Entertainment
‘Paradise’s Creator and Stars Break Down Season 2, Episode 7 and What the Nosebleeds Actually Mean [Exclusive]
[Editor’s note: The following contains major spoilers for Paradise Season 2, Episode 7.]
Summary
Following an early screening of Paradise Season 2, Episode 7, creator, executive producer, and showrunner Dan Fogelman and stars Sterling K. Brown and Enuka Okuma joined Collider’s Steve Weintraub for a Q&A discussing the series’ biggest reveals, the long-term plan for the story, and what audiences can expect as the show moves toward its already-planned third and final season.
The Hulu drama, which begins as a political thriller before evolving into something much larger in scale, continues to expand its mythology in Season 2 while deepening its characters. As the story moves toward its conclusion, the creative team is focused on delivering a carefully constructed ending rather than attempting to extend the series beyond its intended arc. Paradise Season 2 also stars Julianne Nicholson, Krys Marshall, Percy Daggs IV, and introduces Shailene Woodley and Thomas Doherty.
During the interview, Fogelman breaks down how the show’s mysteries are mapped out seasons in advance, Brown discusses why the series resonates emotionally despite its dystopian premise, and Okuma shares insight into the collaborative process behind the scenes. The trio also touches on everything from fan theories and production decisions to how actors prepare for complex serialized storytelling. Read the full transcript below, or watch the video above for the full conversation.
Get to Know the ‘Paradise’ Crew
The trio answer a series of questions to warm up.
COLLIDER: I want to start with how much thank you for making such a kick ass show. Seriously. Thank you.
STERLING K. BROWN: Thank you. Big Dan. Dan Fogerman ladies and gentlemen, look at him. Look at him. Ah, he’s so cute.
Before we get started I like doing something at the beginning called get to know your paradise creator and stars. And we’re not gonna do all these questions I promise but I have 49 questions you guys are gonna pick some numbers.
BROWN: 49. It’s specific.
And you’re gonna pick some numbers but the problem is some of the questions are geared towards actors. Some are geared like anyway so if the question if you pull a question for an actor you know what I mean. Got it. So please pick a number.
BROWN: Me? Let’s see if it’s 49 the square root of 49 is 7.
I love seeing movies and movie theaters. Yes. Do you have a favorite movie theater?
BROWN: Oh man. So I live in Culver City for a really long time so that theater in downtown Culver City which is now back in there. It closed and it was arc light and then it closed and then I was back again. So that’s probably the one that I go to the most although I do really miss the landmark. Always off of Pico and whatnot so may it rest in peace. Please pick a number.
ENUKA OKUMA: Number 5.
What is the last movie or TV show you watched that you want to recommend?
OKUMA: Ooh. Oh that’s good. That is a good one. I’ll tell you something. I am in the middle of a Better Call Saul marathon. Oh no. Started a little late, a little late, but I’m really enjoying it and if you haven’t seen it I recommend it.
BROWN: Yeah. That’s a good one. That’s a good one. I like that.
Please pick a number.
DAN FOGELMAN: 28.
What’s the best fan interaction you’ve had and the weirdest?
FOGELMAN: On this show or in life? No no. We had some crazy ones sterling an eye during This Is Us because people would really tell you. I’ve had multiple people come up and tell us that either adopted a child because of the show or they named their child Randall or Jack or something like that. Those experiences are always wild. So that’s a collective group, just cool experience when that would happen.
BROWN: It is cool. I had somebody tell me they quit their job because of me because Randall quit his job in season one. I was like, bro I didn’t tell you quit your job. He was like I was already leaning in that direction. I was like fair enough. Fair enough.
FOGELMAN: I remember the weird, I’m trying to think of a weird one because nobody ever recognizes me, so it’s a better question for Sterling.
BROWN: I recognize you.
FOGELMAN: Thank you, Sterling. I remember I was once on an international flight right when This Is Us started and I kept noticing there was like a handsome man that kept looking at me and I was like oh this is cool am I getting hit on? And then he came over, and he started complimenting This Is Us. He recognized me and I was like whoa that’s weird. And then I could tell he was awkward. And when he walked away my phone started lighting up because it was in the early days of Twitter and I didn’t know when you were getting notified. And it had been Rob Thomas, the lead singer of Matchbox 20. But I hadn’t recognized him.
And he had written, I just had a funny interaction with Dan and I finally had more followers than my aunt. So that was a weird, fun one. That’s a good one.
Please pick another number.
BROWN: Alright I’m going to go with 21.
Brown Explains What Audiences Misunderstand About Acting
“And you’re really just trying to tell the truth as authentically as you can.”
What do audiences misunderstand most about your job?
BROWN: That’s a really good one. Alright so I had this thing happen to me one time at church when I was doing a play. I was living in Brooklyn, I was living in Fort Green Brooklyn. I was going to a manual Baptist church and I was doing a play for the church. And this deacon came over and prayed with us as the cast. And he goes, he goes Lord even though they’re deceiving people please give them the opportunity to perform well and everything.
And I think that’s the interesting thing is that I think a lot of people have this idea that we’re very good liars. And I see it very differently. Like you try to inhabit the truth of the given circumstances of that character. And you’re really just trying to tell the truth as authentically as you can. So I’m actually not a great liar. And I think my favorite actors are ones who aren’t great at lying either.
Please pick a number.
OKUMA: Number 49. You said there’s 50?
BROWN: There’s only 49.
You’re about to say number 50, weren’t you? What’s a creative choice in this show that most audiences probably won’t notice but you’re really proud of?
OKUMA: Starting with the easy ones here. Oh yeah.
BROWN: You picked 49.
OKUMA: I did it to myself. A creative choice.
What does success mean to you now versus when you first started acting?
OKUMA: That’s a great question. That’s a great question. That’s a great question. I love that. No. I mean it actually is a good question because I’ve been doing this since 1990. And I was just so desperately always trying to get to a certain place and I finally in the last 10 years or so I was just like, you know what? It doesn’t matter. I have to stop striving, striving, striving and just as they say, enjoy the ride. Enjoy the ride. And as soon as I did, I booked paradise.
BROWN: Boom. Bada bing, bada boom.
OKUMA: So it is about surrender in many ways. So success is, I think it’s relative but I’m feeling very happy these days.
And the last one, please pick a number.
FOGELMAN: I’ll do 23.
Fogelman Breaks Down the Planning Behind ‘Paradise’s Twists
“It’s cool when that works because it means you’ve taken people on the ride the right way.”
Actually we can make this for a creative sort of choice but what’s the smallest detail you obsessed over for someone’s character? That’s interesting. That’s good.
DAN FOGELMAN: Well, since we’re talking about, we just screened this episode. I mean, trying to pull off the Dylan reveal here the way we did was a writer of the episode Melissa is here along with I think a few. And our editor. Melissa Glenn who wrote this episode and Julia and Romina who edited it are here. I saw them when I walked in.
BROWN: Right on. Right on.
FOGELMAN: Right on. There’s been a lot of math in years. I’ve been really proud of the, like even talking about our actor Thomas and his age in the first episode of this season and putting it will all make sense when it kind of comes back to play. So I cannot tell you the amount of time we spent in our writer’s room figuring that all out and then all that comes next is so complicated it hurts my brain.
But what was the question again? That was a detail that you obsessed over. I think those details, how to pull off. I mean, we, Sterling and I, have done two shows in a row now with big twists at the end. But there’s also the ways that you pull off a little twist or twists in the middle of things. And I think making that feel fulfilling and rewarding and kind of built-in even though you don’t see it coming. You guys weren’t sitting in the screening just now, but it was cool. He said his name was Dylan, and he said what his birthday was. It’s cool when that works because it means you’ve taken people on the ride the right way. And so that’s something we all work really hard at.
Fogelman Reveals the Long-Term Plan for ‘Paradise’
“And now it will kind of, again, transform as we head out of the second season and into the third.”
Now I’m jumping into Paradise questions. Dan, when did you decide you were going to be George RR Martin this season?
FOGELMAN: Well, I’ve actually become friendly with George RR Martin. Text friendly. And you know, it was, it was, we’ve always had this kind of three season plan for the show. And when I first told Sterling about it, I said what the demarcation points would be in the show. How we would end the first season with him hitting the road and learning the world is out there. And the second season would essentially end with him being reunited with and finding his wife and returning to the bunker.
And what happens in the next episode, which I won’t spoil. And that the show would get progressively, would kind of shift in genre. I mean, in the first episode, you think you’re watching a political thriller. And at the end of the first episode, there’s like, oh, there’s something a bit more apocalyptic and sci-fi here. And then as we get deeper into the show, I hope the hope is…
BROWN: We got picked up for the third season. Yeah, yeah, I know, I heard. I don’t know if you know.
FOGELMAN: Just FYI. It’s a good thing because we start shooting in like two weeks.
BROWN: I know, you would have been really fucked. I would have been crazy. But… So I think, and then, you know, progressively the show enters a different space and genre. But we’ve been taking us there slowly. And now it will kind of, again, transform as we head out of the second season and into the third. I’m very excited about the third season. And I think what’s exciting to me is you can hypothesize and you could guess.
And you may occasionally hit on some things, but like, there’s no possible way to guess where this thing is going. And we’ve been really digging in hard and taking it very seriously. I’m very excited about what comes next. So, yeah.
Oh, I have so many follow-ups. Should audiences be more afraid of what they know or what they don’t know right now?
FOGELMAN: Definitely what they don’t know. I mean… My plan is… I mean, I always say with Sterling, it’s, you know… I got… I’m lucky enough to have had a couple of years in the sun with our best actor. And we’re going to put him through it next year. I mean, I’m going to wring him out like a sponge by the time… By the time we are done with this show, he’s going to need a real vacation. That’s my plan. I look forward to it. Thank you, sir.
Why ‘Paradise’ Is Ultimately an Optimistic Show
“And I always think sometimes people are just having bad days or bad years or bad decades or bad half-centuries.”
What’s something viewers think they understand about Paradise that they absolutely don’t?
BROWN: That’s interesting. Have you been following the fan theories as weeks come out and people have been positing their own…
FOGELMAN: My writers show me wild stuff. And once in a while, I’m like, holy shit, that’s the smartest person I’ve had. They should be president. And you all say, wow, people have a lot of time on their hands, you know?
BROWN: I sent you one and I was like, that’s not bad. That’s where we are.
FOGELMAN: Gosh. That’s spoilers, obviously. I’ve always thought that the thing people don’t see… I think people are starting to notice it now, because it’s ultimately a very optimistic show, even though it’s about the apocalypse. It’s optimistic in the way it thinks about people and who people are and what drives people. And I think in its log line, you would think it’s a very pessimistic show. But even as you watch the ending with Gary, the Cameron who played the male man, who I think is just such a terrific actor, there’s kind of a sadness and a humanity to him at the end.
And you see Sinatra has a whole different story, obviously, that we’re getting towards. And I love that moment when Julianne at the end of the episode is so light with her husband and she looks like a different person. She’s such a terrific actress. It’s like, oh, that’s a different person. And that’s a person who’s just had profound grief removed from them.
And I always think sometimes people are just having bad days or bad years or bad decades or bad half-centuries. And so I think the show is… I think people will find by the end that there’s a really optimistic heart at the center of the show in a really weird way.
What do you think people will say after they have seen the Season 2 finale and how many of them will be screaming at the TV?
BROWN: There’ll be a few screams. I think it’s good. I think it’s a solid ending to a season and it’s a good launch into a third season. And it does. The way he pitched it to me in the very beginning, each season it felt almost like the wire, how the wire sort of reinvented itself. You start with the corner boys, then you go to the shores, then you go to the politics of it all. But it’s all part of the same world, but from a different angle each time. And our show is like that, but it also just keeps getting bigger. It keeps getting bigger. And I don’t want to say too much because it’s really good, guys. Listen, let me tell you. You have an opportunity to do something of value. I remember when I did OJ and I was like, oh man, I got nominated for awards and it’s FX.
And I was like, I’m going to go do a network show and it’s going to be great. I don’t care about awards and stuff. This guy can write and I like the show, but we still got recognized in that sort of way. And I was like, all right, now we’re going to do eight episodes. Probably ain’t going to get a whole bunch of attention. That’s quite all right. It’s no big deal. But I don’t know, man. Dan is this wonderful mixture of intelligence and humor and humanity. And I think he can’t help but have it come across when he writes. You don’t think he’s as sweet of a person as he is when you just see him. When you just look at him, you’re like, ah, this guy is fine. But you look at the cheeks and how he turns red instantaneously. And you’re like, oh, there’s a sweetness to this guy. And he can’t help but put that into everything that he writes. And so it’s easy to collaborate with him because the message that you’re putting out into the world is ultimately an affirming one. And sometimes, like I think with our art, you can show the world as it is.
And you can in your own way sort of like tilt the world in a very gentle and easy direction in the way that you think it should go. And in terms of the options of being selfish and keeping things to yourself. Or actually being a part of society that loves and cherishes community and recognizes that we are stronger together. In our own little simple way, like it’s a dystopian, you know, but not in that sort of way. It’s like, you know, we still have choice to do good, to be good. So I think that’s why people have always resonated with it. He’s also a master storyteller on a character level and on a plot level. He gives you that engine that’s like, this mother, what is he going to do next? His M Night Fogelman, baby, you know what I’m saying? I’m hoping that Stark doesn’t go nowhere, but you never know what happens, you know what I’m saying? So I’m here for the ride.
Fogelman Teases Upcoming Mysteries and Character Reveals
“You want to stick the landing.”
What do you want to tease about Alex?
FOGELMAN: I mean, you’re going to learn a lot in the next episode. Yeah, and then one of the goals of the show has always been, I like to end the episode with forcing the audience to get some answers and ask the next set of questions, and then I don’t want to end the season and have so many questions hanging over that it feels unrewarding. So you’re going to get a lot of answers by the end of the season and then kind of a new kind of set of questions or things that you’re ready to go see. I’m talking about it very carefully.
I’m going to ask the two of you, what was your reaction when Dan finally told you about Alex and where this was all going? Spoiler-free.
OKUMA: I mean, I just read the script and found out in that way, and just like you said, what I felt was great was similar to season one, you are satisfied, you know, things wrap up, but the whole world expands even more. But that’s all I’m going to say on that.
BROWN: What can I say about Alex?
FOGELMAN: Alexander. Sterling came into the writers room a couple of weeks ago, and we pitched him the third season. Tell him about when we pitched you the third season.
BROWN: Just stay alive. Alexander Hamilton, ladies and gentlemen, thank you. I cried. I cried in the pitch. He pitched out the whole third season to me, and I think it’s so beautiful. And I’ll say this on the record, because he gets mad when I do it, right? Because you made the George RR Martin thing.
It’s important. Because this crowd will understand it. You want to stick the landing. Yes. You understand. I ain’t trying to cast dispersions. You want to stick the landing. And they pitched out the third season to me or whatnot, and I was like, okay, I feel like our audience from beginning to end. We only had 24 of these joints to get to one place to another, but because we only had 24, it’s very little fat, and you get a chance to push the plot forward in a very muscular way. He was pitching out the season to me, and I was like, all right, is that the end of the season? He goes, no, that’s 301. And I was like, what the fuck? I was like, oh, that happened in the first episode! It’s really, really good. And I normally, and I think Dan and I are similar, we try to under promise over deliver, but my enthusiasm is hard to contain because I think his imagination is so brilliant. And it’s something that I don’t think a lot of folks would have anticipated or whatnot. It’s a wild ride, man. It’s fantastic.
What do you want to say about some of the character’s nosebleeds?
BROWN: Oh, look at you, you’re getting granular now, Steve. Okay.
FOGELMAN: Yeah, I mean, we’ve put a lot of, it’s not me. I have eight writers in my writer’s room that have dug in so deep into areas of, and genres that I haven’t tread in before. And really, I think that, about the nosebleeds, I mean, they’ll make sense. I mean, they will make sense. I think that by the time, if we do what I hope we’ll do, I think the final episode of the series will move you, and it will feel right, and you will also go, how the fuck did they get here from where it started? And if we do that, then it will be a three years worth well spent. For sure. And that’s what we’re trying to do.
OKUMA: They don’t even, so they don’t tell us either. We’re reading this, you know things. If you want to know. No, no, no. I’ll tell you. I’m good with this. I’m good with not knowing.
FOGELMAN: It was in his contract after his seventh Emmy nomination. He gets to hear it early.
OKUMA: He gets to hear it early. Yeah. But they don’t tell us. And so, you know, we get sort of an overview of what’s going to happen in the season in a Bible, and I remember reading the season two when talking about the nosebleeds, and they theorized for us all the different possible reasons. Maybe it’s this, maybe it’s that, maybe it’s this, and my favorite was the last one was, and sometimes people get nosebleeds. That could be a reason.
Is Jane dead?
FOGELMAN: I mean, it sure seemed dead, didn’t it? I mean, you’ll learn more in the last episode. But yeah, I mean, it seems pretty mortal, the wound.
Nothing is…
FOGELMAN: I mean, a dead kid just maybe came back, so nobody’s really dead.
Again, there’s a reason I was asking that question.
FOGELMAN: They all cheered in here, by the way, guys, when she got stabbed. I’m like, this actress is… She’s an incredible actress, and she might be the nicest human being on the planet. And the fact that everybody hates her in this show, shows what a terrific actress she is.
OKUMA: She’s wonderful. And Gary hates you. The Karen is so lovely.
When ‘Paradise’ Season 3 Begins Filming and What Comes Next
“We’re about to get going.”
You touched on it a little bit, but when do you actually start filming season three, and how long are you shooting for?
FOGELMAN: We start in like three weeks, April 7th, I think. April 7th, yep. So we have basically all the scripts are written now. We’re finishing up, and our final touches. So yeah, we’re about to get going.
BROWN: What goes to about…
FOGELMAN: August. Should be mid-August, yeah.
So something that I really want to commend you guys on, and I speak for so many people in California, you shoot in California. Thank you. And one of the things that I think we all know is shooting in California is expensive. I’m sure someone along the way said, if you guys shoot this in Vancouver, or Atlanta, or some other place, you can get X number of dollars more towards your schedule, towards your budget. So what ultimately said, you know, we’re in California, and we need to be here.
FOGELMAN: Well, initially, I mean I said it, and then Sterling said it, and that carried a lot of weight. And it’s like, listen, Sterling and I, we have young families, and we said if we’d like to do this, but we’ll do it if it’s here. And particularly once, I’m one thing, but when Sterling says it, that’s another thing, and that makes it happen. I’ve been talking about it a lot, because my hope is that if we keep talking about it more people in my position and Sterling’s position will put their foot down and say, if you want me, we stay here.
But it’s a very complicated question. When you are scratching and clawing for every piece of a budget to try and make the show you want to make, you can make it for a couple of million dollars more, or a million dollars more, in a different city, because the tax credits are different, because the rules are different, a lot of stuff is shooting in Ireland, in Australia. I mean, I’m shooting a movie out in Australia that I wrote, and I mean, you can barely get a crew out there right now. I know Pete Cameron’s men are telling me they’re considering moving to Australia. And so, it’s complicated, it’s very easy to blame the exodus out of Los Angeles on one factor, when it’s really a combination of factors. There’s studios and networks not wanting to spend the money, the tax credits not being quite where they need to be, although there’s been improvements now. People in lead positions get so much money that it kind of drains the budget from all the other people working on the show, the unions. It’s a really complex problem.
At the end of the day, I’ve chosen to shoot most of my stuff here. When it can be shot in Los Angeles, sometimes things demand to be shot elsewhere. And I will take whatever budget they get, and if that means that, you know, I love the use of the final countdown in this last episode. That’s not cheap. You know what I mean? Those things aren’t cheap. But I would, if we hit the place where that wasn’t doable, I would have used my unbelievable score to end the episode, and that’s how we would have gotten by in that particular situation. And we have an extraordinarily healthy budget, so we’re not just your typical show. In order to get it made, you really can’t get it made in Los Angeles. So it’s like a lot of smart people need to hold hands and figure out how to get more stuff done here. It’s not just one group of people. It’s not the studios. It’s not Gavin Newsom. It’s not the showrunners or the movie stars. It’s everybody. It needs to kind of figure this out.
Will the series finale be an extended episode?
FOGELMAN: Yeah, still is. I don’t know. If it needs to be, I mean, if it needs to be, I don’t… What’s that?
BROWN: No, go ahead. I’m just thinking about it out loud. What would it feel like? You know what I’m saying?
FOGELMAN: Yeah, I mean, the great part about Hulu and these streaming shows is like, on This Is Us, man, every episode has to be exactly 42 seconds.
BROWN: 42.30? 42.30, yeah. I mean, I cannot tell you how much time in my life… He’d be giving me 51-page scripts. I’m like, this ain’t gonna make it on air, man.
FOGELMAN: What you doing? So, yeah, so… We have episodes that are 50 minutes, 60 minutes, 48 minutes. Typically, our scripts are in a range where it’s not going to be too much of a problem, so I don’t think we’ll need to, but if the story dictates it, I’d fight for that.
Fogelman Explains Why ‘Paradise’ Is Designed as a Three-Season Story
“That would be really great, but I don’t think artistically it will make sense.”
I know this is a three-season show, but this is critically popular. Audiences love it. Has there been any discussion of some sort of like, spin-off, or is it really just three seasons? We’re in and out.
BROWN: We got this question before, too. You go. Yeah, you go, and then I’ll back up.
FOGELMAN: I mean, I think this show as it exists is meant to be three seasons, and it would be very hard to figure out a quote-unquote spin-off of it after. I doubt you’d ask me the question a year from now when the finale ends. That said, it’s definitely been brought up and mused about, we love all the people working on it, but I haven’t seen anything resembling a path for that. It’s definitely a three-season show, the core show, and I haven’t seen the path for a spin-off yet. But I have wonderful young writers, and I give it all to them if they come up with something amazing, but no one has yet.
BROWN: It’s a double-edged sword working for you in that you have a beginning, middle, and end in your mind from the beginning, and so it means that we get a chance to build toward something, so artistically, it’s incredibly fulfilling. I just really want my crew to work as much as possible, and with these eight-episode seasons, things get truncated in a while, and going back to the LA question, it’s too expensive a city to live and not work. So if we can have our cake and eat it too, you would mention your next show is whatever, you can do two seasons at once, so you’re shooting 16 episodes or whatever that case is. That would be really great, but I don’t think artistically it will make sense. Same with This Is Us. When we came to the end of that, it was the right time to end, I think three seasons because it’s been conceived as such from the beginning, I feel like if you go to four, it could be like a shark jump because it feels complete.
I think I speak for a lot of people, I love the idea of three seasons and being just a perfect three seasons, and that’s it.
FOGELMAN: I think the big thing is trying to figure out these shows, how to get them back on the air quickly enough. I had Sterling do a little recap online of the first season because I was like, I don’t remember what happened in the first season of the show. And we were back on quick, we were back on within a year, that we were determined, our studio and network were great about picking us up early, but man, it’s hard to get back into these serialized shows when you’re off the air for so long. So like Sterling was saying, that’s another way that more work can stay in Los Angeles, is if in these big shows when you have people you believe in, yes, maybe it’s an eight or ten episode show, but let’s bang out two seasons at once so then there can be a five month break in between the two seasons and you’re shooting season three, and that starts requiring a commitment before a show is a success or a failure. And that’s hard too, you’re talking about astronomical amounts of money. It’s a complicated equation.
The thing that I’m most excited about why I asked you when you were filming is, if you wrap in August, I know it’s coming back early next year in terms of season table.
BROWN: His goal is to give back at the same time each year. You know, we don’t like the two year wait and anything like that. Give the people what they want.
FOGELMAN: We actually would be shooting already, but like we had two pregnant women and the killies tending.
BROWN: Yeah, all of that together. We need to give it a little more time.
I love talking to actors about how they prepare for their scenes and their work. So you guys are filming, you know, hypothetically Episode 4, and you’ve been going, what does a typical weekend look like for you guys? Are you breaking down the script? Are you practicing like what it is actually like getting ready for the next episode? If you take me through your process.
OKUMA: You know, we’re lucky enough on this show to get the scripts early enough and have time with them. I’ve been on a lot of shows where you’re getting revisions the night before and it’s hard to keep all the stuff in your head. But with this show, they’re timely and we appreciate it. But I’m for me, I am. I learn lines pretty quickly, but I have to. I like to sort of keep it in my head, keep it in my body over a couple of days, weeks if I can. And then it’s the second set. It’s easy after that. Yeah. Yeah. So that’s kind of on the weekend. I’m running lines for sure. My husband’s here somewhere. He’s always running them with me. So yeah, that’s what I am.
BROWN: I always appreciate trying to learn my lines at least 48 hours in advance because it does like it’s like Thanksgiving leftovers. It tastes better the next day. So you’re not trying to like cram the night before or whatnot, but you give yourself at least 48 hours because sometimes I don’t have weeks. I’m a new girl.
OKUMA: Well, with your number one, it’s a little more.
BROWN: They got a brother out here tap dancing. That’s doing a bunch of stuff, boy. I got a fire like, please, can I memorize these lines? But it’s also, I mean, in a sense… I find tricks like this on the treadmill or walking around my neighborhood. Physical activity along with memorization sort of allows things to soak in in a way. And then like, I’ll play with different intonations and try not to come with one fixed sort of way of saying it because you don’t want to get locked into a line reading. So I’ll sing it sometimes. I’ll rap it sometimes. I’ll do it with an accent sometimes just being stupid in a very playful way because it keeps it sort of like it’s in there, but it’s not like that. You know what I’m saying? And there’s like different people in our cast do different things. Say Shahi, if you ever see her script, she writes down her lines over and over again in different colored pencils because she has to have like eight different colors of the thing in order for her to memorize the thing. I was like, that’s a choice.
The late great Ron Seafish Jones when we were working on This Is Us, like it was like a jazz score. He had like different underlines and circles and asterisks and all this kind of stuff, right? It was beautiful. My script is fairly bare. I do like, I will ask production for a hard copy sometimes. I’m trying to save trees, but sometimes I need to… I gotta mark my shit up a little bit. You know what I’m saying? And it does… having something tactile helps in a real way. And some people who are great with just the pad, God bless you. And I know there’s things I can probably use on the pad to get the… What’s the pencil on the pad called? I pencil. You wanted him. Hey guys, it’s a pencil. Brother looked at me like it’s just a pencil, bro. What are you talking about?
But there is a certain tactile thing that I enjoy with the hard copy as well. It’s also a matter of depending on where we are. This one’s not as bad because we do two episodes at a time, but you’re shooting out of sequence. So you always have to have, for me, remembering where I was before and where I was after. Because sometimes it can get sort of jumbled up in your head. So you’re like, alright, I’m coming from here and the next thing that I’m doing is that. Okay, and that helps too.
Give me just one more second. Dan, this is for you. Was there a performance that forced you to rewrite or expand a role?
FOGELMAN: Beavers? No, but I will say actually one of the most exciting parts is kind of an extension to that question. Anuka auditioned for, had one and a half, two scenes in the first season. Two? And I kept saying to her, it’s going to be a really big part. You just bear with me. If you bear with me. And that has been, it’s not a surprise and it’s not like we wrote more. But one of my favorite parts of this season is her carrying that whole two previous episodes. Being like, here’s an actor I wasn’t super aware of who read one scene and Sterling and I were like, yeah, we like her. We like that. And then just going, holy shit, we’re giving her half the TV show right now and she’s just been absolutely murdering it. And so that’s like a really exciting thing. It’s not like the coolest part of my job, it’s not necessarily expanding the part for someone. It’s when you go, oh shit, I’ve got it and I can give it everything that we hoped we could do in it. I can give her her own episode. She’s so winning, she’s so good. People are going to be so excited to see her with Sterling and she holds her own right next to this guy who’s a force of nature. And it’s really, really exciting. So that’s a good part.
Brown’s Meryl Streep Story Steals the Show
“And she kissed me right there.”
This is going to probably be my last question. I’ve been asking this of everyone recently. Have you ever asked for someone’s autograph?
FOGELMAN: I mean, as a kid for sure, baseball, I mean, athletes are still my thing. Athletes are still my thing. Not in a long time. I’m trying to think if I’ve asked for a selfie, which I guess is the modern day autograph of anybody of late. And I don’t think, I mean, if I met like Obama or something, I’d ask for a lie.
BROWN: You haven’t met Obama? Nice guy.
FOGELMAN: What about you?
OKUMA: So my parents are huge Young and the Restless fans. So for them, I ended up meeting a crew member and for them, I got them a signed photograph of the actor who plays Victor Newman. They were really into it. So I asked for someone else.
BROWN: That’s amazing. I have a big crush on Meryl Streep. And I remember the first time I met her, she didn’t know who I was. I was like, I’m just a really big fan. And Dan had told me that there’s a possibility of me coming on to Only Murders in the building as a love interest for her. And I came up to her, I was at the Academy Gala and I was like, Dan Folgman says there’s an opportunity for us to work together. And she goes, wouldn’t that be fun? I said, woman, you have no idea. Then this is the best part, right? Because I done American Fiction and then I saw her at the AFI thing. You were there and she comes up and lovingly holds me around the waist. And she said, when I first met you, I hadn’t seen your work, but you were absolutely glorious in American fiction. And she kissed me right there.
FOGELMAN: I’m good, I’m good. By the way, that story had nothing to do with an autograph.
BROWN: That’s my autograph.
FOGELMAN: He just wanted to tell that story.
BROWN: Can I tell the third part of the story? This is the best part. We were at the SAG Awards, now the Actor Awards. And I was backstage with my wife. And now my wife doesn’t walk fast on red carpet days because she looks like a wounded deer just newly born. And the shoes are very, very high. So I’m always coming like, come on woman, let’s keep up. And so we’re backstage and I saw Meryl. And I said, Meryl. And she turned around and she goes, sterling. And she reaches her arm out and then I just walked up with Meryl because Meryl walks fast. She wears flats. And me and Meryl just walked and talked and had a little lovely time. And my wife was behind trying to keep up. And she said, did you just leave me for Meryl Streep? I said, yes. And yes, I did.
There’s nothing I could say right now that’s going to be better than that story.
Paradise Seasons 1 and 2 are available to stream on Hulu now.
- Release Date
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January 26, 2025
- Network
-
Hulu
- Showrunner
-
Dan Fogelman
- Directors
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Gandja Monteiro
- Writers
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Jason Wilborn
Entertainment
Kyle Cooke Tells ‘Bitch’ Amanda ‘F***k You’ on Summer House
Kyle Cooke flipped a switch on the latest episode of Summer House, calling wife Amanda Batula all sorts of names — and raising eyebrows with everyone in the house.
At the beginning of the Tuesday, March 24, episode of the Bravo series, Kyle, 43, and Amanda, 34, were on good terms following a night out with their housemates. However, after Amanda went outside by the pool and left Kyle alone with his DJ switchboard he turned on her.
“F*** you,” Kyle told Amanda after he shamed her for allegedly not being “supportive” of him while their friends Ciara Miller, Ben Waddell and West Wilson looked on.
Amanda quickly told the group to just pretend nothing happened and go to bed.
“What is the point of talking about this? It’s only going to make things worse,” Amanda told the cameras. “I know that it’s wrong the way that he speaks to me. … I just know having a conversation about it isn’t going to go anywhere.”
While Amanda wanted to brush it under the rug, West chose to console her while agreeing that he would overlook the incident if that was what she really wanted.
“Objectively, nothing just happened. That’s bizarre to me,” West, 31, confessed. “That’s the first time where I’ve ever seen something where 100 percent [it] was unprovoked.”
Amanda, meanwhile, claimed that was “a calm version of Kyle” and something she’d been dealing with for 10 years. (Kyle and Amanda began dating in 2015 before tying the knot in September 2021. They announced their split in January.)
“There was a part of me that was like, ‘This is the best I’m ever going to do. And he loves me so much,’” Amanda told West as she started to cry. “[I was] constantly making excuses.”
As Amanda continued to get ready for bed, West went out and tried to convince Kyle to apologize for coming at Amanda seemingly out of nowhere.
Kyle, who was visibly intoxicated, claimed to West that Amanda “gave me f*** you eyes,” but West immediately denied that happened.

KJ Dillard, West Wilson, Kyle Cooke, Amanda Batula, Mia Calabrese and Ciara Miller. Courtesy of Kyle Cooke/Instagram
“I’m sorry for saying f*** you, I just feel like you don’t pay attention to me,” Kyle eventually told Amanda, claiming she doesn’t “make an effort” with him.
Kyle proceeded to accuse Amanda of spending all her time with their friends while he is ignored out at bars or even in their shared house.
When Amanda clapped back, telling Kyle that she only spends time with their crew because he’s with random people, he got even more upset.
“You’re a f***ing dumbass bitch,” Kyle called Amanda as she walked out of their room. She gave a thumbs up to West and Ben, who were in the kitchen, replying, “Oh yeah, I’m a dumbass bitch, Kyle.”
West was outraged by Kyle’s reaction, so he tried again to figure out what was going on with Kyle.
Kyle claimed that Amanda ignored her “all night long with our friends,” telling West, “It’s always a ‘F*** you, Kyle.’”
“But it’s not! This is your head,” West argued. Kyle, however, continued to claim that Amanda “hates” him and proceeded to go to bed without a true apology.
Kyle later admitted in a confessional interview that he was wrong to attack Amanda.

Amanda Batula, Kyle Cooke. Courtesy of Kyle Cooke/Instagram
“There’s no excuse to drop the F-bomb and say F-you to your wife,” Kyle told the cameras. “But I can only go so long getting the cold shoulder. Getting the small but steady jabs.”
He alleged that Amanda’s digs about his life and DJ career had been “piling up” and it didn’t help his confidence that Amanda appeared to be “having a blast with everyone but me” amid their marriage troubles.
Amanda, for her part, told Lindsay Hubbard the next morning that Kyle is going through his own “s***,” but it is “no excuse” to call her names.
Elsewhere in the episode, Kyle confessed, “I’m like the worst version of myself this summer. I’m just not able to articulate anything.”
The Loverboy founder noted that it felt “very isolating” that no one was seeing his side. “It makes me feel like I should just give up,” Kyle added.
The explosive episode between Kyle and Amanda was filmed in late July 2025, six months before the couple officially separated.
Summer House airs on Bravo Tuesdays at 9 p.m. ET.
Entertainment
Jason Statham’s Colossal 2027 Action Sequel Is Arriving Sooner Than Expected for Some Fans
Next year, Jason Statham returns in the highly anticipated sequel to The Beekeeper, which just got a new release update months after filming wrapped. Starring the English actor as Adam Clay, a highly skilled assassin, The Beekeeper 2 is directed by Timo Tjahjanto and written by Umair Aleem, a major change from its predecessor, which David Ayer produced and directed, while Kurt Wimmer wrote. Wimmer is also a co-producer on the upcoming thriller.
As part of next year’s Amazon MGM slate, The Beekeeper 2 is scheduled for worldwide release (including in the US and the UK) on January 15, 2027. However, new reports confirm that the sequel has landed an early release, arriving a day early, January 14, in theaters across Germany. This is because the country’s leading independent, Leonine Studios, has acquired distribution rights in German-speaking Europe, excluding a Pay-1 window on Prime Video, to the film.
The Battle of the Chrises — The Collider Movie Quiz!
If you’re Pine-ing for a Pratt-fall, or thinking “Evans to Betsy! I wish I knew the value of that stitching (the Hem’s worth),” we’ve got you covered.
Who Else Returns in ‘The Beekeeper 2’?
In addition to Statham, the next Beekeeper installment will see the return of Oscar-winner Jeremy Irons as Wallace Westwyld, Emmy Raver-Lampman (The Umbrella Academy) as FBI agent Verona Parker, Bobby Naderi (The Better Sister) as Matt Wiley, and Jemma Redgrave (Doctor Who) as US President Jessica Danforth. Newcomers include Yara Shahidi, Pom Klementieff, and pro wrestler and actor Adam Copeland. The Beekeeper 2 is produced and financed by Miramax, while Amazon and MGM Studios handle distribution outside German-speaking Europe. Statham’s Punch Palace Productions and Chris Long’s Longshot Productions also produce.
Released on January 12, 2024, The Beekeeper was an instant hit with critics, earning generally positive reviews and grossing $162.6 million worldwide against a $40 million budget. It also earned a Verified Hot rating on Rotten Tomatoes, with a 92% audience score, and now holds a 71% Tomatometer rating. Meanwhile, it’s worth noting that the first film was distributed theatrically by Leonine in Germany, where it was a smash hit — debuting at number one at the box office. The action hit drew over 800,000 admissions locally and generated more than 1 million digital transactions, making it Germany’s most successful TVOD title of that year.
The Beekeeper returns with a sequel in 2027. Stay tuned to Collider for further updates ahead of its release.
- Release Date
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January 15, 2027
- Director
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Timo Tjahjanto
- Writers
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Kurt Wimmer
Entertainment
Steve Carell Said Paul Rudd Advised Him Not To Audition For ‘The Office’
Landing the role of Michael Scott became a defining moment in Steve Carell‘s career, but it almost didn’t happen. Before auditioning for “The Office,” he received unexpected advice from fellow actor and friend, Paul Rudd, who thought it was a bad idea. It offers a glimpse at how different things might have been had Carell heeded his advice and missed out on the now-iconic role.
Paul Rudd Had Doubts About The Series

Carell was a guest on the podcast “Good Hang with Amy Poehler,” where he talked about one of his most iconic roles: Michael Scott. At the time of the auditions, Carell was shooting the movie “Anchorman” with Rudd, when the latter advised him against trying out for the role.
“Rudd pulled me aside and was like, ‘Don’t do it, man. Don’t audition.’ It was like, ‘There is no way’.” Carell said, adding that Rudd basically urged him to steer clear of the project.
“The Office” is the American remake of the British sitcom created by comedian Ricky Gervais, who also starred as David Brent, the UK counterpart to Michael Scott. From the beginning, many thought creating an American version of the show was a bad idea, especially since Gervais had done an excellent job portraying the brash and cringey manager. Anyone stepping into that role would face comparisons.
Poehler said she agreed with Rudd’s thinking at that time, saying, “No one can be as good as Ricky Gervais, no one can do that show.”
Steve Carell Did Not Watch The UK Version
Despite Rudd’s advice, Carell pushed forward with the audition. However, he purposefully didn’t watch Gervais show. “I watched a minute of one and he was so good and so specific and so funny,” Carell said. He didn’t continue watching, fearing that he would try to audition with Gervais’ acting in mind.
Instead, he wanted to create a different character rather than imitate what Gervais had done with Brent. Scott, though as cringe-worthy as Brent, was more childish and goofy.
According to casting director Allison Jones, they initially had Paul Giamatti or Philip Seymour Hoffman in mind to play Scott, but they didn’t think they would agree to do a comedy show. Other actors who auditioned for the role include Bob Odenkirk, Patton Oswalt, and Rainn Wilson, who was eventually cast as Dwight Schrute. The role ultimately went to Carell, who Jones said was always a top choice.
The Pilot Tested Poorly
Carell told Poehloer that the pilot did poorly, saying, “Our pilot was the lowest testing pilot in the history of NBC. People really hated it. They actively hated it. And I don’t quite know how it got legs after that,” he revealed. “The Office” first aired in March 2005, with the first season consisting of six episodes. The reviews were mostly poor to mediocre, with many critics comparing it to the British version.
In an interview with Vox, “The Office” writer Michael Schur said that after they shot the final episode of season 1, everyone thought the show was going to be cancelled. NBC executive Kevin Reilly fought for the show, and they were given a second season.
Steve Carell’s Popularity Helped ‘The Office’
As Schur noted, Carell’s popularity after the first season aired boosted “The Office.” At that time, the actor starred in “40-Year-Old Virgin” before the premiere of season 2. “They partially gave us the second season because they had Steve under contract. So. Network executive sticks his neck out. The guy who’s the main character becomes a movie star,” Schur explained.
Furthermore, Greg Daniels, who developed the show, made some changes in regard to Scott’s character. Instead of following the British version, they wrote new material that resonated more with the American audience.
With the changes made, “The Office” found its footing, and the second season became a massive success.
Steve Carell Left ‘The Office’ Before It Concluded
Carell left “The Office” after season 7, and at the time of his departure, the explanation was that he wanted to spend more time with family. A decade later, however, it was revealed that the actor didn’t want to leave, but NBC hadn’t approached him about renewing his contract, as reported by Parade.
Carell said that shooting his final scenes for the show was “emotional torture,” but it allowed him to have a proper farewell to his show and castmates. However, he returned for a brief moment in one of the series’ final episodes.
“The Office” concluded in 2013 after nine seasons, and it remains one of the top sitcoms of all time. In 2025, the show’s spin-off series, “The Paper,” premiered on Peacock, and it has been renewed for a second season.
Entertainment
Mark Goes to Hell at the Worst Possible Time
Editor’s note: The below recap contains spoilers for Invincible Season 4 Episode 4.
The first three episodes of Invincible Season 4 were jam-packed with build-up, introducing new villains such as Dinosaurus (Matthew Rhys) and Universa (Danai Gurira), teasing the looming threat of Thragg (Lee Pace), and setting up the Viltrumite War. Nolan (J.K. Simmons) and Allen (Seth Rogen) are also working alongside Thaedus (Peter Cullen) to build up the Coalition of Planets, Atom Eve (Gillian Jacobs) is pregnant, and Mark Grayson (Steven Yeun) is getting a little too comfortable killing. It’s safe to say, thus far, Invincible Season 4 has been all killer, no filler — that is, until the fourth episode, “Hurm,” which sends the titular superhero to Hell, literally.
Damein Darkblood Returns in ‘Invincible’ Season 4 Episode 4
As Episode 4 begins, Mark arrives at Art’s (Mark Hamill) costume shop. Mark is overcome with guilt over his actions, telling Art that he has become just like his father, and tries to return his black-and-blue suit. Art tells Mark that he doesn’t have to wear that suit and reveals that he has been working on an updated version of his classic yellow and blue outfit. At that moment, Mark receives a call from Eve, informing him of a new call from Invincible Inc.
Then, the episode takes a turn to Hell (or the UnderRealm, as its inhabitants call it). Damien Darkblood (Clancy Brown), his sister Domina (Kate Mulgrew), and the Darkblood Clan take on the lava-skinned warrior Volcanikka (Indira Varma), who wants an artifact known as the Vial to enact Hell on Earth. Damien says they should have waited longer and tried a ritual again, but Domina notes that Volcanikka would have triumphed had they waited any longer. Volcanikka proves to be a worthy opponent, knocking out Damien and leaving Domina as the only one standing. Domina attempts to take on Volcanikka on her own, but her regeneration powers prove to be too much, and she is supposedly killed in battle. Damien awakens and brings his sister’s corpse to his father, the Great Beast (Bruce Campbell). Contrary to the name, the Great Beast doesn’t look very great nor beast-like.
The Great Beast’s ritual slowly begins to resurrect the Darkblood Clan, but unfortunately, in his frail state, he doesn’t have enough power to complete it. Damien then conducts a ritual of his own, using his trenchcoat and a vial containing Nolan’s blood. The ritual doesn’t go as planned, and instead of Omni-Man, Mark arrives, still in his black-and-blue suit. This begs its own question: why would Episode 4 begin with Mark getting an upgraded version of his classic suit back, only to appear in this bottle episode with his black-and-blue one? Season 4’s marketing has already revealed that he’s going to go back to his original color scheme, so teasing the audience at the beginning is a questionable choice. Apparently, the call Mark received at the beginning of the episode had nothing to do with Damien. Instead, he was called to supposedly protect Riley (Chloe Bennet) from the reawakened ancient Egyptian Ka-Hor (Brown). Now stranded, Riley thinks Ka-Hor was behind Mark’s sudden disappearance, but Ka-Hor tells her that wasn’t the case. He wants a male host to possess, having no interest in inhabiting the body of a woman. Regardless, he realizes he’s out of options and decides to possess Riley’s body anyway.
Mark Learns the Truth About Hell in ‘Invincible’ Season 4 Episode 4
Damien attempts to introduce a confused Mark to the Great Beast, who we now know is Satan. Thinking he’s an enemy, Mark immediately attacks Satan, but Damien stops him, saying that’s not why he was summoned to Hell. Mark apologizes, and Damien proceeds to give him the lowdown on what he needs to do, while also revealing to Mark that Cecil (Walton Goggins) exorcised him back to Hell; he did not return on his own accord. Damien tells Mark that Volcanikka has stolen the throne of Hell from Satan, and he needs his help. Mark is reluctant, telling Damien that he’s in a dark place at the moment and that he should call upon other heroes to help, but Damien rejects the idea. He’s also reluctant to help demons, since he was raised to believe that Satan was the bad guy, but Damien tells him that it’s all myths made up by the “surface dwellers.” In fact, humans exist because of Satan. Invincible is already a show that constantly pushes the edge, but bringing in theology isn’t really something the series needed.
Mark ultimately agrees to Damien and Satan’s pleas for help, but warns them that he is not interested in hurting anyone. Mark and Damien are tasked with retrieving Satan’s Molten Crown, which will restore him to his true monstrous form. While on their journey, Damien tells Mark that he was expecting Omni-Man, but it’s revealed that Mark believes his father is dead, executed at the hands of the Viltrum Empire. Regardless, Mark doesn’t think his father would have helped, but Damien says he thought he could convince him with self-interest. What follows is arguably the most entertaining moment in the episode, as Mark and Damien fall down a “bottomless” pit, where the former constantly asks the latter questions about how he talks with his helmet on and the shocking revelation that Heaven doesn’t actually exist. It’s a fairly simple scene, but after spending so much time with Mark at the lowest points of his life, it’s nice to see him confused in a more comedic fashion, instead of reacting in sheer rage.
Robert Kirkman thinks J.K. Simmons’s Viltrumite could fly circles around the Man of Steel.
Upon arriving at the bottom, Mark faces off with Cerberus, the former three-headed guard dog of Hell. Mark is easily able to retrieve the Molten Crown and carries Damien out of the pit. They present Satan with the crown, who then transforms into his true form and speaks exactly how you’d expect a Bruce Campbell character to talk. It’s delightful. Mark waits outside of Satan’s cavern as he performs his ritual to resurrect Domina and the Darkblood Clan. When Damien joins him, he says, “I helped you get the crown, now send me back.” Of course, Damien tells Mark he still needs his help.
Satan has successfully resurrected the Darkblood Clan, but Domina is still gravely wounded and unable to battle, telling her brother to take her battleaxe in the fight against Volcanikka. The battle culminates in Volcanikka and her Magmaites defeating most of the Darkblood Clan, leaving only Mark, Damien, and Satan standing. Her regenerative powers make her a tough opponent, but Mark ultimately defeats her, causing her to melt. But as she evaporates, she warns him that she will never truly go away. Just as the battle appears to be done, a gang of demonic creatures, known as the Vial, arises from the lava, only to be quickly defeated. It’s revealed that the Darkblood Clan has survived the encounter, and Domina is on her way to recovery. Satan thanks Mark for his assistance and prepares to send him back home, telling him, “We owe you a debt. Make us proud.”
Omni-Man Returns to Earth in ‘Invincible’ Season 4 Episode 4
Back on Earth, Eve tells William Clockwell (Andrew Rannells) about her pregnancy, admitting that while she wants to have children with Mark at some point, she isn’t ready to be a mother yet. In fact, she hasn’t even told Mark yet. William comforts Eve, telling her that she sounds “unsure” and that she really needs to talk with Mark about this, not him. Upon his return, Mark finally dons his upgraded yellow-and-blue suit and flies back to the Grayson household, where Debbie (Sandra Oh) and Oliver (Christian Convery) await his arrival. Debbie tells her sons that Paul (Cliff Curtis) has bought a new house and that they’ll be moving. Instead of being excited about a new beginning, Mark and Oliver are conflicted about the move. Seeing that he doesn’t want to hurt his mother’s feelings, Mark tells her that he’ll support her no matter what and that Paul is a great guy.
The episode ends with Mark sitting next to Eve on the roof, telling her about his complicated feelings about the move as well as his trip to Hell, saying, “I’m not OK. But maybe, I’m getting there.” Eve decides that she finally needs to tell him about her pregnancy, but as soon as she opens her mouth, Nolan and Allen arrive, telling Mark, “The time for war is upon us.” A post-credits scene reveals that Damien has made his return to Earth and that Volcanikka is still pursuing a war on the surface world.
“Hurm” isn’t a bad episode of Invincible, but it comes at the worst possible time for the season. Creator Robert Kirkman previously revealed that this subplot never made it into the comics, and upon watching this episode, you can understand why. It just doesn’t feel like the Invincible we know and love. This is a story with superheroes, intergalactic wars, aliens, and human drama, and really digging deep into the supernatural elements, through the character of Damien Darkblood, doesn’t feel needed. If this episode were to have come during the second or third season, it may have been more effective, but the detour for this particular story in Season 4 is more jarring than effective.
- Release Date
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March 26, 2021
- Network
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Amazon Prime Video
- Franchise(s)
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Invincible
- The bottomless pit moment is funny.
- Mark’s classic suit returns!
- Episode 4’s story doesn’t fit with the rest of the season.
- The episode’s supernatural elements add unnecessary lore to an already crammed world.
Entertainment
Brooks Nader’s Cosmetic Procedures Revealed: Lipo and More
Brooks Nader isn’t afraid to discuss her cosmetic procedure history.
“When I was 18 and I moved to New York, I was like, ‘I’m gonna get filler. I’m gonna do all these treatments, I’m gonna get lipo, whatever it is,’” she exclusively told Us Weekly in February 2026. “My parents gave me, like, $1000 and they were like, ‘Have fun.’ I felt like it was what everyone was doing. I was thrown into this world of Hollywood and chasing perfection. And I thought that getting filler was the answer.”
Nader has admitted to getting face fillers and using GLP-1s, like Ozempic and Wegovy, to lose weight. She also confessed that she regretted getting liposuction when she was younger.
Keep scrolling to see which cosmetic procedures she’s gotten done and how she feels about it:
Brooks Nader’s Nose Job
Brooks Nader shared that she got rhinoplasty, more commonly known as a nose job. She shared in a November 2025 interview with Bustle that others have told her she looks “like Michael Jackson” as a result of the surgery.
Brooks Nader Has Veneers
In a November 2025 interview with Bustle, the model revealed she got veneers done by Dr. Michael Apa.
Brooks Nader Has Gotten ‘Countess’ Injectables
Brooks Nader told Bustle in November 2025 that she has received “countless” fillers over the years. She has gotten Botox, salmon sperm facials and the Nefertiti Lift, which is an injection technique done around the jawline.
“Every Christmas, you can catch me looking like Freddy Krueger,” she quipped.
Months later, Nader exclusively told Us that she has gotten multiple of her fillers dissolved.
“I honestly felt really good about it, because I feel like I get a lot of the comments that are like, ‘You look 40, you look 40, you look 40,’” Nader said. “I’m like, ‘What? I don’t want to be 40.’”
Brooks Nader Got — and Now Regrets — Liposuction
In a March 2026 interview with People, Brooks Nader confessed to getting liposuction “years ago” but now regrets the decision.
“I forever regret it because I just didn’t need it,” she admitted. “I feel like it created dimples and ripples and things.”
Brooks Nader Has Taken GLP-1 Weight Loss Medications
Brooks Nader has been open about using Ozempic and other GLP-1 medications. (The prescriptions were created to manage diabetes by regulating blood sugar levels and appetite, which often leads to weight loss.)
In her November 2025 interview with Bustle, Nader shared that she used the medication after being told she needed to lose weight to book more modeling gigs.
“I didn’t shed one tear over it. I don’t feel bad for myself. I just say, ‘The facts are they want me to lose weight. How can I achieve that?’” she reflected. “The facts are that when I started GLP-1, my career took off. I’m not saying it’s OK. I’m not saying it’s right. I think everybody is different — but I lost 30 pounds, and I booked all the jobs.”
Entertainment
Cyndi Lauper’s Husband Sued Amid Assault Claims Against Son
A woman has filed a lawsuit against Cyndi Lauper’s husband, David Thornton, alleging that the star couple’s rapper son, Declyn Lauper, sexually assaulted her.
According to court documents obtained by Us Weekly on Tuesday, March 24, the woman alleges that Declyn, 28, sexually assaulted her in a New York City penthouse in November 2020 after she “refused to perform oral sex on him.” TMZ was first to report on the filing.
The Monday, March 23, docs detailed that the woman, who was not identified, claims Thorton, 72, “enabled” the alleged incident “because he leased the penthouse and knew of” Declyn’s alleged “violent and sexually abusive propensities.”
Us Weekly has reached out to representatives for Thorton and Declyn for comment.
The lawsuit claims that Declyn, also known by his stage name Dex, “invited the woman … and sent her money for private car transportation,” per the outlet who also reported that “when she arrived, she claims he seemed agitated, and they disagreed about her performing fellatio.”
The woman then claims that “when she insisted on leaving, Dex took her phone and threatened to break the device if she did not” comply, before he allegedly “pushed her onto his bed with his genitals exposed, held her arms down, and forcibly smothered his genitals over her mouth.”

Declyn Lauper Chance Yeh/Getty Images for Marquee New York
As for the filing against Thornton, the woman alleges that the Home Alone 3 actor knew of Declyn’s alleged “prior sexual violence against women and prior settlements of claims for similar conduct.”
The woman claims that Declyn’s ex Brittney Taylor alleged in 2018 that the rapper “was physically and verbally abusive during their romantic relationship,” and that his father allegedly “knew about the allegations but failed to take any action to supervise, restrict, or prevent his son from using the Premises to perpetrate sexual violence.”
The lawsuit also claims that the woman suffered “physical injuries, pain and suffering, emotional distress, humiliation, embarrassment, stress and anxiety, loss of self-esteem and self-confidence” as a result of her alleged November 2020 interaction with Declyn.
The filing comes after The New York Post reported earlier this month that Declyn accepted a plea deal in relation to a February 2024 criminal charge. As part of the deal, he pleaded guilty to possessing a weapon in the second degree in exchange for no prison time in relation to the charge, which was issued after a “shooting in Upper Manhattan” that saw “another individual … hit in the leg.”
Entertainment
“SNL” alum calls out cast members who break into laughter during sketches: 'It doesn't work'
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Kevin Nealon doesn’t seem to be a fan of the recent Ryan Gosling episode.
Entertainment
Peter Jackson Is Making A New Lord Of The Rings Movie, It’s About Tom Bombadil
By Joshua Tyler
| Updated

New Zealand filmmaker Peter Jackson is working on a new Lord of the Rings movie, and to make it, he’s teaming up with talk show host Stephen Colbert. This is not a joke or a drill; it’s happening, and they’re already writing the script.
Stephen Colbert, long known as one of Hollywood’s most obsessive Tolkien fans, is co-writing the film alongside his son, Peter McGee, and returning franchise writer Philippa Boyens. They’re using the working title The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past to refer to the project. It’s not clear yet if that will be the movie’s final title.
Here’s the announcement recorded by Peter Jackson…
The story they’re developing is based on six specific chapters from J.R.R. Tolkien’s Fellowship of the Ring. Those chapters are numbers three through eight, often referred to as “Three Is Company through Fog on the Barrow Downs.” They involve Frodo first leaving the Shire, encountering his first Black Rider, and, most notably of all, encountering Tom Bombadil.

Tolkien fans will no doubt remember that Tom Bombadil was the biggest omission from the original Lord of the Rings movies. Jackson will now remedy that by making an entire, dedicated Tom Bombadil story.
Tom Bombadil is one of the strangest and most mysterious figures in The Lord of the Rings. Living in the Old Forest with his wife Goldberry, in Tolkien’s book, he appears cheerful and harmless, yet possesses immense, unexplained power. He’s so powerful that he’s totally unaffected by the One Ring.

Bombadil rescues the hobbits from multiple dangers, including the Barrow-downs, but exists completely outside the main conflict of Middle-earth, seemingly untouched by its wars, politics, or even its rules.
Peter Jackson is mostly involved in The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past on the production side, reuniting with key members of the original creative team, signaling that this isn’t a reboot but another attempt to mine unused Tolkien material with the same people who built the franchise the first time. This new project is slated for release after Lord of the Rings: Hunt For Gollum, a feature film in production under the direction of Lord of the Rings alum Andy Serkis.
Entertainment
‘Reacher’s Alan Ritchson Absolutely Crushes This Underseen 2020 Supernatural War Movie
When Ghosts of War was released in 2020, it didn’t get a lot of traction and gained mostly unfavorable reviews from the critics. From the current perspective, this horror film set in the penultimate year of World War II hits differently, with its effective mix of not only suspense and action but also supernatural and psychological aspects. Admittedly, the initial premise of Eric Bress‘ film doesn’t come off as very original, as the war setting isn’t anything new to the horror genre, thanks to such outings as Overlord, Trench 11, The Bunker, etc.
Few films, however, offer truly interesting concepts within the genre wrapping, mostly content with finding new ways to introduce various monsters (most commonly, zombies) to the historical setting. A notable exception was M.J. Bassett‘s 2002 film, Deathwatch, which presented war itself as a monster. And Ghosts of War, despite all the plot differences, leans towards the same idea, focusing on the way war shapes horrific moral dilemmas and showing how guilt and shame over certain actions or inaction can create their very own monsters and curses. And now that star Alan Ritchson is dominating on Netflix with his new war thriller War Machine, now is the perfect time to revisit this underseen war thriller.
What Is ‘Ghosts of War’ About?
In 1944, five American troopers of the 82nd Airborne Division arrive at a chateau located somewhere in rural France. They are under orders to guard the place, and at first none of the men think much about the fact that the unit who had the previous shift seem rattled and can’t get out of there fast enough. The guys barely manage to settle in when strange, seemingly paranormal occurrences start happening all around them. Between the mysterious knocking coming from the fireplace—which seems to be using Morse code to send ominous messages—and a journal that details the terrible fate of the family that used to live here, the characters succumb to the dark presence that lurks around them. German soldiers arrive and attack, but at this point, the Americans have already come to realize that what they’re dealing with inside the house might be much more dangerous than the enemies they are trying to keep out.
The Gothic setting of the mansion and all the potential chills that come with it can bring another reference to a supernatural horror set during WWII to mind—the unfortunate sequel to an already unnecessary remake, The Woman in Black: Angel of Death, which came out in 2014. Unlike the latter, though, Ghosts of War doesn’t only utilize war as a backdrop to a classic ghost story about a vengeful spirit who wants retribution but incorporates it into the emotional core here: war isn’t the background of the horror; it’s the catalyst for it. Eric Bress isn’t a novice in genre cinema, having previously worked on the Final Destination franchise—both the second and fourth films—as a screenwriter and having directed The Butterfly Effect. In Ghosts of War, which he both wrote and directed, he makes effective use of space, which remains pretty limited for most of the story, making it work for both horror and the prolonged action sequence depicting the attack by the Germans.
The Cast of ‘Ghosts of War’ and Its Effective Twist Elevate It From Being a Typical Ghost Story
Like many movies with a clear anti-war message, Ghosts of War has a very specific set of characters and a very particular cast that all help to sharpen the idea that most people who find themselves in the trenches aren’t black and white heroes or villains. Just ordinary people who try to hold on to their sanity amid chaos and madness. That is especially evident in the case of the future Jack Reacher, Ritchson, who plays one of the privates with his trademark natural charisma of a man who could’ve been the hero of the story and the one to make it to the end credits in some other scenario. Here, however, he unexpectedly becomes the first and almost random victim, once again emphasizing the idea of war as the dark force that devours everything and everyone in its path.
Other actors in the core cast fully contribute to this effect too. Brenton Thwaites plays the unit’s commander, who does his best to lead but comes off just as confused as the men he’s supposed to be in charge of. And Kyle Gallner, who hadn’t fully reached his Scream King status at that point but already had several noticeable genre outings under his belt, seems to be channeling his experience in The Haunting in Connecticut, playing a character who is probably the most perceptive of the supernatural presence inside the mansion. Rounded out by Skylar Astin and Theo Rossi, this group comes off as a bunch of regular young men who are roughened and exhausted by the war, but try to stick to some semblance of normalcy by gathering around the fireplace and scaring each other by relaying terrible incidents as if they were campfire stories.
Alan Ritchson Addresses Growing Expectations for ‘Reacher’ Season 4
The hit series is eyeing a 2026 return.
While Ghosts of War isn’t by any means a subtle film, the gradual dissolution of the familiar reality is what it does best, hinting at a possible twist with the help of several discrepancies in the story, noticeable to history buffs, and the mention of the famous Ambrose Bierce‘s short story, An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge. When Bress’ film first came out, a lot of the criticism it faced was aimed specifically at the movie’s ending, claiming that both the twist and the following resolution sort of render the previous events pointless. In the context of the movie’s broader meaning, though, there is another way to see this controversial ending. In its final sequence, Ghosts of War seems to be fully embracing its psychological horror origin, showing that the only way to deal with trauma is to go back to the roots of it and address it directly, instead of going through the soothing motions that are merely an illusion of moving forward.
Entertainment
These Katie Holmes-Inspired Wide-Leg Jeans Are a Must-Shop
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The best thing about jeans is that they come in so many variations, so it’s practically impossible not to find a style you love. But thanks to heavy inspiration from Katie Holmes, we found a pair that flatters everybody (and every body). These wide-leg jeans have a distinctive hem and relaxed look that’ll have you reaching for them every week.
Holmes gave us a lesson in cool-mom style when she wore her medium-wash jeans in San Diego. They’re not your typical wide-leg jeans, though, as they have a denim colorblock situation and frayed hems. Consider them a bit funkier than a typical option! To get the style, we luckily found the Jyutia High-Waisted Wide-Leg Jeans to be a wildly similar pick.
Get the Jyutia High-Waisted Wide-Leg Jeans for $37 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate as of the publishing date but are subject to change.
The Jyutia jeans are made of mostly cotton, but there is elastane in there to provide comfortable stretch. Unlike typical denim that comes in number sizes, these are available in small, medium, large and X-large. And to get the Holmes-approved look, snag the Mid Blue color, but the Dark Blue and Black are also no-fail options.
We love how Holmes paired the chunky frayed hem on the jeans with a feminine white blouse. The Mary Jane flats and sunglasses tied the look together for an ultra-stylish mom-on-the-go feel. The wide-leg silhouette allows you to play with your tops and footwear while keeping your proportions balanced.
If there’s one thing all the Amazon shoppers can agree on, it’s that these wide-leg jeans exceed expectations. The nice fit and stretchy fabric make them easy to wear from day to day.
“These are my new favorite jeans! They are high-rise, wide-leg with cuffs. They’re a lighter-weight jean with stretch. The cuffs stay up or you can uncuff and wear,” a five-star reviewer wrote.
“The cut is perfect, the fabric is stretchy and comfy and the perfect color. I wore them to my stylist, who is a real fashionista, and she loved them so much I had to send her a link. Great quality and so stylish,” another happy shopper said.
From the relaxed silhouette all the way down to the unique hem, these Amazon jeans are giving Holmes’ a run for their money. But luckily, you won’t have to spend a lot of yours to get the style!
Get the Jyutia High-Waisted Wide-Leg Jeans for $37 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate as of the publishing date but are subject to change.
Looking for something else? Explore more wide-leg jeans here and don’t forget to check out all of Amazon’s Daily Deals for more great finds!
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