Entertainment
Khloé Kardashian Claps Back At Lamar Odom’s Overdose Claims
Whew, Roomies! Khloé Kardashian is telling Lamar Odom to put some respeck on her name after she broke down her support for him during his 2015 overdose in his new Netflix documentary, ‘Untold: The Death & Life Of Lamar Odom.’ Although Khloé says she was by his side during hiwsrecovery, he seemingly denied some of her claims in recent interviews. But Khloé isn’t letting it slide, she’s making it real clear that she held him down.
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Khloé Kardashian Claps Back At Lamar Odom’s Claims About Her Support During His 2015 Overdose
The reality star is setting the record straight after Lamar Odom seemingly disputed comments she made in his Netflix documentary. The documentary unpacks the former basketball player’s struggles with addiction, including the moment he was found unresponsive in a Nevada brothel in 2015. In the film, Khloé reflects on their marriage and explains why she called off their divorce proceedings to be by his side.
During an episode of her podcast, ‘Khloé in Wonderland,’ she expressed her frustrations with Odom’s feedback while speaking with her bestie, Malika Haqq. Khloé made it clear that she was unhappy with Lamar’s response to her comments and his claims of denying that she was supportive during his overdose and recovery. She said she felt disrespected, because she did the documentary as a “favor” to him.
“I willingly do the Netflix thing for Lamar; I’m not getting one penny to do this. I have no dog in this fight; it doesn’t matter to me if this documentary is made or not made. And it’s also something I really don’t want to talk about anymore,” Kardashian said.
Khloé Doubles Down On Being By Lamar’s Side
During her podcast, Khloé said she peeped Lamar doing a few press interviews about the documentary. She said he seemed to be “annoyed” with her and even seemingly accused her of “lying” about her role in his life when he overdosed. From there, the Good American founder added that she thinks Lamar is essentially discrediting her support because he didn’t like the public’s response to the documentary. She added that it feels like he’s attempting to slander her name since he didn’t have anything positive to highlight during his sobriety journey.
“You’re not now going to s**t on me or play in my face, because you don’t like the reaction and response from the public.” She continued, “Now to act like I didn’t do all of the things I did, and insinuate I’m a liar is crazy.”
Here’s What Lamar Previously Said About Khloé
On April 6, Lamar Odom sat down for an interview on ‘TODAY‘ with Jenna & Sheinelle. When asked if he believes Khloé saved his life, Lamar said he thinks she helped in some ways and did take care of him. “In some ways. I think God saved my life. My Lord saved my life, honestly.” Odom continued, “She took care of me. God took care of me the most. What I came back from was like a medical miracle.”
Khloé first filed for divorce from Lamar in December 2013 after four years of marriage. However, she ended up dismissing it in 2015 to help make medical decisions during his overdose. She filed again in 2016, and they finalized their divorce in December 2016. Nine years later, they reunited during the season 6 premiere of ‘The Kardashians’ in February 2025. During his ‘TODAY’ interview Lamar said their first reunion since separating felt awkward. “It wasn’t really good for me, but you know, once you family, you always family, so she ain’t going nowhere.” Additionally, he said he will always have love for her, but he’s not in love with her.
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What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
“Megan Is Missing” ending explained: Is Megan found?
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It’s among the most notorious found footage movies of all time. For those who can’t bear to watch, EW spoils it all.
Entertainment
Netflix’s Best Drama of All Time Is a 7-Season Series You Can Binge Again and Again
When Netflix was first founded, it was a way to rent DVDs through the mail, before it transformed into a streaming service, which changed how audiences watched movies and TV shows. Now, all you needed was an internet connection and a Netflix account to see the best original content all in one place. Netflix has been the home of many great shows over the years. Stranger Things, The Crown, and Mindhunter are only a few of many that come to mind. One of the greatest of all is Orange Is the New Black. Created by Jenji Kohan and released in 2013, Orange Is the New Black could have been just another prison drama, this time with a nearly all-female cast to make it more provocative. Instead, its ever-changing cast of characters led to an impressive show that stayed compelling for seven seasons.
‘Orange Is the New Black’ Initially Focuses on Taylor Schilling’s Piper Chapman
Part of what keeps Orange Is the New Black so grounded is that it’s based in part on a true story, with inspiration coming from Piper Kerman‘s memoir, Orange Is the New Black: My Year in a Women’s Prison. In the series, the renamed Piper Chapman, played by Taylor Schilling, is the way in to this terrifying world. This shouldn’t be how Piper’s life ends up. She comes from money, has a fiancé named Larry (Jason Biggs), and the most hardcore thing about her life is owning a business where she makes bath soaps. However, Piper also has a past with an ex-girlfriend, Alex (Laura Prepon), who she once carried drug money for. Love and getting in over her head eventually come back to take her down, landing Piper in prison with a 15-month sentence for money laundering.
Orange Is the New Black puts terror around every corner. Piper is the scared blonde who prison will eat alive if she doesn’t adapt. It’s not found only in her fellow inmates, like the scary Russian boss Red (Kate Mulgrew) or the unstable Tiffany (Taryn Manning), but in the guards meant to protect as well. One guard, George (Pablo Schrieiber), is the most feared of all by women as a man who uses his power to terrorize the inmates who don’t really have a voice in their prison.
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The first real Netflix sensation.
Orange Is the New Black is dark at times, while also brimming with uncomfortable comedy, twists, and intrigue found not only by showing how Piper’s fiancée and other family are doing without her, but also through flashbacks that show how she landed herself in prison. Piper evolves in this new environment that forces her to learn how to hold her own. But Orange Is the New Black was never just meant to be about Piper Chapman. The series took things to the next level by taking the supporting characters and making them the heart of the series. If Piper was our way into the series, the rest of the cast is the reason to stick around.
A Well-Written Cast of Characters Kept ‘Orange Is the New Black’ Moving
What separates Orange Is the New Black from other shows is its ability to keep changing. This is a prison where inmates come and go. In that way, it’s similar to The Pitt, which stays fresh with its flexible casting decisions between seasons. Every new season of Orange Is the New Black truly does feel new for this reason. Every season acts like a soft reset, staying in a familiar setting, but offering new twists with characters who must change in their environment and not simply because a script demands it.
Orange Is the New Black was also praised at the time for having a spectacularly talented and diverse cast of women. They are heroes and villains, coming from all types of backgrounds, yet none of them fit easily into some stereotypical box. Even Tiffany, who goes by Pennsatuckey and comes across as the typical prison villain, can become someone audiences end up rooting for. Suzanne (Uzo Aduba) gets stuck with the nickname “Crazy Eyes,” but remains one of the most well-crafted and likable characters of them all, with Aduba’s performance resulting in two Emmys. Red is the aging boss among the inmates, losing her powerful hold on her fellow inmates. Nicky (Natasha Lyonne) is cool and cocky, and she seemingly has no worries, but dig a little deeper and there’s so much more to her than just her façade. Poussey (Samira Wiley), who begins as a comic relief character, has a story that ends in a heartbreaking tragedy. And that’s just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to this series. Forcing all of these different personalities together creates constant chaos in the series, which fuels the drama, especially as new people are brought in every season.
Orange Is the New Black is a brutal drama, a black comedy, and a series that shows compassion to its characters rather than turning them into predictable stereotypes. It also has a lot to say about the prison-industrial complex and how prisoners are treated. Some of the guards can break the archetype, like the kind John Bennett (Matt McGorry), while others are almost completely irredeemable. It doesn’t stay inside the walls either. Just like with Piper’s story, Orange Is the New Black explores how these women ended up in prison through flashbacks, which gives more insight into their true selves. This Netflix series is so much more than a gimmick or just Piper Chapman’s story. Orange Is the New Black will make you laugh and break your heart at the same time, all while being an exciting thrill ride to the very end.
Entertainment
Robert De Niro and Ben Stiller bicker at CinemaCon while presenting “Focker In-Law” trailer: 'Very disrespectful'
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The comedy sequel hits theaters on Nov. 25.
Entertainment
Chick-fil-A Staff Go Viral — Then Lose Their Jobs
Eight Chick-fil-A employees at Tuskegee University in Alabama were reportedly fired. This, after footage of them doing the chest bounce, went viral. The employees were mostly college students, and Sophomore Landin Rolle believes the university’s administration, not Chick-fil-A, was responsible for their firings.
Now, the fellow sophomore Denevea Simpkins and the other ex-employees are speaking out.
And The Shade Room’s Justin Carter is recapping the events on ‘TSR Investigates.’
Chick-fil-A Staff Go Viral
According to Carter, Landin Rolle suggested the trend to the group one day during their closing shift. The group created a 25-second clip that went viral, racking up over 8 million views. However, it wasn’t the first dancing Tok they had reportedly created.
Per Ty’Keria Clemons, the group’s former supervisor, they then received a message from a manager.
“And he was like, ‘You guys need to come to see me on Monday. Immediately. Do not clock in,’” she recalled.
However, Clemons believes it was the leadership at Tuskegee University that got her and her staff fired.
“A lot of the students here are very disrespectful… I feel like some of them were very much petty and sent it to the higher-ups and the Vice President,” Landin Rolle told Carter.
More On The Staff Losing Their Jobs
According to Carter, a public employee handbook for Chick-fil-A has not been located. However, the company has reportedly encouraged employees to refrain from recording videos at work. This, unless the content is approved.
Scroll above to watch as Carter shares previous instances where staffers were fired for their activity on social media. Additionally, fellow sophomore Denevea Simpkins is speaking out, sharing that she’s allegedly been turned away from leadership opportunities on campus, seemingly because of the viral footage. Lastly, Carter shares how the university is reportedly connected with the Chick-fil-A location.
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What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Netflix’s Smash-Hit Series Never Needed To Be an Anthology
Season 1 of Beef was fast-paced, anxiety-inducing, and perfect in many ways. The concept revolved around two people who crashed into each other’s lives after a road rage incident, and their “beef” causes a domino effect of problems in both of their lives. Considering how cleanly it was wrapped up, it was hard to imagine how Beef could justify a second season. It turns out that showrunner and creator Lee Sung Jin had the answer when Season 2 was announced: an anthology.
On the surface, Beef Season 2 has a very similar skeletal composition to Season 1. Instead of two people butting heads, the conflict now involves two couples at very different points in their lives, clashing with each other. This brings with it not only new drama involving the individual couples but also attempts to approach relationships through a realistic and flawed lens. Where Beef Season 2 starts to unravel, though, is when it becomes overly filled with concepts it wants to tackle. From the widening socioeconomic divide to impossible beauty standards to discussions involving race and identity, there’s simply too much for eight episodes, and the result is an ambitious but bloated sophomore season.
‘Beef’ Season 2 Takes a New Twist on the Conflict
While Beef Season 1 focused on a road rage incident that leads to bad blood between Danny (Steven Yeun) and Amy (Ali Wong), Season 2 expands its focus beyond just two people. Josh (Oscar Isaac) and Lindsay (Carey Mulligan) are an affluent married couple in their forties who have been growing emotionally and sexually distant. Ashley (Cailee Spaeny) and Austin (Charles Melton) are a younger, recently engaged couple who are financially struggling but happily in love. Ashley works for the country club in bougie Montecito, where Josh is her boss, and when Ashley and Austin witness Josh and Lindsay have a blow-out fight that nearly turns violent, they record the incident and use it as blackmail to get Ashley a promotion.
Threatened with the potential ruin of their reputation, Josh and Lindsay capitulate begrudgingly, and Ashley begins to move up in the world. With Ashley’s new position at work, she also begins to maneuver a full-time position for Austin at the club as a physical therapist, though he has no actual experience with PT. Despite the blackmail and worrying about where rent money will come from next month, Ashley and Austin are very devoted to each other. Austin is highly sensitive and thoughtful, while Ashley is motivated and determined to gain stability leading up to their eventual marriage.
On the flip side, Josh and Lindsay’s marriage is crumbling. Although they live in a beautiful house, Josh has a great job, and they have a cute dachshund named Burberry, they’re burdened with money problems and a growing rift between them. They haven’t had sex in a long time, with Josh preferring to go to OnlyFans and Lindsay flirting with Woosh (BM), the tennis instructor, and random guys who slide into her DMs. They might have loved each other once, and probably still do on some level, but their marriage is fractured. At the heart of Season 2 is the complicated dynamic that these two couples have with each other, which is actually far more interesting than the actual beef that was the impetus for the series, and therein lies the problem.
‘Beef’ Season 2 Fails to Hit Its Biggest Target: Class Divides
Josh and Lindsay’s relationship is a dark mirror to Austin and Ashley’s, and one thing that Season 2 gets right is just how complicated romantic relationships can be. You might fall out of love with someone and decide to stay with them, or you might be deeply in love with someone and still decide to separate. Although that offers enough material for a strong series, that kind of show wouldn’t exactly fall under the Beef umbrella.
So, instead, the series puts the relationships center stage, but then clutters episodes with all manner of storylines to offer the twisty roller coaster ride we experienced in Season 1. Like in the previous season, wealth inequality and money are major motifs, but they’re handled much more sloppily here. Rather than solely focusing on the nuances of Josh and Lindsay’s wealth compared to Austin and Ashley’s financial burdens, the series inserts another third party: Youn Yuh-jung‘s Chairwoman Park, the owner of the country club that Josh manages.
From ‘Chernobyl’ to ‘Beef,’ 10 Award-Winning TV Shows You Can Watch in One Weekend
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The series is not subtle in the way it continuously reminds us that while Josh is financially more secure than Ashley, he is not nearly as rich as the people he serves. The club members casually jump on a private jet and fly to a chalet for a party, they’ll make quick trips to South Korea for a little plastic surgery, and people like Chairwoman Park can even make the law turn a blind eye if she wants to cover up any mishaps.
Though Youn is, as always, deeply compelling as an actor in her scenes, both she and Song Kang-ho, who plays the chairwoman’s second husband, Dr. Kim, feel like they exist to kick up more dirt and create more drama. The shift in tone when the chairwoman arrives makes the initial conflict of the recorded fight seem almost inconsequential. The series tries to make a commentary on relationships through Chairwoman Park and Dr. Kim’s transactional marriage, but the parallel doesn’t hit quite as well and ends up muddying the waters.
While Beef Season 1 tightly orbited its two main protagonists, the larger main cast of Season 2 makes everything messier. There’s not enough in the series to hold it together, and the result is a story that feels disjointed. Social issues, such as commentary on both Austin and Josh’s identity — Austin is half-Korean, and Josh is Cuban — are only lightly touched on and feel almost performative rather than impactful.
The same can be said for the episodes that get into the broken healthcare system in America and the unrealistic beauty standards set for women. The scenes we get present the issue, but offer no new arguments, and the message is about as predictable as you can imagine. Plus, all the storylines with Chairwoman Park feel genuinely lifted right out of a corporate espionage story rather than Beef. The series makes a major tonal shift that is jarring rather than refreshing, and, ultimately, the final twist is rushed in a way that leaves you with more questions than answers.
Perhaps on its own, without the near-perfect first season, Season 2 might have been a hit, but I found myself wondering several times during Season 2 why this show was even called Beef. Who is the beef with? Is it between the two couples? Kind of, but not really. Is it between the protagonists and the system? Kind of, but also not really. Is it between the couples and Chairwoman Park? Kind of, but there’s not enough runway to make that really work. There’s no doubt that showrunner Lee Sung Jin was ambitious with Season 2, but the result throws the series into disarray; it doesn’t elevate it.
‘Beef’s Season 2 Performances Almost Outshine an Uneven Plot
All complaints aside, the performances at the heart of Beef Season 2 do shine through. Mulligan and Isaac have insane chemistry with each other (as we’ve seen already in their previous collaborations), and as chaotic and toxic as their relationship is, there’s always a part of us that wants to root for them. Both actors are given a chance to shine and are, by far, playing the most complex characters. Though Josh and Lindsay seem easily hateable, especially when their privilege is compared to Austin and Ashley’s humble lifestyle, they are still redeemable. It all culminates in a scene in the finale that’s both triumphant and emotional as well as devastatingly tragic.
Unsurprisingly, Youn and Song are both fantastic. Youn takes on a rare villainous role in Beef that suits her so well that I’m disappointed we haven’t seen her take a darker turn sooner. Though the material she’s given is a little flat and honestly somewhat stereotypical, Youn can make even the most lackluster lines shine with her delivery. Her surprising chemistry with Song creates an interesting foil to the main couples, and Song delivers a great monologue near the end that’s tinted with bittersweet heartache as well as humor, something the actor excels at.
What is surprising is Melton. Playing opposite Spaeny, Melton’s Austin is the epitome of a himbo — a golden retriever in human form. He’s cluelessly funny, endearingly wholesome, and deeply dedicated to Ashley. However, in the moments when the cracks start to show in their relationship, Melton grasps onto the nuances of Austin’s character and proves that he’s far more than just a pretty face with some muscles. The same, unfortunately, can’t be said for Spaeny’s Ashley. The script does no favors for her, making Ashley one of the most grating characters with the least redeemable traits. Spaeny’s performance also isn’t reaching the same heights as her co-stars — especially opposite someone like Mulligan, whose performance is so subtle, it makes Spaeny’s performance almost fall flat. Spaeny and Melton have decent chemistry, but Melton’s better moments lie with Seoyeon Jang‘s Eunice, Chairwoman Park’s translator and assistant, rather than Spaeny or the rest of the cast.
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‘Beef’ Ultimately Didn’t Need a Season 2
The disappointing thing about Beef Season 2 is that there is a lot to love about it. The performances are fantastic, the banter is sharp when it wants to be, and the moral lessons it’s trying to impart are there — but it just isn’t fleshed out enough. The overload of characters creates far too much clutter, not to mention the story being forced to live under the shadow of Season 1.
The series still retains some of the same style and aesthetic, including pulse-pounding needle drops and frenetic storytelling that jumps from one ridiculous moment to another. The cinematography is compelling, and the production and set design are sleek and stylish. There is one unnecessary “oner” shot that feels more gratuitous than enjoyable, but the series is otherwise shot beautifully. It’s perhaps the only thing that the season properly inherited from the last.
At the end of the day, Beef Season 2 struggles where so many other shows flounder today: The show is trying to do too much with too little. With double the protagonists, the season would have had more room to breathe with even just ten episodes, allowing for the final arc — which takes our protagonists out of California and over to Korea — to feel a bit more natural in the transition. Season 2 is by no means bad, but it’s a step down from what this series can accomplish, and I can only hope that if there’s a Season 3, the series will course-correct, because this just isn’t working as well.
Beef Season 2 premieres April 16 on Netflix.
- Release Date
-
April 6, 2023
- Network
-
Netflix
- Showrunner
-
Lee Sung Jin
- Directors
-
Hikari, Jake Schreier, Kitao Sakurai, Lee Sung Jin
- Writers
-
Alice Ju
- The performances, specifically Charles Melton, Oscar Isaac, and Carey Mulligan, shine through and add depth to the protagonists.
- The series maintains the same visual language and style as Season 1.
- Youn Yuh-jung is fantastic as a morally dubious businesswoman.
- Season 2 doesn’t have enough episodes to pack in all the messages it’s trying to convey.
- The season doesn’t feel cohesive ? and the titular Beef doesn’t seem to actually matter at all.
Entertainment
Lisa Hochstein’s Jail Support Triggers ‘RHOM’ Return Calls
Lisa Hochstein enjoys solidarity from her “Real Housewives of Miami” co-stars!
The reality star’s castmates on the Bravo show publicly declared their support after she voluntarily surrendered to the police over an allegation of illegal spying by her ex-husband during their divorce process in 2023.
Lisa Hochstein has since gone viral for her mugshot, which was taken minutes after she turned herself in as agreed upon, according to her attorney, Jayne Weintraub, making the reality star appear as a cooperative citizen, respectful of the law.
What Are Lisa Hochstein’s Castmates Saying About Her Arrest?

Bravo stars Alexia Nepola and Adriana De Moura showed that there is strength in numbers at the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center in Miami on Wednesday, April 15. The duo’s visit was to support Lisa, who turned up at the police station after facing some criminal charges.
Nepola and Moura took the time to speak to reporters about the whole situation, with the former describing it as a “very sad and unfortunate” situation, but her support for Lisa remained firm. Both TV stars refused to answer any questions about their thoughts on Lenny Hochstein’s allegations that Lisa spied on him.
As noted by Page Six, De Moura, on her part, added that she was there to support Lisa as a friend and make sure her children are well taken care of. Nepola had earlier confirmed in a virtual interview that the news of Lisa’s legal woes was shocking to her, but whenever she came out, a big hug and love were waiting for her on the outside.
The 43-Year-Old Wants To Wrap Things Up For Her Kids’ Sake

Another “Real Housewives of Miami” star, Maryol Patton, confessed in the interview with Page Six that when she heard about Lisa’s arrest, she thought it was one of Lenny’s tricks to make Lisa’s life hell again.
She clarified that upon further investigation, she realized that the arrest stemmed from an earlier complaint three years ago, and now the court is investigating it, which means it is in the hands of the law now. Lisa was all smiles when she arrived at the facility alongside her attorney, Jenny Weintraub, who reiterated that the reality star voluntarily surrendered to the authorities.
As for Lisa, she affirmed that anyone distracting her from her big divorce case this month would not get the chance to. The TV personality affirmed that the well-being of her kids remained important to her because they had been through enough drama with her and Lenny. Lisa added, “I’ve heard nobody has been charged with eavesdropping in Miami history.”
‘RHOM’ Fans Want Lisa Hochstein And Her Co-Stars Back
A handful of people were touched by De Moura and Nepola’s warm gesture and took to the internet to express that. “The Miami girls are rallying around each other like they always do,” this commenter stated.
Some fans of the shows wondered why the cameras were not rolling for such an iconic moment that could be a great source of entertainment for those who watch the show. Another X subscriber added, “I’m really p-ssed Miami is on pause during all this drama. It would be great television. Bravo, y’all messed up!”
One other fan commended Nepola for always keeping things real, proving to everyone that she is true to such a kind lifestyle. “Like real sisters!!!” was another anthem of the day on the comment section on X, followed by this user who wrote, “I’m sorry, but I would pay money for Bravo to film this interaction of Alexia and Adriana with the paparazzi.”
The Bravo Star’s Castmates Kicked Against A Reunion With Lenny Hochstein

The jail support is not the first time Lisa’s co-stars have proven their loyalty to her well-being and happiness. As reported by Bravo TV, she got candid with her girls, Nepola and Patton, on the season 7 premiere episode about her ex-husband asking them to get back together. Patton and Nepola instantly urged her to reject such an idea, informing her that she was in a relationship with Jody Gilden at the time and they had been dating since 2022.
However, Lisa expressed that while she loves Jody, the thought of raising her children with their father seemed pretty appealing. Nepola then asked how Lisa intended to justify getting back together with someone who hurt her repeatedly to her kids, prompting Lisa to admit everything was a prank.
She proved how serious she was about not getting back with her ex, stating, “I’d rather post a really f–king ugly picture of me naked that I would never show anyone in a million years than get back together with Lenny. I know that doesn’t sound bad to a lot of people, but I would just be devastated.”
Lisa Hochstein And Jody Glidden Were Both Slammed With Criminal Charges

The Bravo star and Glidden were accused of unlawfully and intentionally” intercepting Lenny’s phone calls between March 12 and March 31, 2023, earlier in the week. As shared by The Blast, Lenny’s filing alleged that Lisa had placed at least one listening device on his car to enable her to listen to conversations he has been having about their divorce.
Lenny emphasized that no one knew the extent of information his ex-wife had gathered during the process, which may have compromised the integrity of the divorce. The “RHOM” star and her plastic surgeon ex finalized their divorce about two years ago, where Lenny was ordered to pay $15,000 for their two children, Logan and Elle.
He was also ordered to pay spousal support as stipulated in their original prenuptial agreement. The proceedings of the divorce were marked with some public clashes, including claims of financial strangulation from Lisa and a temporary restraining order filed by Lenny’s then-girlfriend Katharina Mazepa.
Entertainment
Hollywood’s New Obsession Is Called Zealot Porn, How To Spot It
By Joshua Tyler
| Updated

I recently coined the term “zealot porn” to help explain a new kind of entertainment. Zealot porn is what happens when you make programming specifically designed to torment characters for their personal ideological views, with the goal of your viewers deriving pleasure from their suffering.
zealot porn (noun) — Media that graphically depicts violent punishment of ideological opponents, crafted to gratify the viewer’s sense of moral superiority and deliver cathartic satisfaction through retributive spectacle.

The key to zealot porn is that not only must the characters on screen be portrayed as zealots, in order to dehumanize them, but the people watching must themselves be zealous opponents of the characters’ ideology, in order to fully enjoy their suffering. Zealot porn is what happens when you make stories about zealots for zealots.
zealot (noun) — a person consumed by devotion to a cause or belief, so blinded by passion that reason becomes collateral damage.
This new genre took its clearest and most defined form in the second season of Peacemaker, when creator James Gunn crafted a scene designed to give his viewers the jollies over watching the murder of people who seemed like they might think good things about Nazis. Obviously, no one likes Nazis, but whether you personally like or dislike the views of the people being harmed isn’t relevant to whether or not something is zealot porn.
What matters is the intent of the media you’re watching, and whether that intent is to give the audience pleasure by dehumanizing and punishing people for their views. What those views are or their morality is irrelevant to defining the genre.
How To Spot Zealot Porn
Zealot porn isn’t difficult to spot, if you’re not emotionally invested in the topic. It’s nearly impossible to spot, however, if you are.
To determine if you’re watching zealot porn, use this checklist. If more than three of these are true, you’re probably watching zealot pon.
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The “bad side” is cartoonishly evil, leaving no room for nuance -
Violence or humiliation is framed as morally satisfying, not disturbing -
The hero is always right, even when acting brutally -
Opponents exist only to be punished, not understood -
Emotional payoff outweighs logic or realism -
Scenarios feel engineered to justify a specific worldview -
Complex issues are reduced to simple good vs. evil
Zealot Porn Wins Oscars
The movie One Battle After Another is a zealous feast, and that won it Best Picture. We put together a video to explain it in depth.
Zealot Porn In Real Life
Zealot porn isn’t limited to fictional entertainment. Often, people get catharsis by watching videos or reading coverage of real-life ideological opponents being made to suffer. That’s on the rise too.
As I write this, prominent Democrat Eric Swalwell is getting his comeuppance over various salacious accusations, and Republicans are cheering and gaining pleasure from his downfall. This is a milder form, since no actual violence or death is involved.
catharsis (noun) — the sudden, involuntary purge of buried emotion that floods the mind like a breached dam, leaving behind a raw, emptied stillness that feels strangely like peace.
A more extreme example would be people celebrating the murder of conservative debater Charlie Kirk with similar elation. For them, watching him shot was another form of zealot porn, despite his very clearly not being a Nazi.
Others had similar reactions to videos showing the public execution of a health executive carried out by Luigi Mangione in 2024. That, too, was real-life zealot porn.
Early Zealot Porn

Zealot porn is not a new invention, but it’s been a long time since it was accepted in the mainstream. In the early days of Christianity, Romans fed believers to lions in front of cheering audiences. That was a low-tech version of zealot porn. Using media like movies and television as a delivery mechanism is, however, a recent phenomenon.
Past creators would have balked at the idea of dehumanizing characters for the audience’s base pleasure. Entire books have been written about it being a bad idea. It’s why George Orwell wrote 1984.

On a creative level, it would have formerly been considered bad writing. Normally, good writing aims to humanize the writer’s creations and make them relatable. Zealot porn does the opposite.
Early media that skewed closest to zealot porn are propaganda films from World War 2 or some of the more extreme grindhouse or blaxploitation movies of the 1970s. Most of those, however, focused more on the idea of dismantling a system or punishing someone who’d actively done something wrong. They’re revenge fantasies and not really the same. In the most despicable cases, as with movies like Triumph of the Will, they focused on hurting people based on some immutable outward physical characteristic.
The idea that it’s acceptable to dehumanize and destroy someone for their thoughts is newer in the modern mainstream, and it’s a growing phenomenon.
Quentin Tarantino Births Modern Zealot Porn

If you’re looking for the start of modern zealot porn, its roots can be found in Quentin Tarantino’s 2009 movie, Inglourious Basterds.
The movie presents an alternate history in which a group of American commandos wipe out the evil Nazis and kill Hitler, without the need for a global war. It isn’t about character arcs or military realism; it’s about watching the most evil regime in history get flambéed to the sound of David Bowie.
Nazism was a uniquely perfect ideology to use in birthing modern zealot porn, because nearly everyone has been pre-conditioned toward a zealous hatred of Hitler and his cronies. So Tarantino gives audiences, raised on decades of history classes talking about how uniquely evil Nazis were, exactly what they want: Nazis humiliated, carved, and annihilated. Punished for their beliefs even more than just their actions.

Inglourious Basterds is bloody, indulgent, and engineered specifically for moral satisfaction.
Still, Inglourious Basterds largely focused on murdering those embedded in the Nazi regime’s power structure. It didn’t, for the most part, take pleasure in killing random Germans walking down the street who might be thinking Nazi thoughts.
Inglorious Basterds is a more high-class type of zealot porn, but its existence helped give a green light to the growing wave of more extreme copycats that followed.
If modern zealot porn has a father, it’s Quentin Tarantino.
Robert Rodriguez Targets Conservatives For Destruction

If modern zealot porn has a mother, it’s Robert Rodriguez.
Robert Rodriguez’s Machete began as a fake trailer and mutated into a full-on immigration revenge epic. Danny Trejo stars as a former Mexican Federale turned one-man army after being betrayed by corrupt politicians and anti-immigrant vigilantes.
Where Tarantino created a movie designed to visit violence on a historical group almost universally agreed to be evil, Robert Rodriguez targeted his movie at a mainstream, modern group of people and their current (and widely held) beliefs on border security.

To make that work, he had to dehumanize his targets by twisting their views to cartoonish extremes. Rodriguez takes anti-immigration rhetoric and dumbs it down to absurdist levels, so that he can turn those who agree with it into fodder for righteous decapitation.
Every kill in his 2010 movie is meant not just payback for Machete’s betrayal but for decades of what his audience would perceive as xenophobic cruelty. The film is indulgent, cartoonishly violent, and completely lost in the bubble of its own politics.
Kevin Smith Finds Catharsis In Crazy Christians

If modern zealot porn has a weird uncle, it’s Kevin Smith.
Two years after Inglorious Basterds, filmmaker Kevin Smith applied Robert Rodregeuz’s anti-Conservative formula to fundamentalist Christians with the movie Red State.
The Evangelicals depicted in the movie are a cartoonish, demonic caricature of what real-life hard-line Christians are. That’s a key piece of the zealot porn formula, since it serves to dehumanize the real-world group, thus allowing the audience to take pleasure in their violent end.

By the movie’s end, Red State takes intense pleasure in their doom. As an audience, it feels acceptable because the movie makes them into monsters before it does its worst.
Later examples of purified zealot porn won’t go through as much trouble, but Red State, like Inglorious Basterds before it, was still pushing at the boundaries of what audiences would find acceptable. It’s more restrained than its predecessors but also more pointed in its attack on its character’s beliefs.
Thriving In Independent Film

Once Tarantino, Rodriguez, and Smith showed creators the way, there was a brief explosion in copycats. Those copycats stuck mainly to the topics that those three had already covered.
God Bless America followed in Rodriguez and Smith’s footsteps, gleefully cartooning conservatives for the righteous satisfaction of its audience in 2011. Iron Sky continued Tarantino’s zealous crusade against Nazis in 2012. All of those movies followed a similar pattern, where they turned their ideological opponents into cartoonish straw men to justify dehumanizing them before the slaughter.
Like Machete and Red State before them, none of these movies gained the widespread acceptance and viewership that Tarantino earned when he kicked things off with Inglourious Basterds. Their targets were often too divisive, and most people still recoiled at the idea of getting satisfaction from watching the suffering of people who might share the same views as their neighbors.
The Purge Takes Zealot Porn Big Time

It wasn’t until the arrival of The Purge franchise’s first sequel, in 2014, that zealot porn began to flirt with mainstream acceptance again.
The first entry in the series is a simple survival horror, but the second movie, The Purge: Anarchy, begins drifting into zealot porn as it sets up cathartic violence against wealthy elites. By the time The Purge: Election Year rolls around in 2016, it’s closer to an early-stage blockbuster zealot porn franchise. Each Purge sequel picks a different ideological target.

The Purge: Election Year takes aim at conservatives by turning them into cartoonish caricatures worthy of slaughter, in the mold of Kevin Smith’s Red State.
2018’s The First Purge goes back to the old standby by turning white Americans into modern-day Nazis, thinking racist thoughts, and in need of some murdering.
That push transitioned into zealot porn against nationalists in 2021’s The Forever Purge. That movie takes a weaker approach to it than its predecessors and isn’t as clearly dedicated to its satiation through zealotry.
The Hunt Bait And Switches Audiences

If you’ve been paying attention, you’ve probably noticed that most of the earliest zealot porn entries are aimed squarely at pleasuring left-wing viewers. Their targets are always conservatives or Christians, and they expect their audience to be the most liberal of liberal extremists.
The Hunt tried to trick audiences into thinking it was a commentary on the phenomenon of conservatives being targeted by billing itself as a movie about elite liberals hunting conservatives for their views. In reality, it’s another example of zealous slaughter of conservatives as the movie turns the hunted right-wingers into idiotic caricatures and tries to make the case that they had it coming due to some conspiratorial tweets.

The movie’s only real hero is totally apolitical, which I guess is in its own way a commentary on political polarization, but a weak one.
The Hunt is more of a muddled commentary on the rising popularity of zealot porn than an example of zealot porn itself.
Streaming Pushes Zealot Porn Forward To Its Final Form

Movies had begun paving the way towards making zealot porn socially acceptable, and streaming television took the next step.
The Boys is the best example of this. It started as a show primarily designed to deconstruct and hate on the standard tropes of superheroes. Over time, it morphed into something increasingly political. It creates supervillains designed to embody the political ideology its writers loathe most and then constructs situations in which they’re either humiliated or killed in the worst possible ways.

No character embodies that more than the character of Homelander. He isn’t just evil, he’s the delusional cartoon version of what bubble-dwellers imagine Fox News viewers to be. And even while he survives, the show does everything it can to humiliate and degrade him. Meanwhile, the show’s creators used social media to openly invite audiences to see him as an avatar for Donald Trump and his ideological supporters.
Whenever Homelander or one of these symbols gets publicly humiliated, exploded, or blackmailed, the show delivers a dirty hit of catharsis to its similarly minded, zealous viewers. That’s exactly what they’re going for.
Peacemaker Perfects Zealot Porn

Peacemaker took zealot porn to the next and purest level. All previous efforts used cartoonish oversimplification to dehumanize their ideological opponents, before brutally making them suffer.
Peacemaker doesn’t bother. Returning to the genre’s roots by setting the show’s second season in a world run by Nazis, Peacemaker doesn’t show its residents as engaging in evil before killing them. It simply kills them, because they’re residents of a Nazi world. The show assumes that the viewers will do all the dehumanization in their heads, on their own.

That works because we’re dealing with Nazis, but as Inglorious Basterds demonstrated, it’s unlikely to stop there. Movies like One Battle After Another represent the next wave of mainstreamed zealot porn, which takes the dehumanization of wrongthinkers to previously unseen levels.
Entertainment
Aaron Carter’s Mom Launches Fund For Walk Of Fame Star
Aaron Carter‘s mother, Jane Schneck, has launched a GoFundMe campaign to raise funds to apply for a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. The effort aims to honor the late singer, who died in 2022, celebrate his contributions to entertainment, and give fans a meaningful way to recognize his legacy. Schneck’s fundraising effort comes shortly after she lost a legal battle to block the closure of Carter’s estate.
Aaron Carter’s Mom Aims To Raise $85,000

Aaron Carter’s mother, Jane Schneck, is raising funds on GoFundMe to apply for her son’s star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. As she told TMZ, Carter “would’ve loved” having a star.
Schneck shared with the outlet that she recalls visiting Hollywood Boulevard when Aaron was about 12 years old and telling him, “You’re going to be there someday,” to which the young singer replied, “Yeah.” Moreover, she said L.A. holds plenty of cherished memories of the time she spent with her son. According to Schneck, Aaron’s siblings, Backstreet Boys’ Nick Carter, and Aaron’s twin sister Angel, support the fundraising effort.
The 2026 Walk of Fame application deadline is May 15 and comes with an application fee of $275. The selection criteria include professional achievement, community contributions, and longevity in the business. The Selection Committee then chooses up to 30 of the “most qualified artists.” If selected, a sponsorship fee of $85,000 must be paid for the creation, installation, and maintenance of the star.
Jane Schneck Lost A Legal Battle Over Her Son’s Estate

In February, Schneck filed court documents claiming that Aaron’s former fiancée, Melanie Martin, illegally withdrew about $24,000 from her son’s account. Martin, on the other hand, said she had joint accounts with the late singer and denied doing anything illegally. The two parties battled in court over what remained of Carter’s estate before his death.
Schneck fought to keep her son’s estate from closing, but according to reports, Aaron was in debt at the time of his death. A judge ruled Aaron’s estate “insolvent,” which means his debts exceeded his assets. As reported by The Blast, the non-cash assets were awarded to Martin for her and Aaron’s son, Prince Lyric, who was born in 2021.
Aaron Carter Once Applied For Emancipation

Aaron began his professional music career at 7 years old, releasing his first album in 1997 when he was just 9. In the years following, he sold millions of albums worldwide and cemented himself as a teen heartthrob in the early 2000s.
In 2003, at 15 years old, Aaron filed for legal emancipation from his parents, claiming that his mother, who served as his manager alongside his father, mismanaged his finances and withdrew more than $100,000 from his accounts without his knowledge.
In January 2024, the issue was resolved, with Schneck saying, “I’m looking forward to putting my family back together and working together side by side with all my children.” Scott Salomon, the family’s lawyer, said Aaron sat down with his parents to discuss the “financial misunderstandings,” which were resolved. Aaron also withdrew his petition for emancipation.
The Singer Had A Complicated Relationship With His Mother

Throughout the years, Aaron talked about his tumultuous relationship with his mother, saying that she was an alcoholic and was only concerned about fame and money. In 2004, the singer opened up to PEOPLE, saying that he doesn’t like being around his mother and sister, Leslie.
“I really don’t like being around them. All I hear is ‘You need to go on television and make me look better.’ I just think, ‘Just be my mother, just be my sister.’ It’s all about money and publicity for them. My last word to (my mother) is that she’s the adult, not me. But it seems to be switched around,” said Aaron.
In 2019, the mother and son appeared on the show The Doctors, where Aaron confronted his mother about her drinking. In the episode, he expressed his fear that she would die soon if she didn’t get help. Months following the intervention, it was reported that Schneck left rehab early against professional advice.
Inside Aaron Carter’s Death

Aaron struggled with his mental health, sharing in 2019 that he had “multiple personality disorder, schizophrenia, acute anxiety, and manic depression.” In November 2022, he was discovered unresponsive in his bathtub and was later pronounced dead at the scene by paramedics. Aerosol cans and prescription bottles were found in the bathroom and bedroom, according to reports.
As The Blast previously reported, his cause of death was determined to be accidental drowning after inhaling difluoroethane and taking alprazolam.
Entertainment
Amazon’s Sequel to the Greatest Sci-Fi Parody Ever Made Just Unveiled Its First Footage and Official Title
The search for more money kicks off next year when Spaceballs 2, the sequel to Mel Brooks‘ riotous 1987 Star Wars spoof, invades theaters. And now, thanks to Amazon MGM Studios’ presentation at CinemaCon, we have our first glimpse of the film and its long-awaited title, which may not be what you’re expecting. Collider’s own Schwartz-sensitive Britta DeVore was on the scene in Las Vegas.
The crowd at CinemaCon ate up every second of the Spaceballs 2 trailer as a narrator traced the journey of the sequel’s path from rumor to screen. While no plot was spelled out in any way, shape, or form, we got to see what the creative team has been cooking up with numerous icons returning to their fan-favorite roles after more than three decades. Of course, the original film doesn’t have that much of a plot, either, so this one should fit in just fine. We also now know that the sequel will be titled Spaceballs: The New One; “just like the old one, but it’s newer.” The original film teased that the sequel would be called Spaceballs 2: The Search for More Money, which Brooks joked about in a video message; it no longer bears that title because he found the money.
What Do We Know About ‘Spaceballs: The New One’?
A belated sequel to the 1987 film, Spaceballs: The New One sees the return of Winnebago-flying rogue Lone Starr (Bill Pullman), his feisty paramour Princess Vespa (Daphne Zuniga), and the sagacious Yogurt (Brooks), as well as the sinister forces of Planet Spaceball, including President Skroob (also Brooks), Colonel Sandurz (George Wyner), and the menacing Dark Helmet (Rick Moranis, in his first live-action screen appearance since 1997). New additions to the cast include Lewis Pullman, Keke Palmer, Anthony Carrigan, and Josh Gad; while character details have yet to be released, presumably Lewis Pullman is playing the son of Lone Starr.
Spaceballs: The New One is directed by Josh Greenbaum (Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar), from a script by Brooks, Gad and screenwriting duo Benji Samit and Dan Hernandez, who wrote Detective Pikachu. Imagine Entertainment’s Brian Grazer and Jeb Brody are producing alongside Gad, Brooks, and Greenbaum. It’s Gad’s second stab at reviving a Brooks property, after his well-received History of the World: Part II miniseries on Hulu.
Spaceballs: The New One will hit theaters on April 23, 2027. Stay tuned to Collider all week for the latest CinemaCon coverage.
- Release Date
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April 23, 2027
- Writers
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Dan Hernandez, Josh Gad, Benji Samit
Entertainment
FBI Drops Surveillance Photos In Shooting Amid Hunt
Details continue to surface in the ongoing investigation into the shooting outside of a Florida casino involving Offset. The FBI has reportedly released footage from the incident, depicting a failed robbery that led to a leg injury.
RELATED: Offset’s Mom Breaks Her Silence Following His Hospital Release & First Performance Post-Shooting (VIDEOS)
Suspects Flee SUVs As Surveillance Questions Heat Up
According to authorities, the suspects dipped off in two SUVs—a matte gray Chevrolet Tahoe and a black Chevrolet Suburban—heading in different directions after everything went down.
“The subjects fled the scene in two Chevrolet SUVs, one was a matte gray Tahoe and the other a black Suburban,” revealed FBI Miami Public Information Officer Jim Marshall. “The black Suburban fled the area towards Hollywood, Florida, while the Tahoe fled southbound towards Miami.”
Right after the incident, police detained two people, including rapper Lil Tjay. He was later hit with disorderly conduct and driving without a valid license. But his lawyer made it clear he wasn’t carrying a weapon and wasn’t charged in connection with the shooting. He has since been released on bond, but the questions are still there. In response to claims tied to the incident, Lil Tjay pushed back on accusations with strong words for the rapper, while Offset later appeared to respond on Instagram with the message, “U aint buss nun.”
FBI Investigates Ambush Shooting Targeting Offset
As previously reported, the FBI is officially investigating a shooting involving Offset after authorities say he was ambushed outside a Florida casino. The incident reportedly went down on April 6 around 7:24 p.m. outside the Seminole Hard Rock Hotel & Casino in Hollywood, Florida. Police claim a large group approached the rapper before things turned violent. One suspect allegedly pulled out a handgun and fired a single shot, hitting Offset in the leg. Additionally, the group allegedly tried (and failed) to snatch his watch.
Offset Is Focused On His Recovery
Offset hasn’t said much about the Florida casino shooting, though he did briefly acknowledge the situation on social media shortly after it happened.
RELATED: Back In That Mode! Offset Sets The Tone For His Comeback Following Hospital Release
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