Entertainment
‘Stranger Things’ Star Charlie Heaton Breaks Down His ‘Industry’ Character’s Downward Spiral
[Editor’s note: The following contains spoilers for Industry Season 4, Episode 4.]
Summary
In Season 4 of the HBO series Industry, Harper (Myha’la) and Yasmin (Marisa Abela) are at the top of their game when it comes to knowing the ins and outs of finance, but their competitive nature also quickly puts them at odds with each other. Harper wants to turn things around by striking out on her own while Yasmin tries to carve out a place for herself alongside her tech founder husband, Sir Henry Muck (Kit Harington), at Tender. But things are not what they seem when it comes to the fintech company’s enigmatic co-founder, Whitney Halberstram (Max Minghella), which sparks interest in financial journalist James Dycker (Charlie Heaton). Unfortunately, no one is immune to a downward spiral, and his promising exposé of Tender’s business practices gets turned on him, shifting the spotlight to Jim’s bad decisions instead.
During this one-on-one interview with Collider, Heaton discussed how watching Industry is similar to watching Shakespeare, not having much time to jump into Season 4 and find his footing, how welcomed the cast made him feel in joining Season 4, his club scene introduction with Kiernan Shipka (who plays Tender executive assistant Hayley Clay), and how exhausting his characters building spiral was to experience. He also talked about who his Stranger Things character Jonathan Byers might cast in his movie, The Consumer, that funny NYU Alumni Instagram post inviting his character for their Alumni and Families weekend in the fall, and how he’s excited to continue pushing himself in future projects.
Understanding the World of the HBO Series ‘Industry’ Feels a Bit Like Watching Shakespeare
“You understand the stakes and you understand the tension, but you don’t really understand what’s going on.”
Collider: I have to admit that Industry is a show that I totally do not even remotely understand. I don’t understand the finance world at all. But I’m obsessed with the show because of the characters and their relationships.
CHARLIE HEATON: Yeah, that was very much me going into this. I’d heard of the show when I first was in talks for the role. I was talking to a friend of mine about it who’d watched it, and she said the same thing. She was like, “I have no idea what they’re talking about, but you get it.” That’s part of it. It’s almost like watching Shakespeare, in a way, with the language. You understand the stakes and you understand the tension, but you don’t really understand what’s going on, as a viewer.
Because there’s so much heaviness with this show, to get a little silly first, have you seen the NYU Alumni Instagram page that posted about how they’re looking to get in touch with Jonathan Byers from the NYU class of 1991 for the 35th anniversary of his graduation. I just thought that was the funniest.
HEATON: No, I hadn’t seen that. Where do I go? That’s so funny. I’ll check it out.
They invited him to join the NYU Alumni and Families weekend this fall, and I just thought it was so funny. How weird is it to have a character that you’ve played take on a life of its own in that way?
HEATON: Yeah, it is. What a treat. We’ve been saying goodbye to these characters for over a year now. We’ve just come off this huge press tour where everyone was asking what it feels like to say goodbye. When we wrapped, it really did feel like you were saying goodbye to a friend. I kept using that analogy. You’re leaving them, and they’re going on with their own life. It felt like that. So, the fact that that’s how people feel about all these characters, that they’re real people who really exist in the world, that’s a testament to the show, to the writing, and we played these characters for so long and people have resonated with them for so long that they feel like real, full-fledged people. It’s amazing, really.
Who Would Jonathan Byers Cast in His ‘Stranger Things’ Movie, ‘The Consumer’?
“That’s a funny question.”
If Jonathan Byers’ movie, The Consumer, were a real movie, who do you think he would cast in it? If it had become more than a student film and he got to make it for the big screen, who would he want to see play the woman in it?
HEATON: Wow. I feel like, at the time, you’ve got to look at ‘80s [actors]. I feel like, at that time, Jonathan would have been a fan of Sigourney Weaver. It would be pretty meta to have Winona Ryder be in his movie. That’s a funny question. I know that Phoebe Cates has been mentioned. I feel like Dustin really likes Phoebe Cates. That’s funny.
The first person I thought of was Winona Ryder, and I was like, “How would that work?”
HEATON: Yeah!
When you come off a project that is big and successful and has the attention that Stranger Things has, it can be a bit scary to figure out what to do next and how to follow that up. Industry certainly is one way to do that. It’s considered to be one of the best shows on TV, and it seems like a show that is also both fun and terrifying to do. Was it both of those things?
HEATON: Yeah, it was. It’s such a specific world. I had come from being in such a specific world for 10 years. You’re joining an established show. I’ve been on a show and I’ve seen what it’s like for other people to come onto an established show. It was really terrifying. There wasn’t a lot of time either. It wasn’t like I had a lot of time to prep for it. It literally happened all in the space of a week, I think. That manic-ness and that pressure of being like, “Wow, I’ve got to learn this really quickly,” I do think helped with the intensity of it, just because it is such an intense, wild show. The challenge of it made it the perfect thing for me to go and see how I would do with that.
I was looking for something that was going to really challenge me, and this is so different to anything I’m used to. It’s a different style of work, different tone of work, different tone of material. Konrad [Kay] and Mickey [Down], the showrunners and writers, were so great and they were really encouraging, and they were really excited to see me do something different, so I had their support. They were really helpful. They helped me understand the world. They were bank traders. The story comes from their experience. They’re an encyclopedia of knowledge.
How you find a way into a character is always the job. I’ve done other films before, but being on the show, I discovered Jonathan a long time ago. I had to find my way into this new character of Jim, not knowing exactly how I was going to find my way into it. I don’t really feel like a financial journalist at all. I don’t know what that feels like. But you always somehow seem to find your own way in, and that was really encouraging. It gave me a lot of confidence, which was really nice to experience.
‘Industry’ Season 4 Review: HBO’s Most Underrated Thriller Series Returns With a Dark New Chapter
‘Industry’ may share similarities with other HBO dramas, but it’s evolved into a definitive show of the moment.
You had the double whammy of having to try to understand the financial world, and then also figuring out what it’s like to be a financial journalist who’s reporting on it.
HEATON: It was funny because, at the time we were shooting, it was March or April of last year and there was that brief moment when the American stock market crashed for a couple days or a week and everyone was freaking out. I was reading these long-form articles about what was going on, and because of the show, I would not be able to understand it now, but I was like, “Oh, yeah, I know what they’re talking about. I kind of get it.” For three months, I was like, “Yeah, I know finance.” And then, it was completely gone.
The Club Scene in the First Episode of Season 4 of ‘Industry’ Had a Real DJ To Help Set the Vibe
“They create environments that really help the actors feel that it’s as tangible as possible.”
I love a good character introduction, and this season kicks off with us being thrown into things with you and Kiernan Shipka. What was it like to play all of that with her, starting with her really drawing you in and seducing you on the dance floor?
HEATON: My first day on set was that club scene. They brought in this DJ from Brazil that they really like, and it was really fun. Kiernan is wonderful. She’s been doing this for such a long time, she does it with such grace and ease. When you’ve got to do something like that, it could easily be very awkward, but it was really comfortable. DJ Tennis was the name of the DJ that they brought in. That was fun. The rehearsal wasn’t fun because they didn’t bring any of the background artists in. It was just me and Kiernan grinding on each other, and everyone around watching it was like, “Yeah, that’s okay. That’ll work.” It’s never that comfortable. But we had a lot of fun.
What Industry does really well is keep things as raw as possible. There’s one little frame in the very opening, when you open in Canary Wharf, and it’s these super long lens cameras that are capturing me and Kiernan before we get to the club. Even that was filmed guerrilla style in Canary Wharf. You had real people commuting and the camera was miles away, so you feel like you’re just in the city. They set those environments. When Jim is at those offices, they have the extras moving around. They create environments that really help the actors feel that it’s as tangible as possible.
“I think she has way more agency than meets the eye. I would almost venture to say she has full agency,” says Shipka of her ‘Industry’ character.
What do you think James Dycker thought of Hayley Clay when all of that was happening, especially as things just continue to spiral and he has no idea what’s going to happen to him beyond that moment?
HEATON: To understand the character, you’ve got to understand their moral ethics. In the beginning, I really don’t think he feels like he’s trying to get dragged into that situation. I personally don’t think it’s as dark as that. But then, as the night continues, the ethics get a bit more skewed. In the beginning, I think he just wants to have a conversation because he goes to the pub and I think he was maybe thinking about catching her at the pub, but the moment didn’t feel right. And then, the club happens and she offers him the drugs and he pockets the drugs, and then he ends up back in her house. So, I feel like he’s going down this path, even in that first five minutes, of knowing in his heart that he shouldn’t be there. That’s not the space he should be in. In the morning, he stays to try to get information, which is a bit skewed, but I do think there’s that slight bit of morality and guilt there.
That whole moment when he’s still there the next day and he tells her that he’s a reporter working on a story about her workplace seemed a bit ill-advised. What reaction do you think he thought he was going to get from that?
HEATON: I don’t know. I don’t know why he thought he’d get a sensible [reaction]. That’s crazy. It was super fun. Kiernan is also so good in that scene, when she picks up the knife and she chases him out. It was just really fun to play around in that.
It was funny to see the moments James Dycker would randomly be honest about something because you’re not sure if he’s doing it on purpose or if it’s something that just slips out. You also never know when Hayley Clay is being honest or if she’s manipulating everything.
HEATON: Totally, and I think that’s what they do really well with the show. You are constantly trying to understand. Everyone seems like they have two or three motives. That whole show is like a chessboard, and everyone is a piece on the board trying to outsmart and outmaneuver each other. They’re really clever.
Your character also crosses paths with Harper, who’s a character that I find completely frightening in her focus and determination with everything. What’s it like to share moments with Myha’la?
HEATON: A lot of those scenes are over the phone, but there was a scene in episode one that was a really long walk-and-talk scene that didn’t make it into the cut because of timing. I did get to have that scene with her and she’s just so cool. Obviously, her character is badass, but as a person, she’s lovely. She’s really down to earth and grounded. I think she’s somewhat of a homebody. It was really cool. When I got the show, I hadn’t seen it, so I wanted to digest it really quick. I started to watch the first two seasons, and then I made a conscious decision to stop watching because I didn’t want to be too enamored by these people when I got to set. You start to become a fan and then you’re like, “Well, I’ve got to go and work with these people, and I don’t want to fan out,” if that makes sense. But they’re lovely. Coming in and stepping into a cast who are established, I felt very welcomed, which was nice.
James Dycker Is a Ticking Time Bomb Waiting To Go Off in Season 4 of ‘Industry’
“He’s almost holding it together.”
Your character really spirals. He’s trying to expose this company, but they also essentially expose him. What was it like to find the levels of that, as he’s spiraling and becoming more of a mess? Did you have a very clear idea of how you wanted him to be when he was just totally fucked up?
HEATON: Yeah, it’s that build. I talked about this with both Konrad and Mickey. I do think that he is constantly carrying that energy. This is a guy who runs on prescription pills, cigarettes, and coffee. He likes to work on that wire. He’s also trying to claw back some credibility. When we find him at the beginning, it’s about what the text gives you. He’s got this shitty place in and he’s newly single and his career has been tarnished by bad journalism. He’s on the wire from the beginning, so it’s about, how does that spiral? He’s almost holding it together. He’s that type of person who feels like, “Okay, once I get here, once I prove this, then my life will be better and everything’s going to be better.” But he’s a ticking time bomb waiting to go off.
It’s sad because he’s intrepid and he’s really smart, but he just makes these wrong choices. It’s interesting to play. That was fun. It was difficult. Michelle [Savill] was our director for that block, and she was really good. She has a theater background and likes to do a lot of exercises. She did physical techniques with us that would help get your body into that state, which was really good. And then, you just run with that energy. Those last couple of weeks on set were exhausting.
You said that you’re looking for something different. You jumped into this, which clearly is very different from Stranger Things, but then where do you go from here? Do you know what you’re going to be shooting next?
HEATON: I did a couple of other projects. Last year was a really fortunate and busy year for me. There’s another Netflix limited series that’s coming out, that I can’t really talk about. And I got to do a film at the end of the year in Australia, which was a nice independent film where I’m playing an Australian and I’m also playing someone my own age again. I’m just trying on different hats and I’m trying to challenge myself. Next, I don’t know. We’ll see. It’s a new chapter. It’s exciting. I’m excited to push myself and play around a bit.
- Release Date
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November 9, 2020
- Network
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HBO
- Directors
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Isabella Eklöf, Tinge Krishnan, Ed Lilly, Birgitte Stærmose, Zoé Wittock, Caleb Femi, Mary Nighy, Konrad Kay, Lena Dunham, Mickey Down
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Marisa Abela
Yasmin Kara-Hanani
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Harry Lawtey
Robert Spearing
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Industry airs on HBO and is available to stream on HBO Max. Check out the Season 4 trailer:
Entertainment
Says She’s Not Transphobic (Video)
Nicki Minaj has sparked reactions after sharing why she believes she is not transphobic. Additionally, the rapper shared why she chose to place her support behind Donald Trump.
RELATED: Whew! Social Media Is Goin’ OFF After Nicki Minaj Called Herself Trump’s “Number One Fan” & Held His Hand At Account Summit (WATCH)
Nicki Minaj Says She’s Not Transphobic & Explains Trump Alignment
On Tuesday, February 3, a new episode of the ‘Katie Miller Pod’ was released via YouTube and featured Nicki Minaj as a guest. As the conversation opened, Minaj explained that she placed her support behind President Donald Trump after seeing “how he was being treated.”
“I felt that that same — a lot of that bullying and the smear campaigns, and all of that lying — I felt like that had been done to me for so many years. And I was watching it in real time happen to someone else, and I didn’t think he deserved it,” Minaj explained.
As the conversation continued, Minaj seemed to note that Trump expressed to her his respect for her fanbase and the LGBTQ+ community. Around nine minutes into the interview, Minaj shared her own stance, explaining that although she disagrees with pro-trans rhetoric being pushed in schools, she is not transphobic. Furthermore, she stated that she believes “adults” should be able to do what they’d like with their bodies.
See what she said below.
Social Media Is Sharing Reactions
Social media users reacted to Nicki Minaj’s comments about not being transphobic in TSR’s comment section.
Instagram user @1princessmehgann wrote, “Real barbz Know she isn’t transphobic”
While Instagram user @t.beezus added, “She literally said children … when was the community attacked ? Y’all lack basic comprehension !”
Instagram user @iyawoijebu wrote, “Nicky we judging you and we don’t care!”
While Instagram user @804.saucy added, “Yall not following … what she’s saying is kids shouldn’t have the option at such a young age to change their gender when they don’t even know what they want yet”
Instagram user @istayblessedxo wrote, “I think about 99% of America agrees with her on that. People should not be able to make a life changing decision like that until at least 21. If you’re can’t drink before 21 you shouldn’t be able to change your gender.”
While Instagram user @dijouncruz added, “The ‘Trans part of the LGBT’ pay attention ya’ll smh”
Instagram user @tarisunscripted wrote, “Please get her off my algorithm.”
While Instagram user @chanel__5 added, “She did say this but it’s the way you delivered it with a party that thrives off H8TE”
Before Nicki Minaj Shared That She’s Not Transphobic, She Sparked Reactions With Recent Donald Trump Alignment
Before Nicki Minaj shared that she’s not transphobic, she raised eyebrows with her apparent political alignment with Donald Trump. As The Shade Room previously reported, in November 2025, Minaj appeared at the United Nations. There, she noted her support of Donald Trump speaking on the alleged Christian persecution in Nigeria.
RELATED: Screenshot Appears To Show Tammy Rivera Calling Nicki Minaj A “Bootlicker” As Clip Resurfaces Of Charlie Kirk Saying Rapper Isn’t Good Role Model
Then, earlier this month, Minaj appeared at the Trump Account Summit. Additionally, she said she was the president’s “number one fan” and even held his hand.
RELATED: Birds Of A Feather? Waka Flocka Sparks Reactions With Message For Nicki Minaj Amid Shade Over Trump Support (PHOTO)
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Inside Team USA’s Dramatic Journey to the 2026 Winter Olympics (Excl)
The 2026 Winter Olympics are officially here — and Team USA is arriving in Italy with star power, storylines and sky-high expectations.
As the world’s best athletes descend on Milan and Cortina d’Ampezzo, all eyes are on the Americans: from Ilia Malinin’s can’t-miss moment in men’s figure skating to Mikaela Shiffrin’s long-awaited redemption tour on the slopes, and Madison Chock and Evan Bates chasing gold as newlyweds in their fourth Olympic Games together.
With pressure mounting and history on the line, these athletes aren’t just competing for medals — they’re skating, skiing and sliding into some of the most defining moments of their careers.
Us Weekly spoke exclusively to some of Team USA’s biggest stars as they prepare to take center stage when the Milano Cortina Games kick off February 6.

Redemption Mode
Some of the most powerful Olympic stories are born from heartbreak.
In 2022, alpine skier Mikaela Shiffrin arrived in Beijing as a heavy favorite, expected to dominate the slopes. Instead, she suffered a stunning series of DNFs (Did Not Finish) and left without a medal. “A lot of people who were tuning into Mikaela Shiffrin for her biggest race were tuning in when I didn’t win a medal,” Shiffrin tells Us. “They were saying, ‘Don’t even come home. You failed us. You didn’t bring home any gold.’”
The emotional weight of that moment has stayed with her — and reshaped her perspective heading into 2026. “That’s the hardest thing or the most loaded thing, and I’m very aware of it now, emotionally and mentally,” she continues. “The hurdle I’ve been working on with my team and with my psychologist and with my family and everybody around me is: We could go to these Games and we could do everything right, and it could still go wrong.”
Now, coming off a dominant season that saw her make World Cup history, Shiffrin, 30, is embracing a different mindset. “Going into [the Olympics] as an athlete, you’ve really got to be open-minded,” she explains. “Now that we have all of this in- formation, all of this experience, could we boil it down a little bit and remember that we’re just ski racing here?”

Redemption is also front and center for the U.S. women’s figure skating team, which heads into Milan Cortina with unfinished business. After leaving Beijing without the gold many believed was within reach, the Americans are skating with something to prove — and the depth to do it.
Amber Glenn, Isabeau Levito and Alysa Liu headline a stacked field, blending technical firepower with hard-earned experience on the world stage. For these skat- ers, 2026 isn’t just another Olympic cycle — it’s a chance to turn lingering frustration into gold.
“If we do our jobs in Milan, then more than likely some- one is going to be up there,” Glenn has said of the podium.
American Pride
For many athletes, the Olympics represent more than medals — they’re a rare chance to unite a country.
“It’s one of the greatest honors to be able to go to the Olympics and represent the U.S.,” ice dancer Madison Chock, 33, tells Us. “For us being Americans, we have such pride in our patriotism and really, the American dream.”

That responsibility isn’t lost on veterans like hockey player Hilary Knight, who will compete in her fifth and final Games. “If you want to call us sports ambassadors or sports envoys, we can have an impact on someone’s life in a small way,” Knight, 36, says. “I do think there’s a greater responsibility when you’re representing your country on the world stage.”
Honorary coach and NBC correspondent Snoop Dogg agrees. “One thing about the Olympics that I love is that it gives me a chance to be in front of people to represent what Americans look like, what we feel like, how we love, how we appreciate,” he’s said.
High-Stakes Drama
If any event captures the emotional intensity of the Olympics, it’s figure skating — and few understand that better than Tara Lipinski and Johnny Weir.
“You hear the music, you see the rings, there’s this magic to it,” says Lipinski, 43, who won gold at the 1998 Nagano Olympics at just 15 years old. “I think that’s why the whole world loves this event. It’s one of these things where you realize that this group of athletes has sacrificed their whole life. They’re building to this one moment in time. It’s four minutes on the ice that could change their entire life.”
For Lipinski, that emotional cocktail is exactly what makes the sport unforgettable.
“It’s everything you could want,” she adds. “The pressure, the suspense, the glitz, the glamour.”
Now working together as NBC Sports analysts, Lipinski and Weir experience those moments from the booth — but the nerves never disappear.
“Figure skating isn’t known as the most hugs and kisses, warm and fuzzy sport,” Weir, 41, explains. “But we all appreciate how small and niche and special this family is. As the older generation watching the younger generation of skaters, we want the best for them because we know exactly how it feels to be in their shoes.”
Snowboarder Chloe Kim, 25, has already had a front-row seat to Olympic drama before even strapping in. The reigning halfpipe superstar entered the season sidelined by a torn labrum in her shoulder that left her status uncertain.
For the athlete, the weeks leading up to the Games became a test of patience and resilience — rehabbing, recalibrating and waiting to see if her body would cooperate in time. Whether she’s at full strength or fighting to find her rhythm, Kim arrives carrying the emotional weight of a comeback that started long before the Opening Ceremony.
Must-Watch Phenom
The Olympic experience is one unlike any other — with athletes from all over the world converging in one place, each chasing a moment of immortality. Sixteen different sports disciplines will be featured in Milano Cortina, with more than 3,500 athletes representing 93 countries.
And while the depth of competition is staggering, a select few still rise above the noise and become must-watch storylines. One of them is Team USA’s Ilia Malinin, who will have all eyes on him when the men’s figure skating competition begins.
“There’s kind of different ways I approach it,” Malinin, 21, tells Us. “I like to embrace it a lot, especially closer to a competition. Feeling that pressure is kind of like, ‘OK, everyone’s looking at me. Now I really need to be at my best. Be on my A-game.’”
But even the sport’s most dominant skater admits the pressure can cut both ways.

“There’s also days that won’t be the best days,” he continues. “A lot of the time, what I’ll do is say, ‘OK, there’s a lot of pressure on me, let me just block this out and focus on what I really need to do and try not to think about people’s expectations of me.”
Nicknamed the Quad God, Malinin knows fans often see him as untouchable — something he’s eager to challenge on Olympic ice.
“Everyone sees me at competitions and I’m just so focused, I’m really in a different mindset where I’m pretty much as perfect as I can be,” Malinin explains. “But in reality, I’m not perfect. I’ll have bad days, I’ll have good days. It’s really the thing that tells people, ‘Oh, he’s really human like the rest of us.’”
The MVPs You Won’t See on the Podium
Beyond the athletes, the Games will be stacked with scene-stealing personalities, led by Snoop Dogg, who’s returning as an on-air commentator and cultural ambassador — and promising to keep things anything but predictable.
“You know, one thing about me, I’m unexpected, I’m unorthodox, but I’m always full of fun,” Snoop tells Us, adding that his mission is “making sure that America is represented in a peaceful, beautiful way to the globe.”
While he’s happy to entertain Olympic viewers, the rapper admits he’s still learning — though there’s one event already at the top of his watch list. “I think the sport I’m looking forward to the most [is] figure skating, because I just really, truly appreciate and love the art and the craft that it takes to become a figure skater,” he says — especially with the music, the fashion and the possibility that “my girl, Martha Stewart, may meet me out there at the front row of the figure skating final.”
He’ll be joined around the Olympic universe by Flavor Flav, official sponsor and “hype-man” for the USA Bobsled and Skeleton team, bringing his trademark energy as an enthusiastic supersupporter in the stands. Also on board: Stanley Tucci, who’s set to lend his signature charm and sophistication to cultural and culinary storytelling from Italy — proving that at these Games, the characters off the field may be just as compelling as the competition itself.
Vonn Is Back — and So Is the NHL
The 2026 Games mark a couple of noteworthy returns: skier Lindsey Vonn and NHL players participating in the Olympics for the first time since 2014 in Sochi.
Vonn, 41, who last competed in the Olympics in 2018, announced her return to the sport in November 2024 and earned a spot on the team in December 2025, a miraculous comeback that felt nearly unfathomable after having a partial knee replacement just months before coming out of retirement.
“But after a successful season that saw her reach the podium in seven of eight races, the legend declared, “I’m not the underdog anymore!” Vonn, a three-time Olympic medalist, reflected, “This is 24 years after my first Olympics. I’ve won everything I could have ever won. I’m not doing this to prove anything to anyone. I’m doing this because I think I can do well, it’s a meaningful place for me, and I think I can make a positive impact.”
Despite tearing her ACL during a World Cup race in Switzerland just days before the start of the Games, Vonn said she still intended on competing.

“I know what my chances in these Olympics were before this crash, and even though my chances aren’t the same now, there is still a chance,” she shared via Instagram. “And as long as I have a chance, I will not lose hope. I will not give up! It’s not over yet!”
Men’s hockey will also be a focal point, as the NHL’s best players will represent their home countries for the first time in over a decade.
New Jersey Devils star Jack Hughes will play for Team USA alongside his older brother, Quinn Hughes, which means the entire Hughes family is looking forward to a European vacation.
“A bunch of my cousins, aunts and uncles are making the trip,” Jack, 24, tells Us. “We’ve got some friends coming over, too. All the people in our lives are so excited to be part of this. It’s such a special event. You never know if we’ll be able to go back.”
Pomp and Circumstance
Of course, no Olympics would be complete without the spectacle. The 2026 Games officially kick off February 6 with a massive Opening Ceremony at Milano San Siro Olympic Stadium — a moment athletes say never gets old.
This year’s will feature performances from global super stars Mariah Carey and Italian icon Andrea Bocelli, setting the stage with equal parts star power and national pride. “I’m just looking forward to soaking it all in,” bobsledder Boone Niederhofer says.
For Chock, the spotlight is a reminder of what it took to get there. “It’s the years, decades of work that you put in,” she says. “But that’s what makes the Olympics special.”
And when the Games draw to a close, the celebration will come full circle at the Closing Ceremony on February 22 at the historic Arena di Verona, where athletes finally get to exhale, celebrate their accomplishments and pass the Olympic flame forward — a final, emotional send off to two unforgettable weeks in Italy.
Entertainment
Fleetwood Mac’s Stevie Nicks Wrote a Song Even More Heartbreaking Than “Dreams” or “Silver Springs”
Few people are as good as Stevie Nicks at writing songs that pierce right through your soul. Both in her solo work and with Fleetwood Mac, she has written the best songs about love, heartbreak, and loss. Ever since she was very young, she has known how to capture the rawest feelings in her songs. In fact, she wrote her most heartbreaking song when she was just 25. This track went on to become one of Fleetwood Mac’s greatest hits, and it’s hard to believe it was written by a person in her 20s.
Stevie Nicks Wrote This Song About a Difficult Time in Her Life
Stevie Nicks is the mastermind behind several hits about heartbreak and love. “Silver Springs” is the perfect example. In it, Nicks expresses raw anger, pain, love, and revenge. But while this song might be more aggressive in its heartbreak, there is another song that will quietly devastate the listener, and might be the best Fleetwood Mac song. That song is “Landslide.”
In 1973, Stevie Nicks was dating bandmate Lindsey Buckingham. The couple had recently released their album, the first and only one the duo put out, and their future was uncertain. Nicks was accompanying her partner on a trip to Aspen, Colorado, to a rehearsal, because Buckingham had joined Don Everly’s band as a touring musician. It was a difficult time for the couple. Their album, “Buckingham Nicks,” hadn’t done so well, and they were questioning what their next step should be. “It was horrifying to Lindsey and I because we had a taste of the big time, we recorded in a big studio, we met famous people, we made what we consider to be a brilliant record and nobody liked it,” Stevie Nicks explained.
Buckingham had joined Don Everly’s band not because he wanted to be a touring musician, but because they were struggling financially. Meanwhile, Stevie Nicks was working odd jobs. “I had been a waitress and a cleaning lady, and I didn’t mind any of this. I was perfectly delighted to work and support us so that Lindsey could produce and work and fix our songs and make our music.” However, after having had their chance with “Buckingham Nicks,” the prospect of going back to what they used to do felt wrong. “I had gotten to a point where it was like, ‘I’m not happy. I am tired. But I don’t know if we can do any better than this. If nobody likes this, then what are we going to do?’”
Fleetwood Mac Rejected This Hit Song Written by Stevie Nicks Twice Causing Her to Quit the Band
A classic almost went unheard.
“Landslide” Represents Stevie Nicks’ Decision Not to Give Up
“Landslide” is not only a solid track and a moving song; it’s, in a way, the reason why Fleetwood Mac exists. Nicks spent two weeks with Lindsey Buckingham in Aspen while he was rehearsing, and she wrote “Landslide” while they were there. She was reflecting on their future, and the lyrics, while they are now seen as a beautiful metaphor, were very literal at the time.
“I made a decision to continue. “Landslide” was the decision,” Stevie Nicks explained. “‘When you see my reflection in the snow-covered hills’—it’s the only time in my life that I’ve lived in the snow,” she revealed. In Aspen, she was “looking up at those Rocky Mountains and going, ‘Okay, we can do it. I’m sure we can do it.’ In one of my journal entries, it says, ‘I took Lindsey and said, We’re going to the top!’ And that’s what we did. Within a year, Mick Fleetwood called us, and we were in Fleetwood Mac.”
Stevie Nicks was only 25 years old when she wrote this song, which makes it even more impressive. The lyrics, and particularly the chorus, make it seem like it was written by an older person looking back on their life. “Time makes you bolder / Even children get older / And I’m gettin’ older, too,” she sings longingly. She might have been young, but she had lived a lot of life in those short 25 years. She had fallen in love with the man who would become her songwriting partner long after the relationship was over. She had tried and failed at music, and was still about to make a huge impact in the music world. She just didn’t know it. The commercial failure of “Buckingham Nicks” was a low blow for both of them, but Stevie Nicks was wise enough to reflect on the ups and downs in life, putting it into words in a way that shows that even then, she was wise beyond her years. And just like that, she turned her uncertainty and fear into one of the greatest songs ever written.
Entertainment
Dog the Bounty Hunter's stepson arrested over the fatal shooting of his 13-year-old son
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Gregory Zecca has been charged with aggravated manslaughter of a child with a firearm and using a firearm while under the influence in connection to the July 19 incident.
Entertainment
Brett Ratner Calls Epstein Photo Speculation ‘Crazy’ And ‘Horrible’
This comes after a massive new batch of documents tied to the criminal investigation into the late financier’s activities was released.
The photo, depicting Epstein seated alongside Ratner and two women whose faces are hidden, has begun trending online just as the “Rush Hour” director attempts a Hollywood comeback with his new documentary, “Melania.”
Ratner has largely remained on the sidelines of the industry in recent years, after multiple allegations of improper conduct surfaced against him in 2017.
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Brett Ratner Continues To Deny Any Personal Relationship With Jeffrey Epstein

The photo of Ratner and Epstein with two unidentified women has sparked renewed scrutiny of the director and his relationship with Epstein.
Ratner has moved quickly to shut down any suggestions that he enjoyed a close personal relationship with Epstein.
“I didn’t have a personal relationship with him,” he insisted, during an interview with Fox News Digital.
The filmmaker claimed that the woman he was cuddling was his partner at the time, and that he was therefore not worried when the photo first emerged.
“I knew who was the person in the photo,” Ratner said. “So, I wasn’t concerned about it at all.”
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The Director Spoke About The Effects Of Speculation About Him
Ratner also addressed the personal toll that the continued speculation surrounding his alleged ties to Epstein has taken on his life.
Reflecting on the fallout from the resurfaced photo, the filmmaker defined the discourse as “crazy” and “horrible,” while doubling down on his claim that he believed he was attending an innocent social event alongside his partner.
“My fiancée invited me to that event,” Ratner said. “At the time, the girl in the picture was my fiancée. And that’s it. That’s all.”
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Epstein Photo Emerges As Brett Ratner Returns To Hollywood With ‘Melania’
Ratner has been strongly pushing back against rising speculation since the resurfaced Epstein photo began circulating online.
This new scrutiny comes at a pivotal moment for the filmmaker, who is attempting a return to Hollywood with his new documentary, “Melania.”
Ratner was effectively cancelled from the industry following allegations of sexual harassment against him, a reality that has come at a steep personal and professional price.
Back in 2013, Ratner secured a lucrative 75-film co-financing and co-producing agreement with Warner Bros.
That deal ultimately collapsed after the allegations, prompting the studio to sever ties with his production company.
Prior to “Melania,” Ratner’s last time in the director’s chair was in the 2014 action-adventure film “Hercules,” starring Dwayne Johnson.
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‘Melania’ Enjoyed A Strong Opening Domestic Weekend

“Melania” surprised many industry insiders with a strong box office debut during its opening domestic weekend.
The documentary grossed roughly $7 million from nearly 2,000 theaters, an unusually high figure for a nonfiction release.
However, some social media users were also quick to point out that documentaries are rarely as backed at the same financial level as “Melania.”
Amazon reportedly outbid rivals, including Netflix and Disney, with a record-setting $40 million deal for the film’s distribution rights.
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At the top of the domestic box office rankings was Sam Raimi’s “Send Help,” which earned approximately $20 million. Mark Fishbach’s indie “Iron Lung” followed closely behind in second place with $18 million.
Brett Ratner Is Also Rumored To Be Returning To The ‘Rush Hour’ Franchise With A Fourth Film

Ratner’s prospects of mounting a full Hollywood comeback appear to be gaining momentum.
Reports suggest that Donald Trump has been pushing for a fourth installment of the “Rush Hour” franchise under the director’s guidance.
In November 2025, Variety reported that the president had been lobbying behind the scenes to revive the popular series.
Should the project move forward, Paramount Pictures is expected to take charge of distribution.
Leading stars Chris Tucker and Jackie Chan have both previously expressed interest in reprising their roles. Chan has even urged the producers to “hurry up” with a fourth film before he and Tucker grow too old to make it happen.
Entertainment
The Long Lost Star Trek Episode Starring Milton Berle
Captain Kirk and his crew soon discover their advanced technology is due to cultural interference by a Federation scientist called Bayne. Bayne was to be played by the iconic and notorious Milton Berle.
By Saralyn Smith
| Published

Norman Spinrad thought the script he wrote in 1967 called “He Walked Among Us” had been lost to time until it showed up with an autograph-seeking fan at a convention. The fan scanned the faded script and emailed it to Spinrad, who has published it as an e-book.
Captain Kirk Versus Milton Berle
The script had the Enterprise encountering a primitive race called the Jugali, who used technology that should have been well beyond their ability to develop. Captain Kirk and his crew soon discover their advanced technology is due to cultural interference by a Federation scientist called Bayne. Bayne was to be played by the iconic and notorious Milton Berle.

Bayne had good intentions, but as things often do in science fiction, those good intentions result in unintended consequences. Because of his interference, the Jugali begin worshipping Bayne as a god. Captain Kirk’s job is to get him out of there without further damaging the Jugali.
The whole Bayne is a god mess would have ended up being comedic, had the script made it on screen. But that’s not what the script’s writer, Conrad Spinrad intended. So he set out to sabotage his own episode of Star Trek.
How Conrad Spinrad Killed His Own Star Trek Script
By Spinrad’s own account, the screenplay was a victim of a sometimes terrible but integral part of big- and small-screen productions: the rewrite. Roddenberry originally commissioned a dramatic script from Spinrad that would feature Milton Berle (and an “overgrown backlot village set” Roddenberry was apparently fond of). Berle — who was commonly referred to as “Mr. Television” — was arguably the biggest television star in the medium’s history and was mostly known for comedy.

The Star Trek line producer wasn’t aware that Berle could also do drama, though, and rewrote Spinrad’s script into “an unfunny comedy.” Spinrad was so disgusted and ashamed of the rewrite that he campaigned against its production: “This is so lousy, Gene [Roddenberry], that you should kill it!” I told him. “You can’t, you shouldn’t shoot this thing! Read it and weep!”
His pleas paid off, and the script was never filmed, but that also meant he never received any of the residuals that would have gone along with a produced syndicated episode. Eventually, Spinard made at least a little money off his work by publishing the script for fans to read.
Entertainment
Pima County Sheriff Says He Believes Nancy Guthrie Is Alive
Search for Nancy Guthrie
Sheriff Says They Have to Believe She’s Alive
… ‘Nothing Else to Go On’
Published
NBC
As the search continues for Savannah Guthrie‘s kidnapped mother … Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos painted a cautiously hopeful picture of where the investigation is at right now.
In a new interview Wednesday, Nanos told ‘TODAY’ … “We have nothing else to go on but the belief that she is here, she’s present, she’s alive, and we want to save her.”
As you know … detectives suspect Savannah’s 84-year-old mom Nancy was taken from her Arizona home in the middle of the night against her will.
While some details have come out, none of them have led to cracking the case or even identifying any persons of interest in the Tucson-area case.
As we reported … Nancy has a pacemaker that reportedly stopped synching with her Apple devices early Sunday, before she was reported missing. While there is video of blood on Nancy’s front porch, detectives have not said if she’s believed to have suffered any injuries in her abduction. DNA evidence has been collected and sent for testing.
Additionally, TMZ received an alleged ransom note demanding millions of dollars in Bitcoin in exchange for Nancy’s release … and PCSD says they are aware of the alleged note and are coordinating with the FBI.
For now, authorities say there’s no credible information indicating Nancy was “targeted.”
Entertainment
D4vd’s Friend Neo Langston Appears Before Grand Jury in Celeste Rivas Investigation
D4vd’s Friend Neo
Appears Before Grand Jury In Rivas Case
Published
D4vd‘s friend Neo Langston finally went in front of a grand jury after being arrested in Montana for failing to appear as a witness.
Neo showed up Wednesday to a Los Angeles courthouse where a grand jury has been convened since November to gather information on the death of Celeste Rivas … whose dismembered corpse was found last September inside D4vd’s Tesla in Hollywood.
TMZ.com
We got Neo on his way out of the courthouse … and he was mum as our photog peppered him with questions.
We caught up with Beth Silverman, the deputy D.A. presenting the case in Los Angeles, on her way into the courthouse … and she was all business.
TMZ.com
Neo was in front of the grand jury for about 30 to 40 minutes … and he has since left the courtroom.
Given Neo’s friendship with D4vd, who is a suspect in Celeste’s murder, it’s surprising Silverman spent only 40 minutes with him … the prosecutor has been aggressive with questioning witnesses.
TMZ broke the story … Neo, a popular streamer, was cuffed by a small army of cops in Helena, MT, after an L.A. judge signed off on an arrest warrant.
Neo, who had been squirreled away at his mom’s house, was then transported to L.A. and booked into LAPD’s Metropolitan Detention Center on $60,000 bail before bonding out.
Now, it appears Neo was asked questions in the Rivas case. Multiple witnesses have already testified.
TMZ previously reported D4vd is likely to be charged with Celeste’s murder … and LAPD homicide detectives have ID’d a second suspect who may have been involved “before, during, and after” her death.
Entertainment
Everything we know about “Fallout ”season 3 and what's next for Lucy and the Ghoul
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War is coming to New Vegas.
Entertainment
Netflix’s Tense And Tragic 2000s Thriller Is A Manipulative Family Fraud
By Robert Scucci
| Published

Sometimes a thriller is just a little too on the nose, and it loses its ability to generate suspense because you already know all of the beats going into it. 2001’s The Glass House is a masterclass in setting you up for what you already know is going to happen, which is a shame because it’s acted and shot well, but its screenplay never allows the viewer to read between the lines. It’s your classic story about two teenagers getting adopted by their wealthy godparents and given a living situation that seems too good to be true.
As you would expect, everything seems too good to be true because it is. The Glass House makes the fatal mistake of laying all of its cards on the table far too early to allow for a satisfying payoff, and since things escalate quickly, its entire premise gets pushed into absurd territory before you even realize that the antagonists have the last name Glass and live inside of a literal glass house. If you find yourself wondering, “What could possibly go wrong here?” you’ll figure it out quickly.
Those Who Live In Glass Houses …

Showing its namesake in both a figurative and painfully literal sense, The Glass House wastes no time setting up its conflict. Sixteen-year-old Ruby (Leelee Sobieski) and her 11-year-old brother Rhett Baker are orphaned when their parents, David (Michael O’Keefe) and Grace (Rita Wilson), are tragically killed in a car wreck after celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary. After the funeral, Ruby and Rhett learn that they’re going to live with Terry (Stellan Skarsgard) and Erin (Diane Lane) Glass, an exceedingly wealthy couple who go way back with the Baker family.
Before transitioning to their new living situation, Ruby is informed by her parents’ trust fund lawyer, Alvin Begleiter (Bruce Dern), that she and her brother will never have to worry about money as adults, thanks to their parents’ smart financial decisions before their deaths.

Almost immediately, you can tell something is off. Terry makes sexual passes at Ruby, while Rhett is bought off with the newest video game systems to keep him distracted from the familial and financial malfeasance that’s about to take place. Terry owns a luxury car dealership, and Ruby witnesses him being threatened by loan sharks after he talks about his new “personal piggy bank.” Erin, a prominent physician in the area, is seen on more than one occasion shooting up drugs and blacking out in the living room, which she always explains away as her daily insulin needed to treat her diabetes.
Though the authorities eventually get involved in The Glass House, there’s not much that Alvin can do when Ruby voices her concerns to him. Ruby’s private conversations with Alvin, the social workers, as well as her personal emails, are seemingly reviewed by Terry ahead of time, resulting in him always having the perfect answer when questioned about the family dynamic by a third party. We know the Glass family is up to no good, and we know Ruby and Rhett are in danger, so there isn’t much tension baked into the movie. The setup makes no other outcome possible, which leaves you hoping there’s something you’re missing that could actually generate suspense.
When In Doubt, Listen To The Film Score

The biggest issue I take with The Glass House is its patronizing sound design and film score. The music itself is fine and exactly what you’d expect from a thriller, but it also serves as a blunt cue for every sinister thing happening inside the Glass residence. Ruby snoops around while Terry watches her every move, waiting to confront her, so of course the string section is brooding and plucky, with the occasional dissonant piano notes stabbing through the mix. Every single crescendo exists to tell you that a jump scare or reveal is coming.
Terry and Erin are picture-perfect during the day, but the second the sun sets, they’re arguing behind closed doors, and Terry starts doing his dirty work. Ruby begins the film as a troubled, directionless student going through a rebellious phase, and then she’s suddenly the most perceptive teenager you’ve ever seen, clocking all of Terry’s problematic behavior and skillfully manipulating her way out of a horrifying home life.

The Glass House, which is supposed to function as a thriller, has zero thrills because every trope is used to its fullest, and all of them lead to their most obvious conclusion. If you’ve never seen a thriller, it works as a solid primer for newcomers or younger audiences because it wears all of its conventions on its sleeve, which isn’t inherently a bad thing if you’re just trying to familiarize yourself with the beats before moving on to something more refined. If you’re already deep into the genre, though, this one probably won’t offer much beyond frustration.

As of this writing, The Glass House is streaming on Netflix.
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