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Jay Ellis in 'All Her Fault.'
TV & Streaming

Sarah Snook, Dakota Fanning Tease ‘All Her Fault’ Plot Twists

by jummy84 November 9, 2025
written by jummy84

The Sarah Snook-led Peacock thriller All Her Fault quickly drops viewers into a parent’s nightmare, kicking off with a mother discovering that her 5-year-old child is missing.

Though the search for this child drives the plot, the storyline takes a number of dramatic twists and turns, with dark secrets revealed about the show’s adult characters, including central couple and parents of the missing child, Marissa (Snook) and Peter Irvine (Jake Lacy).

And the team behind the show, speaking to The Hollywood Reporter at Monday’s New York premiere, teased that the audience will not be able to predict what happens.

“You will never guess. Not only will you never guess, but you’ll never guess what happens after you find out what happens,” Jay Ellis, who plays Marissa’s best friend Colin Dobbs told THR of the show’s multiple twists. “There’s a giant turn in the penultimate, and then there’s a giant turn in the finale and like we all read it and were like, ‘What the?’ Every single one of us. None of us saw it coming.”

Snook adds, “It’s a big ride. The family dynamics reveal so much, and there’s so much there to mine, which was so great as an actor to really get into the meat of the show and the story. It’s not just about a kid that goes missing. I have friends who have kids who are like, ‘Oh can I watch a show about a missing kid? I don’t know if I can handle it.’ And I’m like, ‘Trust me, you can handle it; it’ll be OK.’ And there’s a great twist.”

Dakota Fanning, who plays Marissa’s friend and a fellow mom, Jenny Kaminski, and recently revealed that she likes to spoil things for herself, was told early on what happens — “because I wanted to know as I always do,” she said. But she was still “very surprised.”

“I really didn’t see that coming,” she said. “I was really shocked by the twists and turns that are revealed.”

Minkie Spiro, who directed the first half of the season and serves as an executive producer, insisted that “people are going to be blindsided.”

“For somebody that has worked in TV for a while. I’m always like, if I read a book that I’m adapting, I think, ‘I kind of saw that coming, but we can massage that in the script.’ This, when I read the book, I wasn’t expecting that,” she said, urging audiences to go in “open minded” but inquisitive.

She added, “It’s great when you go into a show and you start to think, ‘Oh, maybe it’s him. Maybe it’s her. Or maybe that’s what happened there.’ Like, I want the audience to have those thoughts and ideas so that then they can see whether or not they saw it coming.”

Though, as Spiro indicates, viewers do have a hack to discover what happens: the book of the same name on which the series was based.

While some things have been changed from the book to the series, including the setting switching from Dublin to Chicago, both kick off with a missing child, specifically with Marissa showing up to pick up her son from a playdate only to be told by the woman who answers the door that she has never heard of the kid.

Marissa’s frantic initial attempts to find him and figure out what happened create a suspenseful, frightening opening.

And executive producer Gareth Neame wouldn’t have it any other way.

“The number of scripts that we work on that we have difficulties getting a show airborne, I can’t think of another show that we’ve done to this degree where you really are in from the first shot, from the doorbell ringing on that front door and that front scene,” he told THR at Monday’s premiere. “It’s not only the cliche that it’s any mother’s worst nightmare, it’s actually any member of the audience’s nightmare. Within seconds, it hooks you in. So I think it’s a fantastic, bold arresting opening of the show. And I wish we could find openings like this more often.”

Showrunner Megan Gallagher said there was “no hesitation” about starting the series with such an unsettling development, mirroring the beginning of the book.

“It was a no-brainer from the get-go,” she said. “And now that it’s on screen, it’s a great way to open the show.”

It was that opening that helped attract Ellis to the project.

“The writing was so gripping and fast. I have a child, and in the first four minutes of this thing you find out that Marissa’s child is missing and my mind immediately exploded because I think I read it and my daughter might’ve been on a playdate at the time. That immediately gripped me,” he said. “And then as you go through and you meet all of these characters and hear their backstory, I think all of them are so layered for so many different reasons, and you want to root for all of them but you also kind of think one of them is the culprit as well, which is what a thriller does so well and makes you love somebody and then look at them with a side eye at the same time.”

And Spiro, though she didn’t direct the entire season, hinted that she included some clues to later developments in the first half.

“Any time I take on a show and I’m doing the pilot, I actually create the entire arc of the show, which I then talk through to the next director so that there is a vision. So there are a lot of a lot of things visually we set up that wouldn’t pay off unless the director that does the episodes after me follows through,” Spiro said. “So that was very much an important part of the deal when we brought another director on was to make sure that they honor the visual arc of the show. So when I create a show, I’m always looking at top to tail. So it’s a show where there were some various specific visual clues, which obviously I don’t want to give away at this point, but they were very specific things that subtly adjusted as twists and toes and the characters true colors start to unfold.”

Spiro, though she wanted the audience to “lean in” to wondering what happened to this child, said she was also trying to tease out the series’ look at gender dynamics in parenting.

“There is something that we try to inject as a sub layer, which all about what it’s like, primarily in heterosexual relationships, where the woman is often expected to do the heavy lifting of the child business,” Spiro said. “And so there is a social commentary underneath this thriller.”

Neame adds, “The title itself is really speaking to how a couple, both holding down professional jobs, somehow it’s the woman who still has to do domestic duties as well as professional work and the husband or the father invariably doesn’t. It’s kind of using the [hook] of the thriller to really look deeply at contemporary relationships.”

All eight episodes of All Her Fault are now streaming on Peacock.

November 9, 2025 0 comments
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Kaitlin Olson in
TV & Streaming

‘High Potential’ Boss Breaks Down Morgan’s Romantic Spark, Karadec’s Threat to Wagner, and More Midseason Finale Twists (Exclusive)

by jummy84 October 29, 2025
written by jummy84

What To Know

  • High Potential showrunner Todd Harthan teases what fans can expect from the show’s midseason return in 2026.
  • After a cliffhanger conclusion, Harthan teases more romance for Morgan, tension between Karadec and Wagner.
  • The Roman mystery also continues to thicken as Harthan hints at what’s next for Morgan’s missing ex.

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for High Potential, Season 2 Episode 7, “The One That Got Away.”]

High Potential‘s second season has reached its midseason finale, leaving fans on a cliffhanger that won’t be resolved until Season 2 returns on January 6, 2026, but thankfully, showrunner Todd Harthan is making sure fans are fed until then, as we caught up with the writer and executive producer timed to the latest episode, “The One That Got Away.”

As fans saw in the installment, Morgan (Kaitlin Olson) and the LAPD were called in to investigate the case surrounding a piece of stolen art. Also on the case? The mysterious and suave Rhys (Aiden Turner), an art dealer and consultant who sparks Morgan’s curiosity. As the investigation unfolds, Morgan is drawn closer and closer to Rhys, even sharing a passionate moment in a hotel room, which raises red flags when she begins to believe he is responsible for stealing the art.

Meanwhile, Morgan’s daughter Ava (Amirah J) gets closer to Arthur (Mekhi Phifer) as they plot out their team-up to dig into Roman’s case, in juxtaposition with Soto’s (Judy Reyes) ongoing search for the missing man that Captain Wagner (Steve Howey) has become aware of, much to Karadec’s (Daniel Sunjata) dismay.

While the missing art case remained unsolved, there were more than a few mysteries left unresolved. Below, Harthan offers some clarity as he teases what fans can expect in the new year.

Disney / Mitch Haaseth

This episode ends on a cliffhanger with the case set to continue next year in the midseason premiere. What made you decide to make it a continuing storyline?

Todd Harthan: When our wonderful director Nancy Hower read the script, it was originally just a one-partner, and admittedly a little long, and she goes, “Oh, what if we added some more twists and turns, another red herring, and really expanded this?” Because what she identified was the DNA of this episode was so different than how we started the season with the Game Maker. The tone of it was more fun. It was more Thomas Crown Affair. We were introducing a character, a consultant-turned-suspect, that Morgan was going to be drawn to in a mysterious way, which also felt worth sort of extending in a delicious way. So it was just one of those things that happened in real time, and then we got Aiden, who is a wonderful actor, to play the part. It was one of those things where it just started to make sense, and once we knew we were going to leave the audience wanting more, that was a deciding factor.

Morgan connects with this art dealer, Rhys, and it’s the first time we’ve seen her have a romantic entanglement since Tom (JD Pardo) in Season 1. Should fans buy into the potential she has with this guy, or is it a fleeting thing, considering he’s seemingly a criminal?

Well, I think when we were looking for someone to play this role, we didn’t want someone smarmy. We needed somebody who was charming, smart. What would Morgan be drawn to? So, again, it’s sort of like The Thomas Crown Affair because it really was sort of the seed of inspiration for this, and you think about Pierce Brosnan in that movie; he was just almost too hard to resist. And so we needed to find that actor who had that level of confidence and charm without it being arrogant, and [Aiden]’s like that in person too. He just has a natural easiness about him when he walks into a room. And so that translated to the fictional character he’s playing.

You’ll see in the premiere next year that not everything is as it seems. It certainly feels like this guy is the guy, but there are some things coming that are going to really make Morgan go, “Wait, is he a criminal?” Lots of people have scars, and is it a coincidence? We’re going to play with all those elements in the premiere. And I think the finish is super surprising in the second part. You have to wait and see, but he was wonderful and they had great chemistry, and we’ve been very fortunate [to have] our pick of really amazing actors.

Steve Howey in 'High Potential'

Disney / Mitch Haaseth

Building off of that, Morgan is torn over who the painting belongs to, especially since it was stolen in the past as well as now. Is that going to continue to play into the case? 

Yes, a hundred percent. It’s a through line that carries into the second hour, and I think if we’re going to set something up like that, the history of that painting, the importance of it, who it originally belonged to, it’s not a ball you want to drop.

Captain Wagner reveals that he knows the LAPD is investigating Roman’s whereabouts. How will that impact Soto’s forward movement with that case, especially after Karadec’s threat to Wagner that he isn’t allowed to mess with Morgan on that end?

Well, one of the things we’re playing with Wagner is, is he an ally or an enemy, right? Because we toggle in every episode. You’re like, “Wait, is he here to have our backs or is he going to stab us in the back?” And I think that’s a question we want to ask until we get to the back half of the season. That’s the question Soto is asking herself, which is, he’s in the know, does that mean he’s going to be the wind at our backs and help us, or is he going to out us or impede the investigation? Shut it down? He has the power to do that, so what role will he play? And those are the things we’re unpacking in an interesting twisty turny way when we come back.

As the Roman mystery continues to unfold, will Arthur and Ava play a more active role, as we saw them plotting a team-up? 

Yeah, Mekhi’s been awesome, and he’s infused into the back half of the season as we sort of continue to unpack more and more about what happened to Roman all those years ago. And for Ava, she’s her mother’s daughter, there’s just no way for her to lie her head down at night and not be thinking about now that she knows her dad’s out there somewhere and he is alive, where is he? So it’s hard to contain that drive. And even Morgan’s going to struggle with it in the back half of how do I help us? And mostly, she’s doing this to get answers for her daughter. How do I help us get those answers, but not put her in a situation that is dangerous? We’re playing with all those different complications in the back half.

Karadec’s words to Wagner are interesting. Will they be adversaries moving forward?

In the back half, those guys are oil and water, and they just can’t agree on anything when it relates to how they work with and manage Morgan, their approach to law enforcement, and just their ideologies in life in general. They just could not be more different. That’s fun to write to because one of them says the sky is blue, and the other one is like, “No, it’s not, and here’s why.” And that really starts to fuel tension, conflict, all the things that we want. Karadec’s a protector by nature, and it’s less about protecting himself. This is his department, these are his people, and he feels like they’re kind of being threatened on some levels. So he’s sticking his neck out in the back half. He really is. He’s saying some things, some truth to power that could really get him in trouble, but it’s been fun to watch and fun to write to.

Morgan continues to push boundaries. Is that going to come back to bite her at some point? 

She gets burned, and she gets burned in a major way in the back half. It all comes to a head, and we have a wonderful episode that we just shot, kind of built around that. But I think the fun thing about Morgan is she’s never going to change. She’s not going to suddenly show up and be like, “Okay, I’ll follow all the rules to the letter.” She’s just going to get better at how she goes about it. But yeah, it gets crazy and messy pretty early on in the back half.

High Potential, Midseason 2 Premiere, Tuesday, January 6, 2026, 10/9c, ABC

October 29, 2025 0 comments
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Twists of fete: Around the world in unusual festivals
Lifestyle

Twists of fete: Around the world in unusual festivals

by jummy84 October 17, 2025
written by jummy84

* DIWALI

Theyyam combines ancestor worship, fertility rites and myth, and is believed to have originated among indigenous tribes in the Malabar region of present-day Kerala. (Adobe Stock)

For at least 3.500 years, Indians have celebrated the rice harvest with a festival of renewal.

The festival of lamps, light and new beginnings is celebrated from the first new moon day of the month of Kartika (this generally falls in October or November, in the Gregorian calendar), and marks the beginning of a new harvest year.

The earliest records of it date to the 3rd century CE, with Sanskrit texts of the time mentioning a festival then called Yaksharatri or Night of the Yakshas. Interestingly, it was celebrated with lamps, gambling, and the worship of Kubera, lord of the yakshas and god of wealth.

A Pahari painting from the 1800s depicts lovers celebrating Diwali. (British Museum)
A Pahari painting from the 1800s depicts lovers celebrating Diwali. (British Museum)

By the 6th century, the festival was featuring in Sanskrit plays.

By the 11th century, travellers to India such as the Iranian scholar and traveller Al-Biruni were writing of a festival in the month of Kartika, describing lamp-lighting, gifting and homes adorned with rows of lamps.

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* c. 3000 BCE: THEYYAM ANCESTRAL WORSHIP, INDIA

This festival has roots in the ancient tribal and Dravidian cultural practices of the Chalcolithic Age (named after the Ancient Greek words for “copper” and “stone”, this period extended from about 3000 to 1500 BCE).

Theyyam is considered one of the oldest living ritual traditions in the world.

It combines ancestor worship, fertility rites and myth, and is believed to have originated among indigenous tribes in the Malabar region of present-day Kerala.

By the 12th century, royal patronage had helped create a formal structure for the ritual dances, performed in elaborate costume.

There are now over 400 variants of Theyyam performed in Kerala and parts of Karnataka. Vibrant colours and trance-like movements typify the dance form. Performances are typically held overnight, from October to April (thus avoiding the monsoon), between dusk and dawn.

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* 3000 BCE: SED JUBILEE, EGYPT

Musicians and dancers accompany a procession carrying an idol of Amun-Re, Ancient Egypt’s king of Gods, from Karnak to Luxor, in a recreation of a temple carving.
Musicians and dancers accompany a procession carrying an idol of Amun-Re, Ancient Egypt’s king of Gods, from Karnak to Luxor, in a recreation of a temple carving.

This is probably the earliest recorded iteration of a jubilee.

The Sed was a feast held 30 years into a pharaoh’s rule, and every three years after.

Carvings and paintings in the Step Pyramid complex of Djoser, in Ṣaqqarah, paint an elaborate picture of the king presenting offerings to the gods before being anointed with a white crown representing Upper Egypt, and a red crown for Lower Egypt, signifying also the unification of the two regions.

Wearing a costume something like a kilt, and an animal tail, the king was then carried in a great procession, to be presented at the temples of deities across the region.

Fast-forward to the Opet festival, dated to at least 1500 BCE, and the bond between the pharaoh and the gods had been solidified.

A procession by boat, down the Nile, took the king and an idol of Amun-Re, the king of gods, separately to a temple in Luxor. There, the pharaoh was “wedded” to the deity, reinstating his claim as intermediary between all deities and Egypt. Depictions of the festival indicate the procession was accompanied, on its journeys to and fro, by singers, musicians and acrobats.

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* 1600 BCE: THE SPRING FESTIVAL,CHINA

The Spring Festival (now better known as the Chinese New Year) dates to at least the Shang Dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE).

It began as a new year celebration involving sacrifices to honour the gods and ancestors, and pray for a good sowing season and harvest in the year ahead.

The festivities began with rituals to send the kitchen god Zao Jun to heaven as emissary, with rice wine and sacrificial offerings of lamb. Today, the festival is celebrated over 15 days, with firecrackers, lanterns, incense and the worship of household deities, to ward off evil spirits and pray for good fortune in the coming year.

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* 665 BCE: GYMNOPAEDIA VOCAL OLYMPICS, SPARTA

A sort of naked vocal Olympics, this was an annual festival to honour Apollo, god of music, poetry and the arts; Artemis, goddess of the hunt; and Leto, goddess of motherhood.

It consisted of war dances and choral singing in teams or age cohorts, with each group striving to outdo the others in lyricism, rhythm and physical grace.

The festival is thought to have lasted for 10 days.

Traders, travellers and people from nearby regions gathered to watch the festivities, which unfolded in Sparta’s central agora or marketplace. The celebration served as a rite of passage for young Spartans. underlining the important of discipline and unity, in a highly militarised society.

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* 250 CE: THE O-HARAE CLEANSING RITES, JAPAN

The Gion Matsuri procession was born amid the plague in Japan and is still observed, 1,100 years on. (Shutterstock)
The Gion Matsuri procession was born amid the plague in Japan and is still observed, 1,100 years on. (Shutterstock)

For centuries, periods of distress in Japan, such as epidemics, earthquakes and natural disasters, have been marked by purification rituals involving salt, water and fire.

One of the oldest known ones, O-harae, has been traced to the Kofun period (250-538 CE). These rites were conducted twice a year, or more often, as needed, in attempts to purge the country of disease or ill luck.

By the 9th century CE, an epidemic of the plague had Kyoto in its grip, and a lavish new ritual was born.

Still celebrated in July in that province, Gion Matsuri was an attempt to appease vengeful spirits and stop the spread of this disease. This purification ritual involved crafting 66 stylised battle-axes representing Japan’s provinces, which were then paraded through the city on palanquins and eventually deposited at the sacred Yasaka Shrine.

The festival is still celebrated every July. One key difference: the palanquins have evolved into motorised festival floats.

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* 1400 CE: INTI RAYMI, A CELEBRATION OF THE SUN, PERU

An Inti Raymi procession in Peru. (Getty Images)
An Inti Raymi procession in Peru. (Getty Images)

Among the Inca, the sun god Inti is responsible for warmth, light, growth and life.

This deity is honoured in a nine-day festival in June that involves colourful costumes, traditional dance forms and rituals animal sacrifices.

The Spring festival is believed to date to the Inca emperor Pachacutec (1438-1471 CE). It is now celebrated as the Inca new year.

Across parts of Peru and Ecuador, indigenous peoples visit rivers and springs for a ceremonial bath marked by songs and revelry. Villagers eat foods made only of maize, say prayers of thanks for the recent harvest, and pray for a good harvest in the year to come.

October 17, 2025 0 comments
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Kathy Bates and Skye P. Marshall in
TV & Streaming

Alfie’s Father Revealed With 2 Big Twists

by jummy84 October 13, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The following contains MAJOR spoilers for the Matlock Season 2 premiere, “The Before Times.]

Matlock Season 2 picked up right where the first season left off: The mystery of Alfie’s so-called father. Niko Nicotera appeared in the Season 1 finale’s last seconds, claiming to be Alfie’s (Aaron D. Harris) father. As promised by creator Jennie Snyder Urman earlier this year, the premiere revealed if his claims were true by the episode’s end, but in true Matlock fashion, there was a twist as the episode closed out. The premiere also revealed Olympia’s (Skye P. Marshall) intentions to protect ex-husband Julian (Jason Ritter) in the Wellbrexa scandal and try to pin it on his father, Senior (Beau Bridges).

Viewers learned the name of Nicotera’s character, Joseph Danza, in the opening moments. A protective Matty (Kathy Bates) had told husband Edwin (Sam Anderson) to take Alfie out of the house immediately while she grilled Joey about his paternity claims. She also asked why he emailed after Ellie’s (Marnee Carpenter) funeral, if not to try and get in touch with Alfie. As it turned out, Joey had no idea Alfie existed until the 14-year-old reached out to him.

Joey emailed the Kingstons after Ellie’s funeral because he wanted to give them her iPod, who left the device with him when he last saw her. Joey met Ellie when they were both struggling with substance abuse, and he didn’t know her name for the first few months they were around each other; he only knew her as “Karaoke.” Eventually, they fell in love, but Ellie didn’t tell him she was pregnant. Joey claimed that he’s been sober since 2021, and he shared private details about Ellie’s history with opioid addiction and how her struggles started.

Joey consented to a DNA test, and all Matty needed was seven strands of his hair. He obliged, and the first twist of the premiere came with the results. Joey is, in fact, Alfie’s biological father. What Matty didn’t tell him was that she had his DNA tested for signs of drug use, and it confirmed that Joey isn’t sober. Now, Matty and Edwin have officially left “the before times” again; life will never be the same for them now that Alfie’s father is in their lives.

The other twist involved the Matty-Olympia feud. A sneaky scene in Olympia’s brownstone made viewers think that Matty didn’t find the Wellbrexa document locked in a safe in Olympia’s coat closet, but a call with Edwin was really a decoy. While Matty set off a distraction in another scene on another day, she was able to get into the safe and steal the hidden study. The episode ended with Matty contacting a New York Times reporter to reveal her evidence of corruption at Jacobson Moore.

What did you think of the Matlock Season 2 premiere twists? Let us know in the comments below.

Matlock, Regular Air Time Premiere, Thursday, October 16, 9/8c, CBS

October 13, 2025 0 comments
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Laurie Davidson and Olivia Cooke in
TV & Streaming

Do Cherry and Daniel End Up Together? All the Twists, Explained

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for The Girlfriend.]

When Olivia Cooke said The Girlfriend was “for the freaks,” she wasn’t lying. The psychological erotic thriller features a sort of love triangle, but not in the traditional sense. Laura (Robin Wright) has an overprotective, borderline creepy relationship with her son, Daniel (Laurie Davidson), which gets put on the backburner when he falls in love with Cherry (Olivia Cooke).

Disturbing premise aside, Prime Video’s latest limited series isn’t without romance, though its authenticity is up for interpretation. As the show flits back and forth between the women’s perspectives, Laura becomes increasingly paranoid about Cherry’s motivations, determined to drive them apart. However, as the events unfold, viewers find out that her suspicions aren’t entirely incorrect. Cherry is far from an innocent bystander.

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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Emmerdale star teases John Sugden "twists and turns" as Aaron and Robert remain in danger
TV & Streaming

Emmerdale star teases John Sugden “twists and turns” as Aaron and Robert remain in danger

by jummy84 September 11, 2025
written by jummy84

However, with things getting ever more complicated for John, it would seem that surely he’s only moments away from being caught out? Or maybe not…

Speaking with RadioTimes.com on the red carpet for the National Television Awards 2025, John’s actor Oliver Farnworth was asked whether there was more carnage on the way for his character.

He teased: “It wouldn’t be Emmerdale without a few twists and turns, would it? So I’d say, just when you think something’s gonna go one way, it can always go another.”

John Sugden in Emmerdale. ITV

Farnworth also said that John does love Aaron “1 million per cent”, and that he “feels like he’s his soulmate”.

“But the problem that comes with that, with someone who’s been kind of shielded from love as John has a lot of their life, is that he doesn’t really know what to do with love.

“So he’s got Aaron, and he goes, ‘Well, I just love you so much, I just want you, I don’t want anyone else.’ It just becomes quite possessive, quite dangerous. And I think that’s what’s happened in this instance, and that’s what’s led to all of this carnage.”

It was previously reported that Farnworth will be departing from the soap “imminently” – but just how soon that actually ends up being, and how much damage John can do in the meantime, remains to be seen. ITV previously declined to comment on John’s future.

Emmerdale airs weeknights at 7:30pm on ITV1. Stream on ITVX.

Check out more of our Soaps coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 11, 2025 0 comments
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5 huge EastEnders questions after shock Max Branning return and Zoe Slater twists
TV & Streaming

5 huge EastEnders questions after shock Max Branning return and Zoe Slater twists

by jummy84 September 4, 2025
written by jummy84

After Jack Branning (Scott Maslen) and Ravi Gulati (Aaron Thiara) fought over a gun and it accidentally fired, Zoe realised she had been shot, and her panicked mum Kat Moon (Jessie Wallace) brought her to Walford East and called an ambulance.

As Zoe continue to exhibit troubling behaviour, Kat begged Zoe to tell her what she was struggling with, and Zoe mentioned she had an enemy out there who is still alive.

Alfie (Shane Richie) found them and the trio ended up back at The Queen Vic, where Jack was playing the dutiful police detective and covering his own tracks.

Anthony Trueman (Nicholas Bailey) stepped up to administer first aid, and the former flames had a brief catch up, with Zoe glad to hear that Anthony now had children.

As Zoe writhed in pain, a flashback took us back to 2006, where Zoe was screaming through labour pains as she gave birth to twins.

One of the babies tragically didn’t survive, and having only given her first name to medics, Zoe fled the hospital and left her child behind.

In the present, Kat spotted a tattoo of Zoe’s, sporting baby feet with an angel halo, and she was heartbroken for her daughter.

In the ambulance, Zoe showed warmer feelings towards Kat, and said of herself that she “couldn’t even do giving birth right”.

Meanwhile, Jack ordered a guilty Ravi to change his clothes and shower to get rid of the gun residue, as it became ever clearer that Jack was going rogue.

At the hospital, Zoe needed emergency surgery to stop the bleeding, and as Kat waited for news, she answered a call on Zoe’s damaged phone.

Assuming it was the enemy that was after Zoe and that he had shot her, Kat threatened the caller that she would make him pay, but the man stayed silent.

As the call ended, the character Kat had just been threatening was unveiled to viewers as none other than Max Branning (Jake Wood)!

Like us, we’re sure you have a lot of questions, so join RadioTimes.com as we delve into the biggest ones below.

How are Zoe and Max connected?

Jake Wood as Max Branning in EastEnders. BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron

With Zoe having left Walford in 2005 and Max not arriving until 2006, we’re most curious as to how the pair know each other.

Max has always been a serial womaniser, so it’s of course possible that he and Zoe crossed paths either before he was first on-screen, or in the intervening years while both characters were away.

Still, we also have to entertain the idea that their relationship is not romantic at all!

Was Max calling Zoe as a friend or foe?

With Zoe in fear of an “enemy”, that brings us onto our next big question…

Has Max returned as a villain?

Jake Wood as Max Branning stood in front of Walford East tube station, staring menacingly ahead. He is wearing a light blue shirt paired with a dark coloured suit.

Max was previously confirmed to be returning to Walford. BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron

Max is no stranger to a villain era, having sought revenge over his wrongful conviction for the murder of Lucy Beale (Hetti Bywater) by trying to take over the Square and trying to kill Ian (Adam Woodyatt).

So might his return see him playing the bad guy in vulnerable Zoe’s story?

While we’ve yet to learn all the details, this would pit Max against Kat and the Moon/Slater clan, and we can’t see his daughter Lauren (Jacqueline Jossa) and estranged teenage son Oscar (Pierre Moullier) wanting anything to do with him.

So, is Max up to no good again, or is there another twist in this tale?

Who fathered Zoe’s children?

Michelle Ryan as Zoe Slater standing in Albert Square gardens at night in EastEnders.

Michelle Ryan as Zoe Slater. BBC/Jack Barnes/Kieron McCarron

A quick working out of the dates confirmed that whoever Zoe’s baby daddy is, it can’t be the late Dirty Den Watts (Leslie Grantham).

Now that we’ve established who isn’t the father, we need to know who is, and whether it’s a character we know.

There’s no resemblance to Max, but how about Anthony? Was there more to Zoe’s comment that she was pleased he had kids of his own?

Zoe’s ill-fated romance with Den’s son Dennis Rickman (Nigel Harman) ended long before her exit, but Dennis remained alive until the very end of 2005, and we don’t know how far into 2006 Zoe gave birth.

Imagine widow Sharon’s (Letitia Dean) shock if she found out that Dennis had a fling with Zoe that led to an unknown pregnancy.

Then there’s the old character group Zoe hung around with decades ago – like Ronny Ferreira (Ray Panthaki) or Tariq Larousi (Nabil Elouahabi).

Whoever this mystery man is, we can’t shake the feeling that it’s a familiar face.

During the flashback, a nurse and doctor were concerned by Zoe’s “bad blood” remark about her baby, but was she referring to her own dark conception story, or that of her child?

Have we already met Zoe’s son?

What if Zoe’s child, who would now be 19 years old, is a character we already know about?

While there were no on-screen births for male EastEnders characters in 2006, that doesn’t necessarily rule this theory out.

Many characters have passed through Albert Square over the years, and there must be a reason the soap has focused first on Zoe’s secret son.

One thing we can rule out is the possibility of Zoe being Joel Marshall’s (Max Murray) mother, as Joel is (as far as we know) considerably younger than her child.

What else is Zoe hiding after troubling dialogue?

Was it a clue when Zoe made a point of saying that the man after her is “still alive”?

There’s also Zoe’s continued insistence that she’s done something so awful, that she believes even Kat would wash her hands of her.

This is something we’ve been pondering over since the summer, and with the promise of more secrets to be spilled on Thursday (4th September 2025), it looks like we’ll be in the know very soon.

Anyone affected by Zoe’s story can find support via Sands.

EastEnders continues on Thursday from 6am on BBC iPlayer and at 7.30pm on BBC One.

Read more:

Visit our dedicated EastEnders page for all the latest news, interviews and spoilers.

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Check out more of our Soaps coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 4, 2025 0 comments
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