount realized, just as Donna Langley did at NBCUni, is that it’s the people that are worth spending on, not brands. Langley is making the bet that Sheridan will continue producing hits at the pace he’s done at Paramount, but also that audiences are coming to watch because it’s a Taylor Sheridan project. That they’re spinoffs of the Dutton family or are star vehicles for Sylvester Stallone or Nicole Kidman are secondary.

Thus far Paramount had been willing to write Sheridan a blank check because his shows — “Mayor of Kingstown,” “Tulsa King,” “Landman, “Lioness,” “1923,” the reality competition series “The Road,” and upcoming series “Y: Marshals,” spinoff “NOLA King” starring Samuel L. Jackson, and “The Madison” — comprise the majority of Paramount+’s streaming strategy. Those and new episodes of “Knuckles.” The shows may be expensive, which Puck reported may have been part of the reason that led to the divorce, but they deliver, continually topping streaming charts.

Sheridan also has rare clout to operate the way he wants. He’s the auteur creator who writes all his series on his own, he stays put on his Texas ranch and shoots most of his series from his home state, and he’s had the clout to push back on even his stars like Kevin Costner when it comes to who really calls the shots on the direction of the show.

There are only a handful of TV creators who have such clout in the industry. Shonda Rhimes and Ryan Murphy have virtual free reign at Netflix. Non-writers like Dick Wolf and Jerry Bruckheimer are still immensely important name brands. People like Donald Glover, Greg Berlanti, Chuck Lorre, Noah Hawley, Mindy Kaling, Jesse Armstrong, Kenya Barris, and Lisa Joy & Jonah Nolan inspire that kind of loyalty and (for most of them) back it up with prolificness. Sheridan though is 1-of-1, and soon he’ll be taking his mess of shows, the type of output you can literally build a streaming service around, to NBCUni and Peacock.

L-R: Sylvester Stallone as Dwight
‘Tulsa King’Brian Douglas/Paramount+

When the 2023 writers strike arrived, it became clear how valuable of currency it was to have an overall deal with one of those top names. Studios en masse suspended all of its first look and overall arrangements with writers, and the studios used the opportunity to purge from its ranks some of the expensive ones with talent that weren’t actually resulting in any shows. The ones that remained are the cream of the crop, and lack of activity has never been Sheridan’s problem.

By setting him up with a film deal as well, Sheridan is in a position to be a top filmmaker and a top showrunner. Universal knows how to market its auteurs, be it Steven Spielberg, Jordan Peele, or coming movies from The Daniels and Christopher Nolan. Those are similarly names who can get the clout to do what they want at the pace they want because they have a track record and an audience that is now showing up because it’s a Nolan movie or Peele movie, not because of the IP they’re working with.

We’ll see if Sheridan can join that company on both sides of the aisle. He has a film for Warner Bros. called “F.A.S.T.” likely arriving next year, and before “Yellowstone,” he looked like he was on a hot streak of movies thanks to the unofficial trilogy of “Sicario,” “Hell or High Water,” and “Wind River.” His last feature, “Those Who Wish Me Dead” with Angelina Jolie, fizzled at the box office with just $19.1 million worldwide.

Eventually, Paramount+ will get the streaming rights back to “Yellowstone” itself, which famously was licensed to none other than NBCUni’s Peacock. By that time though, Peacock could have its own new Taylor Sheridan shows to make up for it.

October 28, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Cast and Creators Talk Gruesome Series Opening
TV & Streaming

Cast and Creators Talk Gruesome Series Opening

by jummy84 October 27, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • The cast and creators talk to TV Insider about the series premiere of It: Welcome to Derry, which is set in 1962 and explores the era’s collective fears.
  • The episode introduces a new group of children and adults, highlighting themes of social exclusion and prejudice, while connecting their personal fears to the supernatural terror in Derry.
  • The shocking massacre of most main child characters in the premiere subverts audience expectations, signaling that the series will not follow the familiar patterns of the original It films.

[Warning: The following post contains MAJOR spoilers for the premiere episode of It: Welcome to Derry.]

Welcome back to Derry, Maine, for another cycle of the title extraterrestrial monster emerging from the sewers to terrorize young children.

The premiere of the It prequel series is set in 1962, against a landscape of widespread fears about the bomb and the pernicious racism that prevailed in the era. For cocreator Jason Fuchs, he needed to look no further than Stephen King‘s original text for inspiration for that defining element of the new series.

“Stephen King, I think, intentionally approached it in the way he did, because he wanted Derry to be a microcosm of America, and, in some ways, a microcosm of the larger world around us. We sort of wanted to explore that. We wanted to explore the moment of 1962. It’s a specific period with very specific fears and terrors. Obviously, It does not exist in the beginning, is taking advantage of people’s very real fear. So what are people scared of in 1962, and what are people worried about? There’s a long list, but certainly chief amongst them [is] the threat of nuclear war. It’s the Atomic Age.”

The opening shot of the series plays upon the first of those; a young (but not quite young enough for the pacifier he’s gnawing on) boy named Matty (Miles Ekhardt) is caught watching The Music Man without a ticket at the local cineplex. The usher who chases him implies this is a regular occurrence, but Matty is clocked and covered for by young Ronnie Grogan (Amanda Christine), the daughter of the friendly reel operator, Hank (Stephen Rider), who implies that Matty’s family is terrible to him.

Miles Ekhardt as Matty / HBO

Matty then braves the cold in an effort to get out of Derry and is picked up by a family that goes from wholesome to horrifying in a matter of minutes. As the kids in the backseat with him join their folks in a chorus of bizarre chants, the mother gives birth to a mutant monster baby with wings that attacks. The inspiration for that fearsome new creature, according to Andy Muschietti, is drawn from the perceived dangers of radioactivity in the Cold War era.

“There’s a connection to the collective fears of the era, which is… the fear of nuclear attack, radiation, general nuclear tests. People were in panic of the imminent bang… This scare with the baby is based on the radio broadcast that’s talking about birth defects, stemming from radiation. So I thought it was a great way to start to set up the era where we’re living, what the fears are, and newborn baby, boom, in your face,” Muschietti explained. “There’s also a theme of having children that cuts across the whole book. When you realize that all the Losers in the second half of the book, when they’re adults, they come back to Derry, and they all realized nobody, none of them, had children, it sort of talks about the fear or the horror of bringing kids into this world, which is full of horrors.”

We then meet Major Leroy Hanlon (Jovan Adepo) as he’s welcomed to the air base outside of Derry by General Francis Shaw (James Remar), who quickly puts an obviously racist airman in his place for refusing to salute his superior.

James Remar and Jovan Adepo in It Welcome to Derry

James Remar as Gen. Francis Shaw and Jovan Adepo as Maj. Leroy Hanlon / HBO

For James Remar, while Shaw does want something from Hanlon and his bespoke set of special skills, that’s not the only reason he stands up for him. “Am I just using him? I don’t feel that’s the case, because if I were, then I could do it by force. Francis Shaw is doing it a little bit more by coercion, and trying to get him on his side, and to see what he’s doing is right. So he does have a respect and an affection for him. I don’t feel like he’s just using him. And he protects all his troops, because just about 10 years prior to when this was taking place, maybe 1948, the United States military was desegregated. Prior to that, in World War II, Black troops and white troops did not serve in the same units… But then they integrated. And when the boss, President Truman, said we’re integrating the troops, General Shaw was right on board,” he said. “These are my troops. These are my guys. And it didn’t matter what color they were anymore.”

Leroy is later attacked in his room by a pair of masked men who point a gun at his face and demand top-secret information that he refuses to give. He’s rescued by his partner, Pauly Russo (Randy Mancuso), before things take a grimmer turn.

Jack Malloy Legault, Matilda Legault, Clara stack, Mikkal Karim Fdler in It Welcome to Derry

Jack Malloy Legault as Phil, Matilda Legault as Suzie, Clara Stack as Lilly, and Mikkal Karim Fidler as Teddy / HBO

The show also introduces us to more children who’ve been otherized by their peers at school. There’s Lilly Bainbridge (Clara Stack), who is taunted with jars of pickles after her dad’s accidental death at a jarring factory, and fears she’ll be perceived as mentally unwell. She once confided in Matty about all of that before the boy’s disappearance, and as she remembers that, she begins to hear his voice through the bath drain before a pair of fingers pop out.

Then, there’s Margie (Matilda Lawler), a girl who’s desperately trying to fit in with the popular girls called the Patty Cakes, hates her glasses, and worries that her friendship with Lilly reflects badly on her. Meanwhile, Phil (Jack Molloy Legault) is a foul-mouthed sci-fi lover, and Teddy (Mikkal Karim-Fidler) is an apparent ancestor of Stanley Urie. Teddy, after hearing about the horrors of the Holocaust at the dinner table, experiences the second individual scare with a lampshade turning into human skin and chasing him around the room.

Lilly joins forces with Phil, Teddy, and Phil’s little sister Suzie (Matilda Legault) to dive deeper into what Teddy experienced and how it might relate to Matty’s disappearance. They recruit Ronnie to join in on the mission because she, too, heard something in the pipes. Together, they hit the movie theater to recreate the moment when Matty was last seen, and things take a horrifying turn when the mutant flying baby from the intro bursts through the screen and rips most of the kids to shreds, with just Lilly and Ronnie left alive in the massacre.

Amanda Christine in It Welcome to Derry

Amanda Christine as Ronnie Grogan / HBO

“For me, it was super fun to get to that, being drenched in blood and getting to scream and duck under the seats and see the kids climbing over the seats and getting flung in the air,” Clara Stack remembered of making that scene.

The deaths of three of these children, who at first appear to be in line with the archetypes of the original Losers (with Phil having echoes of Richie Tozier and Teddy reminding us, of course, of Stanley), subverts expectations. That upending was by design, according to executive producer Brad Caleb Kane.

“We wanted to show people in the first episode of the show, this is not the movies. We wanted to pull the rug out from under people right away to let them know you shouldn’t get too comfortable with anybody right away. Anything can happen. Anything will,” he explained.

Find out what else the cast and creatives had to say about the first episode of It: Welcome to Derry in TV Insider’s exclusive aftershow, embedded above. And stay tuned for more cast and creative analysis to come throughout Welcome to Derry‘s run.

It: Welcome to Derry, Sundays, 9/8c, HBO

October 27, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Kantara Chapter 1 Creators Urge Fans Not To Support Piracy - Here's Why | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Kantara Chapter 1 Creators Urge Fans Not To Support Piracy – Here’s Why | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

The producers of Kantara: Chapter 1, the highly awaited prequel to the 2022 hit Kantara, have made an emotional appeal to people asking them not to support piracy. Launched on October 2 in six languages—Kannada, Tamil, Telugu, Malayalam, Hindi, and English—the film has released to positive reviews and censoring out crowd.

Taking to social media, production house Hombale Films said:
“Dear Kantara fans and movie enthusiasts, right from the start, Kantara has belonged to you as much as it is ours. Your support and affection have seen this journey through. We respectfully request you not to encourage piracy. It destroys the film, but more importantly, the dreams and hard work of thousands who worked day and night to make it come alive.”

The team also strongly advised not recording or sharing theatre footage, stating further, “Kantara Chapter 1 was made for the cinema—for you to feel each sound, each frame, each emotion as originally intended. Let’s safeguard this experience together and leave Kantara an unforgettable memory in theatres.”

The movie has received stern admiration from celebrities and fans. Indian cricketer Varun Chakravarthy posted on his Twitter account, “#Kantara has to be one of the best representations of India’s diverse and intricate cultures… Fantastic and mind-blowing!”

Also Read: Kantara 3 Title Revealed? Get Ready for the Most Epic Chapter Yet

Renowned Animal director Sandeep Reddy Vanga also showered praise on the film, terming it “a cinematic thunderstorm” and a “true masterpiece.” He admired Rishab Shetty’s solo act and the chilling background score by Ajaneesh Loknath. Hombale Films received it graciously, stating they were “overwhelmed” by the appreciation.

Directed, written, and starring Rishab Shetty, Kantara: Chapter 1 is staged against the backdrop of the Kadamba dynasty rule in Banavasi and features Rukmini Vasanth and Jayaram alongside Shetty. Made by Vijay Kiragandur, the movie follows Hombale Films’ tradition of making powerful, culturally connected cinema.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
BTS' RM, V, J-Hope dance their hearts out at Tyler the Creator's Seoul concert, poses with him and gives him a shoutout
Bollywood

BTS’ RM, V, J-Hope dance their hearts out at Tyler the Creator’s Seoul concert, poses with him and gives him a shoutout

by jummy84 September 15, 2025
written by jummy84

BTS members RM, aka Kim Namjoon, V, aka Kim Taehyung, and J-Hope attended Tyler, the Creator’s concert in Seoul. Taking to their respective Instagram accounts, RM, V, and J-Hope shared pictures and videos with the artist. CORTIS member James was also seen at the event.

BTS members RM, V and J-Hope posed with Tyler, the Creator at his Seoul concert.

RM, V, and J-Hope attend Tyler, the Creator’s Seoul concert

In a clip, RM was seen singing and dancing as he stood in the fan pit at the venue. He and V were also seen laughing at another clip. In another video, J-Hope was seen shaking V as he laughed. They were also seen dancing and enjoying themselves. RM, V and J-Hope also joined James for a photo.

RM, V, and J-Hope pose for pics, dance and enjoy at concert

RM shared a photo of Tyler on stage from the venue. He also shared a picture featuring himself, Tyler, J-Hope and V. For the event, RM wore a blue sweatshirt, black shorts and sneakers. J-Hope opted for a black vest under a matching jacket and pants. V was seen in a brown T-shirt and denims. Tyler opted for a white T-shirt and trousers.

RM shared a photo of Tyler on stage from the venue.
RM shared a photo of Tyler on stage from the venue.

BTS members give a shoutout to Tyler

J-Hope shared a video as he watched Tyler perform. He also shared a picture collage of the trio posing with Tyler for pictures. Taking to his Instagram Stories, V gave a shoutout to Tyler, the Creator. He wore a T-shirt seemingly gifted to him by Tyler.

J-Hope shared a video as he watched Tyler perform.
J-Hope shared a video as he watched Tyler perform.

V tagged him and penned a note, “Thanks for the gift (folded hands and pink heart emojis). And welcome to Korea! I’m having a Mom’s Touch burger tonight, you’ve got to try it too.”

During the concert, Tyler said on stage, “Y’all guess what I had for lunch? I had Mama’s touch. That’s the f*** y’all doing out here? That shit is m********** delicious.” V shared a picture of a burger and wrote, “Mama’s touch.”

Cortis shares pics with RM, J-Hope, V

Cortis’ Instagram account shared a bunch of pictures featuring James, RM, J-Hope, and V. All of them posed near the stage at the concert venue. The caption read, “Watching the GOAT with the GOATs @rkive @uarmyhope @thv @feliciathegoat.”

BTS members Jin, Suga, Jimin and Jungkook weren’t seen at the concert. Jin and Jungkook are currently busy with their events.

About BTS

RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, Taehyung and Jungkook are gearing up for their first album in four years. The seven-member group started producing the new album in the US in July. The new record, which will be released in Spring next year, will be the band’s first as a complete group since Proof in 2022.

September 15, 2025 0 comments
0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Social Connect

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Youtube Snapchat

Recent Posts

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

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

  • Snapped: Above & Beyond (A Photo Essay)

Newsletter

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

Categories

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

Recent Posts

  • Shushu/Tong Shanghai Fall 2026 Collection

  • Here’s What Model Taylor Hill Is Buying Now

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

Editors’ Picks

  • 2009 feels like a whole other world away

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

  • Spotify’s Joe Hadley Talks ARIA Awards Partnership

Latest Style

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

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

  • Hannah Einbinder Slams AI Creators As “Losers”

  • Facebook
  • Twitter

@2020 - celebpeek. Designed and Developed by Pro


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