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Cannes Parody Goes Viral — Interview
TV & Streaming

Cannes Parody Goes Viral — Interview

by jummy84 October 16, 2025
written by jummy84

If you only watch one new short film this week, make it “Ovation.” That is, if you haven’t seen it already. Over the last nine days, director Noam Kroll and actor Luke Barnett racked up close to a million views across Instagram and X for their one-take short that attempts to answer a question every film festival attendee has asked themselves: What the hell do actors think about during those endless standing ovations?

Inspired by the video of Joaquin Phoenix looking bored and confused during the “Eddington” standing ovation at Cannes, the five-minute film stays on Barnett’s face as he enjoys an infinite stream of applause for his film at the 2028 Cannes Film Festival. He displays an entire character arc without a word, going from gratitude to awkwardness to boredom to illness and finally death — and it culminates with a brutally hilarious final title card.

Sul Kyung-gu in Good News

It’s the kind of concept that every filmmaker wants: fresh, simple, and instantly relatable. And these were the perfect collaborators to execute it: Barnett cut his teeth making viral FunnyOrDie videos in the early 2010s with the likes of Ryan Gosling before writing and starring in the feature “Faith Based.” Kroll’s directed five features, writes a weekly newsletter, and hosts the micro-budget filmmaking podcast “Show, Don’t Tell.” But as Barnett and Kroll told IndieWire during a recent interview, they almost backed out of making “Ovation.”

“I think I texted Noam at first being like, ‘I’ve got an idea we could do for no money really quickly.’ And he liked it and all, but then I talked myself out of it,” Barnett said. “And I was just like, ‘This probably isn’t worth doing.’ And then Noam was like, ‘Just record it on your phone in your house.’ And so I literally just did an improvised one on my phone and sent it to him. Ten minutes later, Noam was like, ‘We got to record this.’”

Kroll believed the concept was so strong it could have worked even with a lesser performance. But once he saw Barnett’s self-tape, he knew the idea had real legs.

“Initially, the thing I loved about it was it could be this Andy Warhol kind of thing. Where even if his performance wasn’t as dynamic as it ended up being, it could still work, just on this art film level,” Kroll said. “When I saw he conveyed so many different emotions in five minutes, I was like, ‘This really actually does tell a story.’ And then it made it really clear I think, to both of us, that it could be done in one take and in this very simplistic way.”

“Ovation” is proof that you don’t need a lot of time or money to make a great short. Barnett and Kroll went from idea to finished product in five days, and their only expense was renting two hours of soundstage time. They called in favors with friends to assemble a crew for two hours, during which they were able to shoot four takes.

The original plan called for an LED or rear projection screen to fill the background with a festival audience, but Kroll realized that simplicity was of the essence on such a small shoot. Instead of creating a digital background, they convinced a few actor friends to lend their services as extras. That added a human touch while streamlining logistics.

“We wanted to do this really quick because we were calling in so many favors with actor friends and people that were going to come and help,” said Kroll. “We literally had two hours booked at the studio, so I felt if we’re going to use the projector and all this technical stuff, it’s just going to complicate it. And really, the whole thing is like Luke’s performance, so anything that’s going to detract from that was going to hurt the film.”

“It ended up working out really well, because the studio had these two big soft box lights,” he said. “It was a very small room, so we had to basically shoot at a 40mm lens, two lights. We couldn’t move the camera. We were so literally boxed in and restricted to what we could do, but it was exactly what we needed. Nothing more, nothing less.”

For most filmmakers, the ultimate goal of a short film is to land a prestigious festival premiere. But despite making a film about festivals, Barnett and Kroll opted for a different approach.

They released “Ovation” online immediately, figuring that someone else could beat them to the concept if they sat on the film for too long. The strategy is clearly paying off. While they they might have closed some festival doors by making the film publicly available, the film’s online response is already a bigger victory.

“We literally submitted it to SXSW and Slamdance the day before we released it. We originally thought like, ‘Okay, this is a good little festival piece,’” Barnett said. “But it was actually my manager, I was talking to her, and she said, ‘Just one thing to think about… How long do you want to wait to release it at the risk of, does somebody make a silly TikTok about it? Or does ‘The Studio’ Season 2 do it?’ I didn’t want this to come out after those things where it’s like, ‘Oh, well they watched that season of ‘The Studio’ and just did a worse version.’”

In terms of next steps, Kroll and Barnett are keeping their options open. Some kind of festival run isn’t off the table, as it’s possible that the film’s online popularity will entice some programmers to waive their premiere requirements. Both men pointed out that festival interest also grows exponentially after your film finds some success at its first one, and the viral popularity of “Ovation” could effectively allow them to skip that first hurdle.

But whatever comes next is almost a bonus: “Ovation” has found a bigger audience than many shorts that make it into the biggest festivals, with the hundreds of comments praising the brutal commentary it offers on the state of indie film distribution. It’s a showcase for Barnett’s acting and writing and Kroll’s directing that has already been viewed over a million times. The online applause is thunderous, and the digital ovation doesn’t end when you leave the theater.

October 16, 2025 0 comments
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Pam Bondi & Kristi Noem React To 'SNL' Parody
TV & Streaming

Pam Bondi & Kristi Noem React To ‘SNL’ Parody

by jummy84 October 12, 2025
written by jummy84

With two Saturday Night Live legends reuniting to give them the parody treatment this weekend, Pam Bondi and Kristi Noem have shared their reactions.

Following host Amy Poehler and special guest Tina Fey‘s cold-open impressions of the pair, they’ve since responded to the sketch, with one making light of the current militarization of Chicago and the other blaming Democrats for the government shutdown.

“Sec_Noem⁩, should we recreate this picture in Chicago? Loving Amy Poehler!” wrote Attorney General Bondi on X, sharing a screenshot of the comedians posing, with Fey’s Noem toting an assault rifle.

Homeland Security Secretary Noem commented on the sketch in a statement to Entertainment Weekly. “SNL is absolutely right — the Democrats’ shutdown does need to end!” she said.

Saturday’s cold open came after testimony took place on Capitol Hill this past week, with the former Sunshine State AG repeatedly rebuffing Democratic senators over citizen-accosting ICE and American troops in U.S. cities, Jeffrey Epstein, the indictment of ex-FBI director James Comey and the current shutdown. Or, as Poehler said in the opener, “the DOJ has many ongoing operations, and we’re moving like Kash Patel’s eyeballs very quickly in multiple directions at once.”

In one of the fastest-moving and leanest cold opens in many an SNL, Fey’s Noem exclaimed, after she tossed her machine gun aside: “I’m the rarest type of person in Washington D.C., a brunette that Donald Trump listens to.”

Harking back to Noem’s memoir referencing dog killing that likely saw ex-South Dakota governor dropped from Trump’s VP short list last year, tonight’s skit saw Fey declaring that the idea Democrats want the shutdown over “makes me laugh more than the end of Old Yeller. … Dogs don’t just get shot. Heroes shoot them.”

October 12, 2025 0 comments
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Spitting Image team say they're "baffled" by Paddington Bear lawsuit
TV & Streaming

Spitting Image team say they’re ‘baffled’ by Paddington lawsuit – and insist their parody is going nowhere

by jummy84 October 10, 2025
written by jummy84

The satirical puppet sketch show, which ran from 1984-1996, used to top the TV viewing charts and was beloved for its absurdist caricatures of Britain’s leading figures, from Margaret Thatcher to John Major, even the Queen Mother.

While most politicians and pop culture figures of the time took their puppet parodies (fairly) on the chin, the new revival of the veteran comedy show has ruffled someone’s feathers… or should we say fur.

Created by Al Murray and Matt Forde, the new Spitting Image revival, now available on YouTube, made headlines this week when it was revealed that StudioCanal, the French film and television production company behind the Paddington movies, and the Bond estate have filed a High Court complaint over copyright and design right concerns, following the depiction of the beloved bear.

“We’re baffled by that, to be honest,” says Murray. ‘If we were going to expect anything, it would be a hard stare from Paddington.”

Their radical reimagining of the sweet-natured bear sees Paddington as a foul-mouthed, crazy-eyed Pablo Escobar-esque parody, with a penchant for powder over marmalade sandwiches. He hosts the shows podcast ‘The Rest is Bullsh*t’, a parody of the Goalhanger ‘Rest is’ sphere, alongside an equally caricatured Prince Harry.

“If you’re looking for [podcast] hosts, you need two national treasures. They were the first names on the team sheet,” says Forde.

While his characterisation may be extreme, Forde and Murray insist it is only intended for purely comedic purposes.

“It’s the oldest thing in comedy,” explains Murray. “We’re not saying we’ve done anything particularly original. [Paddington] is normally presented as this very ‘goody-two-shoes’ character and we’ve flipped him over. It’s a very Spitting Image thing to do – to take someone and say ‘Hey, maybe they’re the opposite.’”

“I mean, they’ve fallen into a bear trap of their own making,” says Forde. “We’re getting tons more views as a result of the lawsuits publicity, so more people are watching this depiction of Paddington that they don’t want anyone to see.”

Is it potentially a case of miscommunication involving the ‘British sense of humour’?

“I mean taking the piss is a great British value, as is having a sense of humour about ourselves,” says Murray. “But there obviously has been a drift towards people who want to shut other people’s jokes up – and it’s weird, it seems like an attack on comedy really.”

“In my experience, people find you funny taking the p**s out of things, until you take the p**s out of something they like. Then they don’t find you funny anymore.”

But it’s the fact the call for legal action has come from fellow creatives that really surprises the pair.

“I would imagine that the people at StudioCanal who’ve come to this are the sorts of people who not long ago were pretty outraged by Jimmy Kimmel being pulled off air,” explains Murray. “If they’re sensitive, creative people that’s probably how they felt about it.”

“But they’re trying to do that to our absurdist, ridiculous Paddington and that leaves me scratching my head.”

Whilst they may see a funny side in the call for legal action, (“We are literally talking about a fictional bear and a puppet show!” exclaims Murray at one point) the pair recognise that the dispute over their depiction of Paddington highlights a wider conversation on freedom of speech in our current political climate.

“It’s terrifying that pressure can come from all sorts of different places,” says Forde. “I think the risk is that these kinds of authoritarian instincts exist on left and right.

“They exist in governments; they exist in corporations. We’re living in an era where politicians can get you taken off the air and the consequences of that – and it’s not just comedy – will close people in all sorts of other industries down.

“People need to be careful about thinking. ‘Well, I never liked Jimmy Kimmel anyway, so I’m fine with it’ because eventually, they will get round to you, and they will shut you up.

“Comedy is an easy first target because people don’t like being laughed at, but it’s not comedy that they have an issue with. It’s the freedom of speech.”

Their new YouTube show was born out of the success of their live theatre production – Idiots Assemble: Spitting Image The Musical created by Murray and Forde, alongside Sean Foley. It was during this run they realised the new medium of theatre, unlike TV, avoided outsider input in what content their show could cover.

“There was no one between us and the audience,” explains Murray, “That was what was brilliant about it.”

“As stand-ups we’re used to that,” agrees Forde, “You write it, you perform it and there is a purity in that. Once it filters through more layers, it becomes tamer, and I think in the modern era people want comedy like this to really pack a punch.”

Their YouTube series is not the first revival of the iconic ’80s show. Spitting Image was briefly resurrected in 2021, with both Murray and Forde working on the show as writers and voice actor respectively, parodying a new cast of political and pop culture figures, from Donald Trump to Greta Thunberg. It was cancelled by ITV after just two series.

Hosting their show on YouTube has allowed for this greater freedom when creating the satirical sketches.

“The danger sometimes with television is it becomes very bureaucratic and slow,” says Forde. “The comedy can almost get legislated out of a sketch. I think this smaller team and nimbler production has allowed it to just hit harder.”

And it seems the public would agree. The show’s viewing numbers on YouTube have hit nearly 12 million views and is reaching millions more across other streaming platforms.

The pair believe the media reaction highlights a clear appetite for cutting political satire and hope to bring the beloved classic to the smartphone generation.

“There are different themes, different celebrities, that you want to be lampooning,” says Forde. “To be able to apply that in 2025 when you’ve got TikTok and X and Instagram and make something the younger generation really love – that’s a real thrill.”

It’s not just Paddington viewers can tune into watch; the show parodies a host of recognisable figures, from Taylor Swift to Vladamir Putin. But for Forde, with his spot-on impersonation, his favourite has to be Trump.

“Trump is so much fun,” he says. “The puppet is phenomenal; it’s a grotesque recreation of him. When we’re writing and ad-libbing in the room, you’re inside the mind of this maniac and we have the tools to bring him to life in our own way.”

Parodying figures from all realms of the political spectrum, the pair maintain they never let their personal politics influence their character choices or depictions either.

“They’re all fair game and it’s just so much fun taking the p**s out of them,” says Forde. “But for each one there must be that grain of truth to it. It must be silly and big and daft, but you need to hit upon something that people recognise in those characters.

“In a way, the politics falls away from it. These are characters you’re satirising. They just happen to be political ones.”

“If the impression goes with the puppet,” says Murray, “…it doesn’t need to be laser point accurate because the puppets, after all, aren’t. They’ve got the essence of the person… it’s like, as Matt’s saying, it’s got to have the grain of truth in it. And then you dial it all up.”

The current run of Spitting Image will last for 12 episodes, but what about the show’s future?

“We’re seeing if it’ll work and whether the audience will come to it,” says Murray. “And we haven’t got to wait for someone to say yes, you spend so much time in comedy coming up with things and having to wait for someone to say yes.”

“I mean purely as a viewer, you think, why are these things so rare?” continues Forde. “It’s immensely frustrating that Spitting Image wasn’t around for so long.

“So many of the things we’ve done even in the last two episodes have gone viral, so there is a huge appetite for this sort of comedy. You want it to always be around.”

And what about our furry friend? It looks like he’ll be sticking around – he’s not heading back to Peru just yet.

‘I think if you were to ask our Paddington…” teases Forde. “You know, he’s an energetic guy, wants to work a lot…”

October 10, 2025 0 comments
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Charlie Kirk's producer calls on Paramount to reinstate ‘South Park’ Parody episode, saying he "loved that he was featured"
Music

Charlie Kirk’s producer calls on Paramount to reinstate ‘South Park’ Parody episode, saying he “loved that he was featured”

by jummy84 September 20, 2025
written by jummy84

The executive producer of The Charlie Kirk Show has called on Paramount to reinstate the South Park episode that parodied him.

After the conservative commentator was murdered last week (September 10), the August 6 episode of South Park was pulled from re-run schedules.

That episode saw the character Eric Cartman becoming a conservative commentator who debates students in college campuses, mimicking Kirk’s hairstyle and mannerisms. The episode also featured a prize called the Charlie Kirk Award for Young Masterdebaters.

Now, Andrew Kolvet, Kirk’s executive producer, has urged the network to reinstate the episode.

“As someone who can speak with some authority on this, Charlie loved that he was featured in ‘South Park,’” Kolvet said in an X post on Wednesday. “He told me many times. He would want the episode back up.”

Hey @paramountplus, as someone who can speak with some authority on this, Charlie loved that he was featured in South Park. He told me many times. He would want the episode back up.

— Andrew Kolvet (@AndrewKsway) September 17, 2025

 

MAGA supporters have also blamed the show for Kirk’s shooting, with some suggesting the August 6 episode directly influenced the shooter’s actions. Currently, there is no evidence to suggest the shooting was motivated by the episode.

“Trey Parker and Matt Stone have blood on their hands. Remove South Park from all streaming services” wrote one person, while another added: “South Park certainly fomented the hatred necessary to get Kirk assassinated.”

Season 27 of the show has aimed the majority of its jokes at the Trump administration, depicting the US President as being in a relationship with Satan and also having a micro penis.

The White House has previously condemned the depiction of President Trump and his allies in a statement, remarking that the show “hasn’t been relevant for over 20 years.” The show’s creators responded with a mocking apology at San Diego Comic Con in late July.

Yesterday (September 18), the latest episode of South Park – which will be the first since Kirk’s death – was delayed just hours before it was scheduled to air. Creators Trey Parker and Matt Stone explained that it was their own fault: “Apparently when you do everything at the last minute sometimes you don’t get it done. This one’s on us. We didn’t get it done in time. Thanks to Comedy Central and South Park fans for being so understanding. Tune in next week!”

The delay marks only the second time in South Park‘s lengthy run that an episode has missed its production schedule – the first time took place in 2013 due to a power outage.

September 20, 2025 0 comments
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