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Belly (Lola Tung), Jeremiah (Gavin Casalegno) in The Summer I Turned Pretty
TV & Streaming

The Summer I Turned Pretty: Gavin Casalegno Finale Interview

by jummy84 September 19, 2025
written by jummy84

[This story contains major spoilers from Prime Video’s The Summer I Turned Pretty series finale.]

During the final episode of Prime Video’s The Summer I Turned Pretty, viewers saw Conrad Fisher visit Isabel “Belly” Conklin in Paris ahead of her birthday, with the pair finally confessing their love and getting back together. However despite the great secrecy surrounding the series and how it would truly end, eagle-eyed fans began posting videos of the cast filming in Paris online with one in particular making everyone second guess the show’s ending.

Despite the show leaving viewers’ to guess whether Team Conrad or Team Jeremiah would prevail, even though (spoiler!) in the books Belly ends up with Conrad, Gavin Casalegno was spotted filming with Lola Tung in Paris, making viewers wonder if Belly would perhaps end up with his character Jeremiah instead. But the filming ended up being a decoy to trick fans.

“They just told me to get on a plane and show up and they handed me sides that were blank and then I just went out there and ran,” Casalegno tells The Hollywood Reporter of filming in Paris. “It was super fun. It was a free trip to Paris, can’t complain. I had some great coffee. I got to meet a lot of the French crews as well and the French are so amazing.”

He then quipped, “I don’t know. I just work here!”

Despite a Conrad endgame in the finale, throughout the show’s three seasons, viewers had followed the ups and downs of Belly’s relationship with Jeremiah from watching their surprising love confessions to a four-year-long relationship, engagement, almost wedding and breakup. When asked about telling a separate love story within a focus on an inevitable Conrad and Belly reunion, the actor said he didn’t feel “overwhelmed” by it and focused on trying to portray someone who would be himself. “I just wanted people to love him for him. Even after the series ended there are still people that are team Jeremiah,” he said.

Even if fans of the original book trilogy were committed to Team Conrad, Casalengo says he still thinks Jeremiah and Belly could’ve worked. “I think it still could have worked without Christmas. Christmas was when she [Belly] started loving him [Conrad] again… But I think without that and with a lot of healthy boundaries, I feel like we probably would have seen a wedding go through.”

Following the premiere of the finale, Casalegno spoke to THR about the upcoming TSITP film, Jeremiah’s growth (and criticism) and Jeremiah’s blossoming bond with Denise in the finale.

***

For starters, we have learned that this season was not the actual ending and there will be a movie. What can you tease?

Honestly, we have no clue! We’ve heard whispers about it but we’re really just in the dark as much as you are. I guess keep reading fan theories.

Ahead of the final season there were viral clips online of you filming in Paris with Lola Tung. What’s the backstory there? Was that just to throw everyone off with the ending?

I think so! Honestly, I don’t know. They just told me to get on a plane and show up and they handed me sides that were blank and then I just went out there and ran. It was super fun. It was a free trip to Paris can’t complain. I had some great coffee. I got to meet a lot of the French crews as well and the French are so amazing. But I don’t know. I just work here!

The Summer I Turned Pretty season three.

Prime Video

It’s safe to say that Jeremiah has gotten probably the most criticism this season and a common argument is that he only pursued Belly as a way to win her over Conrad due to a possible jealousy or competitiveness with Conrad. Can you address the criticism of Jeremiah’s intentions with pursuing things with Belly?

This is Jenny’s world, Jenny’s creation. I just kind of wanted to collaborate with her on her vision, but I was like, “Jenny they’re closer in age, and I think it would be really cool to play this Jeremiah as someone who’s loved her for a long time.” It was best friends, and there’s always this chemistry between them. You obviously you don’t date when you’re six years old and so now that they’re teenagers, they’re like, “Oh, wow, this could be something.” And so I was under the impression that Jeremiah actually had a thing with her growing up, and that’s what I did. And it was funny, all the criticism and stuff.

I had a conversation with someone yesterday at a jazz bar at like 2 a.m. and they were like, “So are you actually a Team Jeremiah?” And I was like, “Yeah, of course.” And they were like, even after all this other stuff?” And I was like, “I’m sorry. Are you perfect? Have you ever made a mistake?” And she’s like, “Yeah, I’ve made mistakes.” And I was like, “Are you still team you?” And she’s like, “Yes.” There you go! We all make mistakes. Some big, some small, but at the end of the day, we’re all growing and learning and I think that’s the most important thing that you learn from your mistakes. And Jeremiah really did. I think he’s grown a lot in the series.

Regardless of what team people were on, the reality was that Jeremiah and Belly were in a four-year long relationship and we spend a lot of season two and season three following their relationship. What was it like trying to build this love story with Jeremiah and Belly while navigating the Conrad endgame that existed in the books? Did you feel like it was overshadowed or difficult to try to convince people that they too had a genuine love story? Did Jeremiah get a fair chance?

I have a lot of thoughts for this one. The bottom line is, I want to see people love Jeremiah for who he is and love him as a person and be able to see themselves with someone who would sacrifice and do anything for their loved one. I think the nice guy is always overshadowed. People will say it’s predictable and they want that danger, but I think ultimately you end up marrying your best friend. You don’t end up marrying someone who you never know their feelings or anything like that. As far as feeling overwhelmed with the teams, not really. I just wanted people to love him for him. Even after the series ended, there are still people that are team Jeremiah.

Tung and Casalegno in The Summer I Turned Pretty season three.

Prime Video

We also see Jeremiah having this fear of losing Belly again and seemingly knowing that Conrad was always going to be in the picture. Do you feel that even if the Christmas reunion hadn’t happened between Belly and Conrad and Belly and Jeremiah hadn’t gotten engaged, do you think Jeremiah’s fears was always going to break their relationship or do you feel like they could’ve been the endgame and still worked?

I think it still could have worked without Christmas. Christmas was when she started loving him again. That was a moment where boundaries weren’t set for either of them and they were able to emotionally connect in a way they hadn’t for four years because Belly was always with Jeremiah. I think that separation between them, where she essentially had a getaway with Conrad, was pivotal to her feelings and things being stirred up again, where she’s like, “I love him” and reawakened those feelings. But without that and with a lot of healthy boundaries, I feel like we probably would have seen a wedding go through.

Despite the heartbreak, we do see Jeremiah finding his way and him and Denise developing something. Do you think they’re going to pursue things and how will that work, especially given she’s headed to California with Stephen and Taylor?

Yeah, I don’t know. I genuinely just want him to be happy. When is too soon after leaving the altar basically? I don’t know when is too soon to be getting with someone. Probably not within a year, I would imagine, but I just want him to be happy. Denise has gotten to see different sides of Jeremiah and who he is and I hope for the best for them.

***

The Summer I Turned Pretty is available to stream on Prime Video.

September 19, 2025 0 comments
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Malaika Arora: ‘I was judged for my career, my clothes, and my relationships’ | Interview
Bollywood

Malaika Arora: ‘I was judged for my career, my clothes, and my relationships’ | Interview

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

Too bold, too outspoken, too everything – these labels have followed Malaika Arora throughout her career in Bollywood. For a long time, she fought them, even justifying herself. However, she’s now embracing these tags as her crown. She shares the day she stopped explaining herself was the day she felt truly free.

Malaika Arora’s last public relationship was with actor Arjun Kapoor.

On taking control of her own narrative

In an interview with Hindustan Times, Malaika opened up about being judged throughout her life, often labeled as ‘too bold’ or ‘too outspoken’.

Looking back at how tough it was to take control of her own narrative, Malaika reveals that the criticism and judgments stopped when she stopped justifying herself. That being said, she doesn’t feel the need to explain herself anymore.

“It was tough because people love to tell you what you should or shouldn’t be. I was judged for my career, my clothes, my relationships – you name it. But the day I stopped explaining myself was the day I felt free. My biggest takeaway? The only narrative that matters is the one you write for yourself,” Malaika said.

Malaika, who was previously married to actor-producer Arbaaz Khan, with whom she shares a son, admits that people called her “too loud, too much, too bold” all the time.

“I’ve been called too bold, too outspoken, too everything. And honestly? I wear it like a crown now. If I’m “too much” for someone, they’re probably not enough for me,” shares the star, whose last public relationship was with actor Arjun Kapoor.

On her work reflecting her life

There are times when Malaika stumbles upon projects and collaborations that mirror her journey. She grabs it with pride and joy. Her latest association with cosmetics brand HYUE as the face of its new campaign titled Own It.

“Whether in fashion, fitness, or just the choices I’ve made, I’ve never followed a formula. I’ve always believed that real confidence comes when you stop performing for the world and start living for yourself,” says the mother of one.

“It (the association) felt like they were telling my story through beauty. I’ve had to fight labels, opinions, and expectations all my life. So Own It isn’t just a tagline to me – it’s my lived reality,” she added.

On struggle with self-doubt

Like many, Malaika isn’t immune to self-doubt, and there are days when uncertainty creeps in, leaving her questioning herself. However, she has learnt to embrace those moments with kindness.

“Self-doubt is human—it never really disappears. There are days when I question myself, just like anyone else. But over the years, I’ve learned to meet those moments with kindness rather than criticism,” Malaika confesses.

She adds, “Confidence, for me, isn’t about never doubting—it’s about moving forward with grace despite it.”

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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Italian reporter defends herself after viral Ayo Edebiri interview; ‘I find it striking’
Bollywood

Italian reporter defends herself after viral Ayo Edebiri interview; ‘I find it striking’

by jummy84 September 10, 2025
written by jummy84

An Italian journalist is speaking out after facing strong criticism for her viral interview with Ayo Edebiri, Julia Roberts, and Andrew Garfield. The interview, filmed for ArtsLife TV on September 5, showed reporter Federica Polidoro asking Roberts and Garfield a question about the #MeToo and Black Lives Matter movements in Hollywood. Edebiri, who was sitting with them, was not included in the question, leading many viewers to accuse the journalist of ignoring her.

Journalist Federica Polidoro has defended herself after receiving backlash over the viral Ayo Edebiri interview.(AFP)

The viral exchange

Polidoro asked Roberts and Garfield: “Now that the #MeToo era and the Black Lives Matter movement are done, what do we have to expect in Hollywood?”

Her wording surprised all three actors. Roberts quickly responded, “It’s not done.” Garfield agreed, and Edebiri stepped in, saying: “I don’t think it’s done at all. Hashtags might not be used as much, but there’s still important work happening every day.”

Edebiri’s thoughtful response went viral online, with fans praising her for addressing the issue clearly. But many questioned why she was left out of the question in the first place, especially since she is both Black and younger than her co-stars.

Polidoro’s response

On September 8, Polidoro posted a statement on Instagram saying she has been targeted with personal insults, accusations of racism, and cyberbullying since the clip spread.

She explained that her question was meant only for Roberts and Garfield, but she published the full answers from all three actors in her interview.

“I find it striking that, instead of focusing on the thoughtful responses of Ayo Edebiri, Julia Roberts, and Andrew Garfield, the discussion is only about how I phrased the question,” she wrote.

Also read: Ayo Edebiri responds after being excluded from MeToo, Black Lives Matter questions to Julia Roberts, Andrew Garfield

Defending her work

Polidoro said she has worked with international publications for over 20 years and comes from a multi-ethnic, feminist family with a history of immigration.

“The real racists are those who see racism everywhere and try to silence journalism,” she added, saying she may take legal action against those who attacked her online.

The interview was part of the press tour for After the Hunt, a drama starring Roberts, Garfield, and Edebiri. The movie explores themes connected to the #MeToo movement and will be released in theaters on October 17.

FAQs

1. Why did Ayo Edebiri’s interview go viral?

It went viral after the reporter excluded her from a question on #MeToo and BLM, and Edebiri gave a powerful response.

2. What did Federica Polidoro say about the backlash?

She said she faced online attacks, denied racism, and defended her right to ask tough questions.

3. What is “After the Hunt” about?

It’s a drama starring Edebiri, Roberts, and Garfield, exploring themes tied to the #MeToo movement.

September 10, 2025 0 comments
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Saoirse Ronan on Her Wild, Darkly Funny Role in 'Bad Apples' INTERVIEW
TV & Streaming

Saoirse Ronan on Her Wild, Darkly Funny Role in ‘Bad Apples’ INTERVIEW

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

TIFF: In Jonatan Etzler’s darkly funny “Bad Apples,” the actress plays a harried teacher who does something really crazy to a naughty student. As the pair explain to IndieWire, that’s not the wildest part: It’s how disarmingly funny Ronan gets to be.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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CBS News Implements New Interview Policy For 'Face The Nation'
TV & Streaming

CBS News Implements New Interview Policy For ‘Face The Nation’

by jummy84 September 5, 2025
written by jummy84

CBS News said that Face the Nation will only broadcast live or live-to-tape interviews following Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem‘s complaints over edits made to her appearance on the show on Sunday.

A CBS News spokesperson said, “In response to audience feedback over the past week, we have implemented a new policy for greater transparency in our interviews. Face the Nation will now only broadcast live or live-to-tape interviews (subject to national security or legal restrictions). This extra measure means the television audience will see the full, unedited interview on CBS and we will continue our practice of posting full transcripts and the unedited video online.”

Face the Nation has published full transcripts and unedited interviews online, but Noem complained that the broadcast “shamefully edited” an interview in which she made allegations about Kilmar Abrego Garcia, the undocumented immigrant who has been at the center of much coverage about the Trump administration’s deportation efforts. She alleged that CBS News “shamefully edited the interview to whitewash the truth about this MS-13 gang member and the threat he poses to American public safety.”

More to come.

September 5, 2025 0 comments
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Sales So Far Out of Venice, TIFF, and Telluride
TV & Streaming

Paul McCartney Doc Man on the Run: Morgan Neville Interview

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Listening to documentarian Morgan Neville and actor Paul Mescal dive down the Paul McCartney rabbit hole at the Telluride brunch was one of my festival highlights. Both are McCartney experts at this point, as Mescal is returning to rehearsals in London to play Paul in the first of Sam Mendes’ four Beatles movies, and Neville has spent the last three years prepping “Man on the Run,” his post-Beatles portrait of McCartney as he created his solo albums and assembled the band Wings. When I was growing up in ’70s New York, I loved McCartney albums Cherry and Ram, but was never a Wings fan. Now I see how many of his catchy songs have seeped into the culture: I’m adding a bunch to my playlists.

'Wuthering Heights'

“Man on the Run” reveals an artist who must reinvent himself without the Beatles and with his great ally and love, Linda McCartney. But he never fell out of love with John Lennon.

This is a Q&A with Neville by documentary filmmaker David Wilson that took place after the film‘s second screening on September 1. (Full disclosure: My daughter works for Neville’s Tremolo Productions.)

This interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.

David Wilson: You’ve worked primarily in music films, although every time you make a film about music you’re coming at it from a different place. What role did music play in your life growing up?

Morgan Neville: A lot. We had a jukebox in my house. Lot of Beatles 45s. My dad was a music obsessive. He saw the Beatles in ’64 in Indianapolis. I started playing music. I formed my first band when I was 12. My wife and I played in a band together. I just love music. And I love the stories of music, too. And I have made a lot of music films, but to me, they’re all exploring some different thing I’m trying to find out about.

That is a through-line in your films. With all these different subjects, there’s a big idea you’re grappling with. Is that something you think about going in? Or it comes out as you make it?

It’s both for this one. When I first started thinking about it, I started reading that first interview Paul gave, which was the Q&A where he revealed that the Beatles were no more. And you see the woman handing that Q&A out to the press. And that last question: “What are you going to do next?” And he said, “My plan, my only plan, is to grow up.” And I thought, “That’s the question I want to start with. What does that mean when you’ve been a Beatle since you were 17, you’ve been a quarter of this entity that’s gone to outer space and back. And how do you be a person in the wake of that?”

Directors Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at Telluride.
“Bruce Springsteen: Deliver Me” director Scott Cooper and Morgan Neville at the Telluride brunch. Anne Thompson

I’ve made a lot of biographical films. The films are always a form of therapy for me, and certainly for the subject. And with Paul, we could talk about that, trying to get him into a certain headspace. But the questions Paul was asking at that time were questions I was always wondering about: “How do you wrestle with your own legacy? How do you stay grounded in show business? How do you deal with being a parent and a father?” All these different questions that I grapple with all the time. So all that was resonating. So even though it’s Paul McCartney, who’s a genius to me, it was this guy who’s just an artist trying to find his way and trying to listen to his gut as much as he can. So “Mary Had a Little Lamb,” which is the flip side of “Mull of Kintyre,” they’re both crazy ideas. One turns out and one doesn’t, but it’s the same impulse, and I totally respect that fearlessness.

McCartney also talks about a quest for “personal peace.”

Yeah, and that quote at the end where Stella [McCartney] says, looking back on it, these were the happiest years of our lives? And I just sent my last child off to college 10 days ago. I get emotional even thinking about it. I don’t think anybody’s ever understood what Linda meant to Paul in all ways. And that’s what my wife means to me: having somebody who can be your wingman in every imaginable way, who has your back, is the greatest thing. That’s what you need to survive.

Had you met Paul before this project?

Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John Lennon
Paul McCartney, Ringo Starr, George Harrison, John LennonCourtesy Everett Collection

I met him once for a shoot on another documentary years ago. And then I met him again when we talked about the film, and he was, “Okay, this sounds great.” The first interview, we did in London at his office. He had a sound man in the Bates Studio in the basement. He said, “My guy will set up some mics.” So I show up, and there are two mics in this tiny love seat in his office. I’m sitting close. Okay, you have to forget it’s Paul McCartney and just go for it. And Paul’s great at helping you forget he’s Paul McCartney, because he’s been Paul McCartney for a very long time. For somebody like him, who’s been public for so long, who’s talked so much, to not do the jukebox of greatest hits, of things he says about albums or songs, and trying to really break that, was great.

I did many audio interviews, but I wanted to have conversations with him. So we started talking about ideas. We talked about painting, we talked about all different kinds of things, because I wanted to get him to be thinking and speaking in the present. That helped. He recognized in the conversations he would get carried away. We ended up having seven sessions of interviews over more than a year.

The Beatles are famously difficult interviews, right? Was there a moment with him, as you were in those sessions, where you thought, “Oh, this is something new. I’m getting a side of Paul that wasn’t there.”

I like to think so. When he would get excited about things, we were doing one interview at his house, and he’d run over to the piano and start playing, show me stuff. And then he’d go on about getting high with Fela Kuti. It was helpful to get him in a certain headspace. He hadn’t talked about Linda in any deep way in decades. I just showed the film two weeks ago. He had a little family screening with his family and all the grandchildren, and invited my wife and my son. All the grandkids are sitting in front of me. Stella’s son said, “I’ve never heard my grandmother’s voice before,” and that punched me. And then I heard another grandson say, “Grandpa went to jail?”

Was there a moment where you thought you would go all the way up to Linda’s death?

I always felt like that decade and the bookends of McCartney, one and two: leaving the Beatles and John’s passing, and running away from the Beatles and what he had done for that decade. And I definitely thought about Linda’s death and we played with it, but it just felt extraneous in a way that Linda did live on for another 17 years past this time. And when I showed Paul the film, he said, “I’m so glad that you left Linda at the end of the film like that.”

It’s something I’m piecing together from talking to Paul again just a couple weeks ago, in the beginning of the film where he said, “I thought myself as the bastard, when people blame me for all this.” He internalized it, and that period of ‘Let It Be,’ and then suing the band was so painful. And the “Get Back” project actually opened up something in him, saying it wasn’t all bad. Everybody said everything was horrible, but actually it was much more nuanced. There was love, there was tension. And that process of self-forgiveness was the reason this film happened: if that wasn’t that bad, maybe I should think about this other period that I’ve also pushed out of my head in a lot of ways. And that’s amazing that still 50 years later, that’s still going on.

The parallel love story here, obviously, is him and John. Do you think that “Get Back” experience opened up his ability to talk about him and John?

In watching ‘Get Back,’ which I devoured as soon as it came out, you see how much real love that he still has, to the point where John is in his life every day. And I’m not exaggerating. I have no doubt he thinks about John every day, if not many times a day. So it’s not something that’s distant to him. It’s something that he holds onto.

When you’re digging through an archive and trying to find something usable, and then this clip rises up to the surface, what were those clips for you?

God, there’s so many. Paul has an amazing archive. He married a photographer, so that was convenient, all of Linda’s negatives of that entire decade, which is just incredible. There are so many things in this film that have never been seen. And there’s so many tiny things from the way people talked about Paul in the press at the time. I love that little clip of the reporter going back to the Cavern Club to interview the young punk girl about the Beatles. The best thing is the home movies. Who documents themselves that much? Now, we maybe do with phones, but you see Paul filming with a 16 camera. And Linda’s taking pictures of Paul taking film of her.

There are so many great shots in this film of the actual construction of songs, where you’re in the studio, and you’re seeing them work through something. Was that something you specifically went looking for? How much did you want to have that behind the scenes?

I geek out on that stuff. And hearing the studio chatter. You can hear him orchestrating this stuff in his head in real time, which is what makes him Paul McCartney. And we have fragments of so many different songs in here. I loved the Beatles, but Wings were the band that were putting out albums when I was a kid, and that’s what I was buying. And I loved Wings. There’s so much interesting, good work through that decade that people don’t think about that much. He put out 10 records in 10 years. One of the happiest things was after I showed my son the film two weeks ago, I saw that he quietly added a whole bunch of Wings songs to his playlist on Spotify.

One of the joys was every three minutes there was hit after hit song that has been a part of the fabric of our world. Even if we didn’t identify with them the same way that we did with The Beatles.

We put that tiny snippet of “Wonderful Christmastime” in there, because in the midst of all that other stuff, that was a tiny single he threw out at the end of the year in 1979 which was a footnote, but a song that for better or worse we hear every year. It’s both the contextualizing and rediscovering of a lot of the songs we know, a deep dive, going through some of these records. And Ram is one of my favorite albums. It’s amazing how reviled that album was, again, you see the savage Rolling Stone review by Jon Landau, who went on to manage Bruce Springsteen. And now Ram is one of the top 500 Albums of All Time, according to Rolling Stone. So it’s that long game: Let’s not pay attention to what people want this week, this year. Let’s just make music that works for us.

How can people tell their friends to go see this?

Amazon/MGM bought the film and it’s not going to come out till February. Six months from now, hopefully you will hear all about it. We’re going to do a theatrical release, and then it will eventually stream. It’s coming.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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Jessica Sanchez
TV & Streaming

Jessica Sanchez Interview on Pregnancy, ‘American Idol,’ and More (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Nineteen years after she was a contestant on Season 10 of America’s Got Talent at just 10 years old, Jessica Sanchez is back for Season 20. The singer, who was also the runner-up on American Idol in 2012, received Sofia Vergara‘s Golden Buzzer during her audition and will hit the stage again for the Quarterfinals during the Tuesday, September 2, episode.

Just days after she auditioned for the show earlier this year, Jessica found out she was pregnant with her first child (she married husband Ricky Gallardo in 2021). However, the news didn’t stop her from wanting to continue the process, even though she’s now several months along amid the live shows.

“This year, I just felt this immense peace, like, I’m ready to do this. I took the leap and I found out that I was pregnant a couple days later, but it didn’t really hinder me from wanting to take that next step back on that stage,” she tells TV Insider. “If anything, it kind of motivated me a little bit because I’m like, now I get to do this with my daughter. It’s like a once-in-a-lifetime thing.”

Sanchez says preparing for the live shows has been “going great” and that she’s felt “peaceful,” not stressed. “Even preparing vocally, typically your breathing and stuff gets affected when you’re pregnant, but as far as I’ve been preparing, it hasn’t really been affected tremendously and I’m so thankful for that. … Even if my voice does get a little impacted from the pregnancy, I’m excited to challenge myself on that stage.”

Trae Patton/NBC

Scroll down for more from our interview with Sanchez, including a tease of her next performance, what she learned from American Idol, and more.

Why were you ready to return for this season after being on the show in the past?

Jessica Sanchez: Season 1 of AGT, that was the biggest stage that I had ever been on at that time. I feel like that really catapulted my dream to being a professional singer. I was like, “Oh wow, I feel like being on this stage is something I really want to do and maybe I can take this dream somewhere I never thought I could.” So I feel like AGT was a big thing for me and a big reason why I decided to pursue this music career. But with all the things that I did after, I had so many amazing opportunities, worked with so many amazing people, and hit some very big stages, but I feel like I was so young at that time, I didn’t really get to, one, digest it properly, and also, I feel like I was tugged back and forth of where people wanted me to be and who they wanted me to be.

I needed to take a step back from music. So I took that step back and I kind of just lived a normal life, which was different for me because music was really, like, my identity when I was younger. It felt like a low season, but I definitely needed that to be where I am today to be confident in myself, to know who I am, to know what I want. To come back 20 years later, back on the stage where it all started for me, I feel like I’m on cloud nine.

What have you taken from your experiences on AGT and Idol into this new journey on AGT?

It can be overwhelming for some people, but I really fell in love with that big stage and being able to use my gift to entertain people, to impact people, and just kind of navigating through how hard you have to work and the pressure of it all. I feel like it molded me as a young woman how to handle pressure throughout my life. I feel like I have thick skin. After AGT, dealing with people, feeling rejected, feeling like I wasn’t enough, it taught me how to handle all of those things. I was really young, so I did need to take a step back if I wanted to do this fully and full of purpose before I could come back and feel like I was fulfilling a purpose with my gift.

Have you kept in touch with any contestants from the past shows you’ve done?

It’s so funny because it’s not like I keep in contact where we’re hanging out all the time, but I do hear every now and then from these people, like older contestants and stuff like that. Actually, the winner from the first season, Bianca [Ryan], we follow each other on Instagram and we message each other every now and then just about life stuff, not even about music stuff, which is so cool. I love seeing that she’s killing it and she sees me doing my thing. I really love that no matter how much competition it feels like, you can still kind of detach and be like, wow, all of these amazing talents are coming in and you can share that love of the stage and stuff like that. So I kind of keep in contact with some people.

You were on a few episodes of Glee back in the day. Would you ever dabble in acting again?

I would love to. I’ve tried. I’ve put out audition tapes after doing the Glee stuff. But I’m so seasoned with singing, that is really where I shine. I feel like acting would be a fun thing to do, not really a professional, this is what I do full-time. I think it’d be really fun to start doing it, but singing is really what I’ve known from the beginning.

Anything you can tease about your Quarterfinals performance?

I don’t want to give away too much, but I feel like the first audition I really came in with a song that a lot of people did not expect me to sing and with this next song, it’s similar as in, like, a lot of people aren’t really going to expect the song. It was really fun for me to be creative with it and take it somewhere vocally where a lot of people think it wouldn’t go. I’m excited for that, that’s the only little tease I can give you.

America’s Got Talent, Season 20, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 8/7c, NBC

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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Speedy Mormon Recaps Interview With Ace About "NicOlandria" Remark
Music

Speedy Mormon Recaps Interview With Ace About “NicOlandria” Remark

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Ace Greene’s first and only solo interview since appearing on Season 7 of Love Island has exploded following his remarks about finalist couple Olandria Carthen and Nic Vansteenberghe — who fans have nicknamed “NicOlandria.”

When asked of the couple’s authenticity by journalist Speedy Mormon, Ace hinted that their relationship might only be surface level. His silence and remarks left the internet in shambles, with some dubbing him a “hater” and others agreeing with his words. Offering more insight into what may have been said by Ace off-camera, Speedy hopped online to address their viral sit-down.

“I do want to say that some people may have more information than you,” Speedy reminded critics, subtly defending Ace’s claim that Nic admitted to only being physically attracted to Olandria. “They may be aware of things that transpired that you don’t know. They may have seen and witnessed things that you have not.”

Speedy went on to say, “You may see someone have an opinion on a relationship… I would say maybe, just maybe they know something that you don’t,” before abruptly adding, “Because if what I was told off camera is true….”

In the 1 hour and 11 minute video, the 23-year-old recalled to Speedy, “Going into this villa, you know, my intention was to get to know someone through and through for them,” reflecting on his journey that ultimately ended with him leaving in an exclusive relationship with Michelle “Chelley” Bissainthe.

He also admitted there was inauthenticity happening in the Villa. “I feel like going into this villa and people were asking me, ‘What’s your following?’ and ‘What do you think it’s gonna be outside of this?’ I don’t feel people [had] genuine intentions.”

When Speedy asked if Nic and Olandria’s romance was real, Ace’s silence was louder than words. Although he admitted to having “a lot of respect for Olandria,” he alleged that Nic told him he had “no romantic spark” for her, despite the two admitting they find each other attractive. On the other hand, Ace vouched for his other close friend in the villa, Taylor Williams and Clarke Carraway’s relationship.

As for the friendships he’s kept since filming Love Island, Ace revealed he and Nic are no longer close, but insisted Olandria remains a good friend of his.

Olandria seemingly responded to Ace’s comments on X with a casual, “Chile anyways… my event at Tuskeegee went amazing yesterday.” The post has since been deleted.

Nic also appeared to address the drama by posting on Snapchat after the interview dropped. When asked how his day was going, he replied, “This morning 10/10. Later in the day 4/10.”

Take a look above at Speedy addressing Ace’s remarks about “NicOlandria’s” romance being inauthentic and the couple’s suspected responses.

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Ethan Hawke on 'Blue Moon' Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart
TV & Streaming

Ethan Hawke on ‘Blue Moon’ Interview: On Playing Lorenz Hart

by jummy84 August 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Ethan Hawke wears many hats. The multi-hyphenate writer-director-actor returns to the Telluride Film Festival for a Tribute with Berlin prize-winner “Blue Moon” (SPC), in which he plays Broadway lyricist Lorenz Hart. And Hawke is debuting his new documentary “Highway 99: A Double Album,” a two-parter devoted to the life and music of Merle Haggard, which will likely sell to a streamer as it hits the festival circuit. And showing at the Toronto International Film Festival is a new series debuting on FX September 23, “The Lowdown.” After all his recent efforts, Hawke, who has four Oscar nominations (three for collaborating with Richard Linklater), is ready to just talk. “I’m exhausted,” he said over breakfast in Telluride.

Ask E. Jean

Hawke has always loved music, and has learned a lot over the years from playing trumpeter Chet Baker (“Born to Be Blue”) and directing the music movies “Blaze” and “Seymour: An Introduction.” That one debuted at Telluride in 2014. “Seymour was my midlife crisis, right?” said Hawke. “It’s an old Shaker expression, but to master a craft, you have to apprentice three that surround it. My real mission is performance. That’s what I’ve done my whole life. That’s where the rubber meets the road. But learning about directing, learning about writing, learning about music, learning about these other things helps. It’s all connected.”

His two Telluride movies are united in that they’re both about songwriters, “two of the greatest American songwriters in the history of America,” he said. Lorenz Hart had partnered with Richard Rodgers on such American songbook faves as “Blue Moon” and “My Funny Valentine.” Hawke’s love for Merle Haggard was embedded from his youth. “For most of us, the music that our parents played is somewhere deep inside us forever.”

AUSTIN, TEXAS - MARCH 13: Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke attend Netflix's Apollo 10 ½ SXSW World Premiere on March 13, 2022 in Austin, Texas. (Photo by Greg Doherty/Getty Images for Netflix)
Richard Linklater and Ethan Hawke in 2022.Getty Images for Netflix

His dive into Haggard follows “The Last Movie Stars,” about Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward, “my love letter to my own profession,” he said. “In thinking about what to do next, I love making documentaries, because it’s something you can work on slowly. When I was younger, I used to try to write prose, and I wrote some books because I needed a job to sustain the imbalance of an actor’s life. In the last few years, documentary has replaced that part of my life. Before I work on Larry Hart, I’m working on Merle Haggard. Then I take a break. I disappear for 8-10, weeks. I play Larry Hart, and then I come back into me again, and I’m talking about my childhood and my loves and things that are personal to me, and it helps keep me balanced.”

“Highway 99” is Hawke’s love letter to music. “I knew that whoever won the election, half the country was going to be despondent. Merle Haggard always wrote about people. He continued his whole life to never write from a left wing or right wing point of view, but from a humanist point of view. Country music is a place where men can express their feelings, where they often struggle, and it’s a really safe place to talk about what’s going on inside you.”

The two-part documentary digs into, among other things, the unrequited love story between Merle and Dolly Parton. And Hawke got to recruit some of his favorite singers to interpret Haggard’s songs. He asked them which songs they wanted to sing, and Nora Jones, Valerie June, Steve Rowe and others picked them. “I thought I could tell his life as a musical,” said Hawke. “I could use his own writing to tell his own story.”

“The Last Movie Stars”

When it came to his ninth collaboration with Richard Linklater, “Blue Moon,” Hawke’s music movies helped him to prepare for Larry Hart. “Things like studying jazz for Chet Baker, studying the piano with ‘Seymour,’” he said, “studying the pain of trying to be a songwriter through ‘Blaze.’”

The pain of Lorenz Hart comes through in this achingly sad story set at the end of Hart’s partnership with Rodgers (Andrew Scott). It all takes place at Sardi’s on the opening night of “Oklahoma!” — which Rodgers composed with Oscar Hammerstein II instead of Hart, sealing their split. “If you are feeling a lot of pain,” said Hawke, “there’s this idea that success or approval from others is going to quiet that pain or bandage it. But in the history of mankind, it never does. He’s heartbroken about Rodgers. He’s setting himself up, and he’s distracting himself that he’s in love with this young woman [Margaret Qualley], and he’s not even heterosexual. But he can’t deal with the real pain that’s happening. He can’t look at it for a second. That movie is about a man who died of heartbreak. The alcohol was part of his sadness, the pain was too great to suffer without it. Alcohol is a painkiller.”

The movie starts out with Hart walking out of “Oklahoma!” and ponying up to the bar at Sardi’s, where the bartender (Bobby Cannavale) tries to keep his drinking under control. Hart is a great talker, the words flow out of him like butter. Hawke has to sustain the rhythm and cadence of long speeches. And theater vet Cannavale, who had bonded with Hawke on “Hurly Burly” when they were both going through divorces, was there for him on “Blue Moon,” running lines. “He was my de facto acting coach,” said Hawke.

Ethan Hawke in

Hawke was a “monk” during production, he said. “I would just sit in my dressing room and listen to Ella Fitzgerald sing Rodgers & Hart songs over and over again. If you listen to the music, you start to realize how well the script is written, because the script functions like a Larry Hart song. It’s so funny and absolutely heartbreaking and poignant and witty and irreverent and lewd. So I started looking at that first monologue as the lyrics to the song. Rick [Linklater] was going to be Rodgers. Rick was going to write the music and build it and make sure it was sculpted right, and make sure it was presented right.”

Nailing this performance was about words. “This guy doesn’t walk and talk like me, so it’s voice and speech,” said Hawke. “He speaks in complete sentences. He speaks with clear ideas. It always has to be the perfect word choice. It had to have the language.”

But it was also movement and body language. Hart was short, with a hideous combover. “I grew my hair really long and then shaved the middle so that I could do the combover,” said Hawke, who is just under six feet. “A combover is about the most unflattering look that men have ever come up with. So what happens immediately is your own self-esteem drops, because everybody starts looking at you, talking to you differently. We did all these old school stagecraft tricks to make me smaller.”

They built a trench in the floor and he bent his legs inside wide pants. “When you do a scene with Margaret Qualley when you’re a foot shorter than her, is different than being two inches taller than her, because she doesn’t take it seriously.”

Luckily, Hawke had a decade to get used to the movie. Linklater gave it to him when he was in his early 40s and said, “when you’re old enough, we’re going do it.” They’d get together every couple of years and do a reading of the screenplay, Hawke said, “and we’d prune it and tweak it and talk about it.”

The actor didn’t feel any anxiety about it until just before shooting in Ireland. “Then I realized that this movie was going to put Rick and me up against the wall of our talent,” he said. “The bullseye in this movie is so small. There’s so many ways to go wrong. One room, real time. Larry Hart is dying.”

Also, the movie was filmed fast. “Rick had to be incredibly decisive and clear,” said Hawke. “We didn’t have a big budget, no budget, but luckily, we didn’t need one. We needed ideas and great actors. I knew if the guy playing Rodgers wasn’t phenomenal, the movie wouldn’t work. That was the biggest challenge.”

In just a few quick scenes during the after party, the movie establishes the relationship between these former partners who are both grieving the breakup. “There’s a certain Lennon-McCartney to Rodgers and Hart,” said Hawke. “For these two people who are that creative together for that long. It’s a high level of intimacy.”

But Rodgers is moving forward, while Hart is descending into alcohol. Hawke had long admired Scott, who also comes from theater. Qualley does not, but they all rehearsed the hell out of it and it all came together.

Next up: Sterlin Harjo’s FX series “The Lowdown,” in which Hawke plays a renegade truth-teller. “I got to have this character built for me by this brilliant young man,” said Hawke. “And I had so much fun.”

August 31, 2025 0 comments
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Sheridan Smith Interview on Ann Ming, ITV Drama
TV & Streaming

Sheridan Smith Interview on Ann Ming, ITV Drama

by jummy84 August 29, 2025
written by jummy84

English actress and singer Sheridan Smith has not only made a name for herself with the role of Ruth “Rudi” Smith in Gavin & Stacey, but also by portraying real-life people. In the TV drama Cilla, she played English singer, actress and TV host Cilla Black. The role won her the best drama performance honor at the National Television Awards and the best actress honor at the TV Choice Awards. And in the TV series Mrs Biggs, she portrayed Charmian Biggs, the wife of the famous train robber Ronnie Biggs, winning the BAFTA TV Award for best actress for her performance.

Now, Smith stars in ITV‘s four-part drama I Fought the Law as Ann Ming, an English woman whose 22-year-old daughter was murdered in 1989. After two unsuccessful trials, the defendant admitted to the murder. But the 800-year-old British double jeopardy law prevented him from further prosecution. After all, the double jeopardy rule prevented people from being tried twice for the same offense.

Ming reacted with 15 years of campaigning to change the law. Thanks to her efforts, the Criminal Justice Act 2003 created an exception, allowing an acquitted defendant to be tried a second time for a serious offense. That opened the way for a retrial and 2006 conviction in the case of Julie’s murder. The man was sentenced to a life term.

Jamie Crichton (All Creatures Great and Small, The Last Kingdom, Grantchester) wrote I Fought the Law, based on Ming’s book For the Love of Julie. Smith stars as Ming in the drama produced by Hera Pictures (What It Feels Like for a Girl, Mary & George, Hamnet), in association with All3Media International.

“The drama follows the tragic, moving and deeply inspiring journey of the Ming family after the murder,” highlights an ITV synopsis of the series. “In the wake of multiple police failings, Ann relentlessly pressures the authorities to uncover the truth and ensure the man responsible is brought to justice — despite initially seeming he will get away with murder.”

I Fought the Law launches on ITV and STV on Sunday, Aug. 31, with the series streaming on ITVX and STV Player, followed by a documentary about Ming’s historic campaign called I Fought the Law: The Ann Ming Story.

Star Smith and writer Crichton talked to THR about creating the drama series and the challenges it provided, working with Ming, and why it never mentions her daughter’s murderer by name.

“She’s not a very well-known name in this country, and yet she should be, and hopefully she will be,” Crichton said about Ming. “The same is true for the double jeopardy law. I think if you stopped someone on the street and said, ‘What’s double jeopardy,’ they probably wouldn’t know.”

He saw a documentary that moved him, though. “It was Ann’s story, and it was such an incredible story. I couldn’t believe I didn’t know it,” he recalled. “So, I took it to Liza Marshall at Hera, and thankfully, she loved it too.”

The question of who should portray Ming in the drama wasn’t really a question for the writer and producer. “We both said the same name,” Crichton told THR. “I feel everybody says, whenever you’re talking about actors, ‘Oh, they were at the top of our list.’ But genuinely, I had three names and said I’m going to start with the first one. And I said, Sheridan Smith. And Liza said: That’s exactly what I’m thinking. Perfect!”

Smith was quickly on board. “Liza gave me Jamie’s brilliant script, episode one, and I read it,” she told THR. “I had the same reaction that they had. ‘How do I not know this story?’ This is incredible. I was thrilled that they wanted me. And I’m very grateful that I got to portray Ann.”

Smith prepared for the role by researching online, watching the documentary, other material and Ming’s book.

“We only met once,” the star says about Ming. “I had watched her so much and studied her that I just started doing mannerisms and things. It was my friend who was on set who noticed it first. ‘You are walking differently.’ I was like: ‘What?’ And she said, ‘You’re doing this twitchy thing with your eye.’ No offense to Ann, but I just try to embody the role.”

Is it easier or harder to portray a real rather than a fictional person? “It is scarier playing a real person, especially someone like Ann, who’s changed this 800-year-old law,” Smith told THR. “I felt such responsibility to do her story justice, because she’s trusted these guys to tell her story. And at the end of the day, it’s her real life. It’s not just a TV show, it’s her life and her family, and it matters.”

That meant extra hard work to get things right. “So I put myself through the wringer and really tried to feel exactly how she would have felt,” the star explained. “I know I can’t, because I haven’t been through that trauma, but I would beat myself up if I didn’t make myself feel at least a fraction of what she went through. So it was quite a tough shoot, but it was amazing, and an amazing team.”

Sheridan Smith and Ann Ming

Courtesy of ITV

That includes a great costume and makeup department, Smith lauded the crew. “I couldn’t even see myself in the mirror,” she recalled. “It just wasn’t me, and I didn’t see where I was. So it was a magic shoot. I’m really pleased. And I hope Ann is pleased. We’ve done well, if Ann’s happy.”

Crichton offered that getting Smith to portray Ming was key. “It’s impossible to speak for Ann, but I don’t know whether she would have let us tell her story if we hadn’t said we got Sheridan Smith on board,” he told THR. “As soon as we said her name, she said that she absolutely adores her.”

How did he, as the writer, pick what parts of Ming’s extended campaign to focus on in the series? “It’s a big span of time, which means you must make editorial decisions, dramatic decisions,” he said. “Ultimately, it’s all about trying to get the emotional story right. Ann’s book is so powerful. It does so much of the work, if you like. When I started really feeling like this is going to work was when I made the decision to tell the whole story from Ann’s point of view.”

Explained Crichton: “So often, especially when you’re dealing with stories that have true crime elements, the story is told through the procedural point of view, from the detective’s point of view. So you’re always going to meet suspects who are being interviewed. I decided, even though it’s quite a challenge, quite tricky, to tell it all from Ann’s point of view as a mother. Obviously, what that means is you’re restricting yourself to a certain extent, you’re not able to see what you would think as an audience of as being the classic interesting scenes. For example, I knew I would have to have police come in and talk to Ann to catch her up” on the status of the case.

His worries vanished soon, though. “I first thought that’s going to be the worst story ever told. But actually it was really liberating, because it’s nothing you normally see,” Crichton said. “And the great thing is that you put Ann in every single scene, or 99 percent of the scenes. And once you make that decision, then it’s about the emotion, and about how you tell a story that conveys the appropriate emotional beats at the appropriate times.”

Being in so many scenes meant that Smith was constantly in action or getting ready for a scene. “I feel that I was going slightly nuts,” she recalled. “But it’s also a gift. I mean, Ann is constantly in a state of anxiety, and no one’s listening to her, and everyone is shutting doors in her face. And what’s brilliant about her story and Jamie’s scripts is that I could get myself panicked sometimes, because it’s just so hard to turn it off. It’s this hamster wheel, and you want to keep going.”

What was Ming’s reaction to what she saw in I Fought the Law? “I think she loved it. I think she really got a buzz,” said Crichton. Smith also had some fun in between all the dramatic scenes, including in a scene that shows Ming barging into a room. “There’s so much trauma in it, but those moments where a strength comes through are great,” the actress shared. “And it’s great fun to play that and have a real release and, after doing lots of crying and internalized emotion or angst, be able to really show how Ann flew in there.”

The murderer of Ming’s daughter never gets mentioned by name in the series, and that was a core choice Crichton made early on. “That was really important to me from day one, because this is Ann’s story,” he told THR. “It was always important to me that this is not about the killer. Not only is he not named, you never hear his name in any of the four episodes, but he’s not even in the credits. The actor who played him, Jack James Ryan, graciously agreed to this. This is not his story.”

Concluded the writer: “So often, especially when you’re watching true crime stories, they’re about the gruesomeness of the killer, and that’s where a fascination comes. That’s the intrigue of the macabre. And it feels so exploitative of some poor family’s grief and trauma to make a piece of entertainment. So, for me, it was just always important that this is not his story. This is Ann’s story. “

Smith also wrapped up with that in mind. “This is a story about a woman who sees something that’s unjust and has been around for 800 years,” she told THR. “She was so horrified, obviously, by the death of Julie, but she was also so determined that this was not right. The strength in her is amazing. She just kept fighting. It’s about this little working-class woman who takes on the establishment amd wins. And I do think that that’s such a powerful story.”

August 29, 2025 0 comments
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