Ella Bright in Off Campus Season 1.Image via Prime Video
Prime Video delivered the perfect antidote to its recently concluded superhero series The Boys, which underwhelmed critics and audiences with its series finale. The streamer’s latest superhero offering, Spider-Noir, has the added benefit of featuring an acting icon and being based on one of the most popular fictional characters of all time. The new show delivered exactly the results expected of it in its midweek debut, even though it failed to overthrow Prime Video’s current number one title. The holdover hit defied the odds to deliver one of the streamer’s biggest-ever debuts. It currently trails only The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and Fallout, which have an obvious built-in fan-following. With 36 million views in under two weeks, the steamy new romance series has outperformed legacy titles on Prime Video such as Reacher and The Summer I Turned Pretty.
It posted the streamer’s number one debut of all time among female viewers in the 18-34 age group. The show follows the romance between a university hockey champion and an aspiring musician, played by Belmont Cameli and Ella Bright, respectively. In addition to the staggering viewership achievements, the new show has also been critically acclaimed. It’s now sitting at a “Certified Fresh” 93% score on Rotten Tomatoes, with Collider’s Therese Lacsoncomparing it favorably to the source novels and writing that the show “delivers a captivating romance adaptation that will satisfy book lovers and newcomers alike.”
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Collider Exclusive · Marvel Personality Quiz Which MCU Hero Are You? Spider-Man · Daredevil · Iron Man · Punisher · Thor · Cap
Six heroes. One destiny. Answer 10 questions to discover which Marvel Cinematic Universe hero shares your personality, values, and fighting spirit. Will you swing, fly, or thunder your way to glory?
🕷️Spider-Man
😈Daredevil
🤖Iron Man
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💀Punisher
⚡Thor
🛡️Cap
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01
What drives you to do what’s right? Choose the answer that feels most like you.
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02
It’s 2 AM. Where are you? Your answer says more about you than you’d think.
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03
How do you handle a villain who keeps escaping justice? Every hero has a method. What’s yours?
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04
How do you feel about keeping a secret identity? The mask — or the lack of one — says everything.
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05
You’ve lost someone important because of your heroism. How do you carry that? Every hero pays a price. The question is how they pay it.
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06
What’s your role when working with a team? Who you are under pressure is who you actually are.
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07
Where do you draw the line between justice and revenge? The answer defines what kind of hero you really are.
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08
When you’re not saving the world, what does life look like? The person behind the mask is always the more interesting story.
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09
What keeps you up at night? Fear is useful data — if you’re honest about what you’re actually afraid of.
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10
The battle is lost. You’re outnumbered, outgunned, and exhausted. What do you do? This is your tiebreaker — choose carefully.
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Your Hero Has Been Identified Your MCU Hero Is…
Based on your answers, the Marvel hero who matches your spirit, values, and instincts has been revealed.
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Queens, New York
🕷️ Spider-Man
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You carry the weight of the world on shoulders that are younger than they should have to be — funny, loyal, and endlessly self-sacrificing.
You do the right thing not because it’s easy, but because no one else will.
You understand that responsibility isn’t a burden you choose — it’s one that finds you.
Whether it’s a neighbourhood mugging or a multiverse crisis, you show up.
Peter Parker’s lesson — that great power demands great responsibility — isn’t a slogan to you. It’s the code you live by, even when it costs you everything.
Hell’s Kitchen, New York
😈 Daredevil
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You fight in the shadows between law and chaos, guided by a fierce moral compass that refuses to let the guilty walk free.
You use every tool available — your mind, your body, your faith — to protect those the system overlooks.
You’ve looked into the darkness and chosen not to become it, though the line has never been easy.
Matt Murdock’s duality — champion in the courtroom, devil in the alley — mirrors your own.
Relentless, conflicted, and unwilling to stop. That is exactly you.
Stark Industries, Malibu
🤖 Iron Man
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Brilliant, driven, and occasionally insufferable — but always the person who solves the unsolvable problem.
You lead with your mind and back it up with resources, innovation, and a stubbornness that borders on heroic.
You started out looking out for yourself, but somewhere along the way the world became your responsibility.
Tony Stark’s arc — from ego to sacrifice — is your arc too.
You build, you plan, and when the moment comes, you’re willing to give everything. Because in the end, you’re Iron Man.
New York City
💀 The Punisher
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You’ve been through fire that would break most people — and it did change you, completely. What’s left is unyielding, relentless, and operating by a code forged in grief.
You don’t ask for forgiveness, and you don’t expect gratitude.
You see a corrupt, broken world and you’ve decided to do something about it, consequences be damned.
Frank Castle’s war is born from love twisted by loss — and so is yours.
Uncompromising and unflinching — the world may not agree with your methods, but your conviction is absolute.
Asgard · Protector of the Nine Realms
⚡ Thor
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Powerful, proud, and on a lifelong journey to become worthy of the legend you carry.
You lead with strength but have learned — sometimes painfully — that true greatness comes from humility and growth.
You’re larger than life, yet more vulnerable than you let on.
Thor’s story is one of transformation: from arrogant prince to worthy king, from isolated warrior to beloved protector.
You bring the storm when it’s needed — and the warmth when it matters just as much.
Brooklyn, New York · The Avengers
🛡️ Captain America
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You believe in something bigger than yourself — and you fight for it even when the world has moved on and nobody else will.
You don’t bully the small guy, and you never stop when it gets hard.
Steve Rogers didn’t become a hero when he got the serum — he was always one. So were you.
Your strength isn’t in your fists; it’s in your refusal to compromise what’s right, no matter the cost.
In a world full of people taking the easy road, you’re the one who picks up the shield and stands up — every single time.
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2 Wildly Different Demographics Are Propelling Prime Video to New Heights
We’re talking, of course, about Off Campus, the show that successfully fended off competition from Spider-Noir last week, albeit briefly. Spider-Noir returns Nicolas Cage to the character he voiced in the Spider-Verse animated movies, but this time in live-action. It pays homage to the film noir gems of the 1940s, and has opened to critical acclaim. It’s now sitting at a “Certified Fresh” 91% score on Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Nicolas Cage delivers a gloriously pulpy performance that makes every quip and thwip crackle in Spider-Noir — a dazzling, stylish blend of hard-boiled storytelling and pure comic book verve.” The aggregator’s consensus for Off Campus, on the other hand, reads, “Off Campus thrives on titillation and the deliberate excavation of relationship dynamics in a whirlwind romance novel adaptation that genuinely cares for the genre and all its pleasurable trappings.” Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
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Release Date
May 13, 2026
Network
Prime Video
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Directors
Dawn Wilkinson, Erica Dunton, Silver Tree, Sam Bailey
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If you’ve ever wondered what sneakers, wedges and loafers would look like as one shoe, Martha Stewart just showed Us. Her summer slip-ons deliver plush comfort with a design worth photographing, making them an incredible upgrade to any summer wardrobe. Somehow, Stewart’s exact shoes are under $100!
In a recent Instagram post, Stewart posed in a breezy beige sweater, tailored pants and these Skechers Relaxed Fit Parallel Lite shoes. They’re dressy enough for a garden lunch yet secretly feel like slippers, which is Stewart’s magic move. Why suffer in something stiff when you can glide through your day in memory foam?
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Get the Skechers Relaxed Fit Parallel Lite for $70 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
The Parallel Lite has a delicate knit upper, sleek silhouette and 2.5-inch wedge heel that provides enough lift to feel put together. Clean lines and a neutral palette are just a few other highlights. Rhinestones give these shoes a quiet luxury flair, so don’t be surprised if people think you’re rich.
Summer means sandals, but Kate Hudson isn’t wearing basic slip-ons. Instead, she’s adding an elevated twist by wearing the slingback style that makes even a tee and jeans look rich. Naturally, we’re ready to copy Hudson’s look — for only $40! A few weeks ago, the actress was photographed celebrating her son’s college graduation, juggling a handful […]
Inside, these stylish wonders feature a cooling memory foam insole that keeps your feet from overheating, which matters when you’re walking city streets and hosting on the patio. Better yet, the upper upper hugs your foot without pinching, so there’s no break-in period required.
“This is my second pair,” one five-star reviewer wrote. “I have them in black as well. So very comfortable for walking.”
Stewart paired her slip-ons with tailored-looking pants, but this versatile shoe looks equally stunning with a flowy midi skirt, wide-leg jeans or a sundress at brunch. The simple shape and elegant details do the heavy lifting, so your outfit appears polished regardless.
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Stewart clearly cracked the code, and now the rest of Us get to copy. Snag these comfy new Skechers below!
Get the Skechers Relaxed Fit Parallel Lite for $70 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate at the date of publication but are subject to change.
Jennifer Lawrence always looks effortless, but her latest sandal style takes it to a whole new level. She proved that comfy and chic can totally go together, and all it takes is this $25 look on Amazon. Lawrence was spotted with her little one in the West Village, iced coffee in hand, wearing a soft […]
The Love Island USA couples continued to find ways to act on their chemistry by performing sex acts that were caught on the night cameras — before an emotional elimination.
Viewers noticed that in footage from the Friday, June 12, episode of the Peacock show, Sincere Rhea and Melanie Moreno were getting up close and personal — as did Zach Georgiou and Kayda Bosse. This came after Corbin Mims and Kenzie Annis appeared to take their relationship to the next level.
Love Island USA viewers had a front row seat to the sexcapades that took place this year in Fiji. While past seasons featured some couples finding ways to share an intimate moment or two, it felt like season 7 set some kind of record with the amount of sexual “journeys” taking place in the communal bedroom.
“We did have a code word [for sex which was] ‘journey’ and it kind of traumatizes me now. When somebody outside is like, ‘Oh, a journey?’ I’m like, ‘How dare you!’ I am clutching my pearls,” Amaya “Papaya” Espinal joked on the “Call Her Daddy” podcast in July 2025. “People were having journeys.”
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Since there wasn’t room for much privacy, Amaya confirmed that it did get awkward at night, adding, ”I’m like, ‘Can I sleep?’ We already don’t get enough sleep around here and then you hear [sexual noises]. The earplugs [we got] were not plugging? Those were low quality earplugs because we were still able to hear things. Especially if there’s a couple right next to you.”
“It was steamy, all right. We were hot and we were sweating. It really was a great feeling to just have that private and intimate moment,” she gushed. “We actually do want to talk to each other and we love being next to each other. The next morning, we were just sitting and we were just quiet. It was beautiful and silent. I really did feel like I found my best friend where I could yap away or have a quieter moment.”
When asked whether Bryan really did “eat that kitty in The Hideaway,” Amaya coyly replied, “Well he definitely took that advice. We had a great night.”
They got a text — and found love in the Love Island USA villa. The beloved British dating show made its way across the pond in 2019, following a crop of American bombshells searching for The One in a luxury tropical villa. In season 1, eventual winners Elizabeth Weber and Zac Mirabelli had a connection […]
While Love Island USA viewers know that “journey” is a code word the Islanders use for sex, the term “folded” is another one that has been brought up multiple times last season. Chris Seeley quietly revealed to Bryan that he “folded” the night prior with Huda Mustafa, adding, “I wasn’t going to tell anybody. [But] I couldn’t do it any more. I really tried [to hold out]. I just didn’t want to tell the other boys.”
“I feel like that was just a great step into our physical connection that we probably don’t show in front of everyone else,” he noted. “It definitely made us feel stronger in our physical connection. That is really all I can say about that.”
New episodes of Love Island USA are released six days a week — except for Wednesdays — on Peacock.
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Join Us Weekly and Bracketology.tv in our first-ever Love Island USA fantasy league! This is your chance to predict who you think will win Season 8 and rank the Islanders weekly based on how confident you are that they will survive the next elimination. You will be playing against our editors, get access to exclusive content and have the chance to win fun prizes. Sign up for free today!
When it comes to cop dramas, few names carry the same weight as Titus Welliver, who has spent the better part of the last decade playing Harry Bosch. What makes his rise to prominence even more impressive is that most of the world’s most popular police procedurals came from network TV — Welliver was one of the first actors to commit to bringing a great cop drama to life on streaming, which he did thanks to Prime Video. Welliver first played Bosch all the way back in 2014, where he starred as the LA-based detective for seven seasons in the show of the same name. Bosch went off the air in 2021, but fans didn’t have to wait long to see Welliver return to the role in Bosch: Legacy, which even saw him team up with one of his arch-rivals.
Most fans felt that Bosch: Legacy was poised to be the perfect replacement series for the original Bosch, but those same viewers were devastated when it was canceled after only three seasons. What made it more tough to swallow was that it didn’t feel like a natural end to the character, more a studio-based decision that didn’t sit right with fans. Now two years removed from a single episode of Bosch: Legacy hitting Prime Video, fans continue to show why the series should never have been canceled in the first place. Bosch: Legacy has surged back into the streaming top 10 as fans anxiously await the arrival of Ballard Season 2. After featuring in a few episodes of Ballard Season 1, Welliver is confirmed to return in the second season of the spin-off series.
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Collider Exclusive · Action Hero Quiz Which Action Hero Would Be Your Perfect Partner? Rambo · James Bond · Indiana Jones · John McClane · Ethan Hunt
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Five legends. Five completely different ways of getting out alive — with style, with muscle, with charm, with luck, or with a plan so intricate it probably shouldn’t work. Ten questions will reveal which action hero was built to have your back.
🎖️Rambo
🍸James Bond
🏺Indiana Jones
🔧John McClane
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🎭Ethan Hunt
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01
You’re dropped into a dangerous situation with no warning. What do you need most from a partner? The first few seconds tell you everything about who belongs beside you.
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02
You have to get somewhere dangerous, fast. How do you travel? How you get there is half the mission.
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03
You’re pinned down and outnumbered. What does your ideal partner do? This is when you find out what someone is really made of.
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04
The mission is paused. You have one evening to decompress. What does your partner suggest? Who someone is when the pressure drops is who they actually are.
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05
How do you prefer your partner to communicate mid-mission? Good communication is the difference between partners and a liability.
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06
Your enemy is powerful, well-resourced, and has the upper hand. How should your partner approach them? The approach to the enemy defines the partnership.
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07
Things go badly wrong and you’re captured. What do you trust your partner to do? Who someone is when you need them most is the only thing that matters.
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08
What does your ideal partner bring to the table that you couldn’t replace? A great partner fills the gap you didn’t know you had.
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09
Every partnership has a cost. Which of these can you live with? No one comes without baggage. The question is whether you can carry it together.
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10
It’s the final moment. Everything is on the line. What do you need from your partner right now? The last question is the most honest one.
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Your Partner Has Been Assigned Your Perfect Partner Is…
Your answers have pointed to one action hero above all others. This is the person built to have your back — for better or considerably, spectacularly worse.
Rambo
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Your partner doesn’t talk much, doesn’t need to, and will have assessed every threat in your immediate environment before you’ve finished your first sentence. John Rambo is not a man of plans or politics — he is a force of nature shaped by survival, loyalty, and a capacity for endurance that goes beyond anything training can produce. He will not leave you behind. He has never left anyone behind who deserved to come home. What you get with Rambo is the most capable, most quietly ferocious partner imaginable — one who has been through things that would have broken anyone else, and who chose to keep going anyway. You’ll never need to ask if he has your back. You’ll just know.
James Bond
Your partner will arrive perfectly dressed, perfectly briefed, and with a cover story so convincing it’ll take you a moment to remember what’s actually true. James Bond is the most professionally dangerous person in any room he enters — and the most disarmingly charming, which is the point. He operates in a world of layers, where nothing is what it appears and every advantage is used without apology. You’ll never be bored. You’ll occasionally be furious. But when it matters — when the mission is genuinely on the line and the margin for error has collapsed to nothing — Bond is exactly the partner you want. He has survived things that have no business being survivable. He does it with style. That is not nothing.
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Indiana Jones
Your partner will know the history, the language, the cultural context, and exactly why the thing everyone else is ignoring is actually the most important thing in the room. Indiana Jones is brilliant, reckless, and occasionally impossible — but he is also one of the most resourceful, most genuinely knowledgeable partners you could find yourself beside. He approaches every situation with a scholar’s eye and a brawler’s instinct, which is an unusual combination and a remarkably effective one. He hates snakes and gets personally attached to objects of historical significance, both of which will slow you down at least once. It doesn’t matter. What Indy brings is irreplaceable — and the adventures you’ll have together will be the kind people write books about. Assuming you survive them.
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John McClane
Your partner was not supposed to be here. He does not have the right equipment, the right information, or anything approaching the right odds. He has a sarcastic remark and an absolute refusal to accept that the situation is as bad as it looks. John McClane is the greatest accidental hero in the history of action cinema — a man whose superpower is stubbornness, whose contingency plan is improvisation, and whose capacity to absorb punishment and keep moving would be alarming if it weren’t so useful. He will complain the entire time. He will make it significantly more chaotic than it needed to be. And he will absolutely, unconditionally, without question come through when it counts. Yippee-ki-yay.
Ethan Hunt
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Your partner has already run seventeen scenarios by the time you’ve finished reading the briefing, and the plan he’s settled on involves at least two things that should be physically impossible. Ethan Hunt operates at the absolute edge of human capability — technically, physically, and intellectually — and he brings the same relentless precision to protecting his partners that he brings to dismantling organisations that shouldn’t exist. He is not easy to know and he will never fully tell you everything. But he will carry the weight of the mission so completely, so absolutely, that your job is simply to trust him — and the remarkable thing is that trusting him always turns out to be the right call. The mission will be impossible. He will complete it anyway.
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What Is the Bosch Spin-Off ‘Ballard’ About?
The official synopsis for Ballard, which is led by Maggie Q, reads as follows:
“Detective Renée Ballard leads the LAPD’s new and underfunded cold case division, tackling the city’s most challenging long-forgotten crimes with empathy and relentless determination. As she peels back layers of crimes spanning decades — including a serial killer’s string of murders and a murdered John Doe — she soon uncovers a dangerous conspiracy within the LAPD. With the help of her volunteer team and retired detective Harry Bosch, Detective Ballard navigates personal trauma, professional challenges, and life-threatening dangers to expose the truth.”
Prime Video is also actively developing a new Bosch prequel series, Start of Watch, which will give fans a look inside Bosch’s younger days. Welliver is not involved with the show in any capacity, but Amazon has recruited Cameron Monaghan to star as a young Harry Bosch in the show. Monaghan is best known for playing Cal Kestis in the Star Wars Jedi video game series.
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Check out all episodes of Bosch and Ballard on Prime Video, and stay tuned to Collider for more updates and coverage of the Bosch universe.
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Release Date
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2022 – 2025
Network
Prime Video, Amazon Freevee
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Showrunner
Eric Overmyer
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Directors
Patrick Cady, Alex Zakrzewski, Sharat Raju, Ernest R. Dickerson, Adam Davidson, Kate Woods, Leslie Libman, Tawnia McKiernan, Hagar Ben-Asher, Haifaa al-Mansour
Writers
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Chris Wu, Osokwe Vasquez, Benjamin Pitts, Chris Downey, Barbara Curry
Yellowstone‘s Dutton Ranch spinoff introduced a twist by killing off a surprising character in a gruesome death.
During the Friday, June 12, episode of the hit Paramount+ series, Chet (Hart Denton) was encouraged by Rob-Will (Jai Courtney) to seek revenge for his firing. Chet decided to seek out Joaquin — and even shot him in the hand — before Miguel (Berto Colón) got the chance to take the ranch hand out.
Before his death, Chet worked at 10 Petal and was made a foreman before being demoted and fired by Rip (Cole Hauser).
Yellowstone initially introduced viewers to the Dutton family in 2018. The Paramount Network show came to an end in 2024, expanding its universe with Luke Grimes’ CBS show Marshals and Dutton Ranch, which premiered in May.
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Dutton Ranchhas introduced some new characters played by Annette Bening and Ed Harris. Other newcomers include Courtney, Natalie Alyn Lind, Pablo Raba, J. R. Villarreal — and Marc Menchaca‘s Zachariah.
Earlier this month, Menchaca weighed in on whether the deadly twists on the show had him worried about his character Zachariah’s fate, telling Us, “It’s always a possibility — and I have a pretty good track record of saying bye bye on a show.”
“My wife [Lena Headey] made a death reel for me for my birthday this last year. It was about 10 minutes and it didn’t even have all my deaths,” he quipped. “So I was a little bit [worried].”
He continued: “I was like, ‘They may take me out so I better get on everybody’s good side.’ Hopefully it won’t happen but the way things are now, you get these scripts just a little bit before. Then you start going through and you’re like, ‘Is it gonna happen next scene?’ Thankfully it has not [yet].”
“I grew up that life. I just took from ranchers that I worked for,” he shared. “I wanted to be a team roper when I was a kid and it brought my childhood back to me.”
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Looking ahead, Menchaca teased what is yet to come, adding, “Obviously there’s going to be tension. It definitely creates tension and we will find out that there are some things about the 10 Petal that are unbecoming of a country boy.”
Aliens have existed for a very long time in Disclosure Day, and there’s proof of that. On the one hand, the Wardex Corporation, part of the U.S. Government and secretly assigned to extraterrestrial investigations, wants to keep that evidence from reaching the public. On the other hand, a former Wardex employee named Hugo Wakefield (Colman Domingo) leads a revolution to release that information to the masses worldwide. People have a right to know, regardless of how it affects them, once they do.
Caught in the middle of Wardex and Hugo’s obsession with revealing the truth is Daniel Kellner (Josh O’Connor), a cybersecurity expert running around with what is seemingly all of the government’s extraterrestrial evidence in his backpack. Daniel rescues his girlfriend Jane Blankenship (Eve Hewson) at the beginning of the film, and she tags along or shows up whenever it’s convenient to the storyline. Jane is a former nun solely so Disclosure Day can make comparisons to religion and whether aliens existing and being revealed to the public is blasphemous or not.
Leading Wardex is Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth), a man who insists on using alien technology to catch up to Daniel, even though it is clearly killing him. The film introduces a gray crystal the size of a travel toothbrush holder that allows the user to telepathically control and communicate with others.
As Daniel contemplates just dumping everything he has online as he flees, a Kansas City TV meteorologist named Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) speaks alien dialect on the air and gains the ability to know everything about someone just by looking into their eyes. Margaret and Daniel are connected in a way that will be key in the mission to reveal aliens to the world.
No Surface Is That Reflective
There are a few things Disclosure Day does right. It isn’t fair to say that Steven Spielberg is a hack or has lost just about everything that made much of his previous work enjoyable, because certain elements still suggest otherwise. Cinematographer Janusz Kaminski returns to work with Spielberg for the 19th time, and it shows as the film looks incredible.
The car chase sequence where Wardex finds Daniel and Jane at the farmhouse is a highlight of the film. As Daniel sneaks around the field, the camera impressively waltzes through and around a fence. The sequence is stitched together as a one-take, and it makes you wonder if there are any hidden cuts because it’s executed so well.
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The film has an obsession with lens flares and brightly lit background windows, though. Like, if J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg got into a lens-flare-off, it would be like staring at the sun until our eyes exploded. It’s every major sequence for the first half of Disclosure Day, though. It’s an odd choice since the film is like 93% dialogue, and everything around them can’t be that reflective or take place during that time of day.
As a science fiction film, though, Disclosure Day is a chore to sit through. Clocking in at just under two and a half hours, the film is congested with dialogue. You expect a certain amount of exposition in a film to set the story or eventually lead to something worthwhile. Disclosure Day is all exposition and no payoff. The way the film concludes is so melodramatic and unsatisfying. It feels like Steven Spielberg and screenwriter David Koepp were going for how we, as a species, would react if certifiable extraterrestrial proof were unveiled like this.
But all Disclosure Day does is remind you of how stupid the human race actually is. The final moment before the film cuts to black is infuriating, as well. You’ve waited two and a half hours for this moment, and it’s cut short for either obnoxious ambiguity or a potential unwanted sequel. It’s wild that David Koepp wrote 42 drafts of the screenplay, and this is what he landed on.
Awkwardness Abounds
There’s an awkwardness to Steven Spielberg films in the way they’re written that I can’t tell is universally accepted by those who adore his work or goes unnoticed with his status as a well-known director. The attempts at humor are often lame, while the character interactions are overwhelmingly corny. Disclosure Day is no different, and it’s even more irksome because the film feels so long.
Here’s this long-winded and torturous stretch of dialogue with the only reward being a smart ass glance from across the room, a bad attempt at a joke that is total cringe, or body language that is offensively embarrassing for everyone involved. It feels like an intentional dick move you can’t escape from. Disclosure Day is like being trapped in the spiked room in Indiana Jones and The Temple of Doom while somebody dry humps one of the spikes as a spike pierces your brain and says something like, “At least I’ll have more leg room on airplanes,” right before you’re crushed to death. It’s trash.
It doesn’t help that the people we’re forced to tag along with for most of the film are selfish, annoying pricks. Margaret has a boyfriend named Jackson (Wyatt Russell) who is such a gigantic POS. Margaret dreams of being a serious news anchor, but is currently stuck dancing and acting a fool while showcasing the weather. She wants to move even though they just got settled in Kansas City, and Jackson doesn’t want to because he has his music and he just scored performances two days a week locally.
To make matters worse, he doesn’t want Margaret to succeed or move on because he likes seeing her dance on television. Screw aliens and career advancement since Margaret gives Jackson boners now. After Margaret learns things she shouldn’t, Jackson worries about the dumbest things that don’t matter while something that affects the entire world is going on. She starts talking about Daniel, and he thinks it’s an ex-boyfriend, and he lies to her and does something that would have derailed the entire story if he had succeeded.
Meanwhile, Emily Blunt overacts, Josh O’Connor underacts, and Colin Firth stumbles around the entire film with that look on his face like he crapped his pants and is now trying to hide it because he can’t go home and change. But everyone knows, Colin. Everyone knows.
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The filmmaking aspects of Disclosure Day are impressive, and they should be, considering Steven Spielberg’s illustrious career and the people he continues to work with, but the story feels so elongated for no reason, with no real conclusion, and the dialogue and humor are so awful when there is so much of each.
Carson Rowland’s absence from Sweet Magnolias has sparked backlash from fans, but the actor has been busy working on a new project — and it’s finally been revealed.
Rowland, 28, will have a “recurring role” on NBC’s The Rockford Files, Deadline reported on Thursday, June 11.
While Rowland’s character on the reboot has not been shared, the show was picked up to series by NBC last month.
The Rockford Files initially aired from 1974 to 1980 starring James Garner as former inmate turned private investigator, Jim Rockford.
Sweet Magnolias is gearing up for its big season 5 return — but Serenity, South Carolina, will be missing one familiar face. Showrunner Sheryl J. Anderson exclusively confirmed to Us Weekly ahead of the show’s Thursday, June 11, premiere that Carson Rowland, who portrays Tyler “Ty” Townsend, made the “decision” to sit out on the […]
In the new iteration, David Boreanaz will portray the lead. Felix Solis and Jacki Weaver have also been announced as part of the cast, playing Jim’s best friend, Nitty, and trailer park neighbor Karma, respectively.
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According to the logline, the new series follows Jim Rockford after he’s been “newly paroled for a crime he didn’t commit, who returns to work as a private investigator in Los Angeles but finds himself targeted by both police and organized crime.”
While Rowland hasn’t publicly confirmed his part on The Rockford Files, he’s hinted that he’s back to work via social media in recent weeks.
Carson Rowland on ‘Sweet Magnolias.’Netflix
“I’m alive. Promise!” Rowland wrote via Instagram on May 28, sharing a series of photos, including one picture of him on camera shooting something.
In addition to filming The Rockford Files pilot, Rowland recently shot three independent movies, according to Deadline, which have not been released.
The actor’s future on Sweet Magnolias, meanwhile, is still up in the air after his character, Ty, was missing from most of season 4.
After it was revealed that Carson Rowland won’t be returning for season 5 of Netflix’s Sweet Magnolias, many fans are now convinced that he may be joining season 2 of Amazon Prime’s hit series Off Campus as Jake. Sweet Magnolias showrunner Sheryl J. Anderson exclusively confirmed to Us Weekly that Rowland, who portrays Tyler “Ty” […]
His absence was explained by Ty — who is Maddie Townsend’s (JoAnna Garcia Swisher) eldest son — going on tour with bandmate Olivia (Tommi Rose). He even missed girlfriend Annie’s (Anneliese Judge) graduation, which led her to break up with him via text.
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When season 5 premiered on June 11, fans were surprised that Ty wasn’t present at all. However, he was on the minds of viewers after Annie received a “miss you” text out of the blue.
Showrunner Sheryl J. Anderson told Deadline this month that the text and missed FaceTime message from Ty could spell a return for Rowland’s character down the line.
“We’ll have to wait and see, won’t we?,” Anderson teased.
Serenity saw some major shakeups throughout Sweet Magnolias season 5 — and series showrunner Sheryl J. Anderson is breaking down every twist for Us. Warning: Major spoilers below for season 5 of Sweet Magnolias. For years, Sweet Magnolias has followed lifelong best friends Maddie Townsend (JoAnna Garcia Swisher), Dana Sue Sullivan (Brooke Elliott) and Helen […]
She noted that the writers wanted to “give that story emotional weight, stakes, consequences,” for Annie, explaining that “to just pretend that nobody thinks about him, nobody asks about him, and that he’s not thinking about them would have been insincere, I believe.”
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Anderson added, “He’s still out there trying to figure out what happens next, she’s still in Serenity trying to figure out what happens next. And again, open doors we hope will lead to new information, different resolutions. Love isn’t cut and dry. You don’t just wake up one morning and say, I don’t love this person anymore, and move on. It takes time.”
Only time will tell if Rowland returned to Sweet Magnolias for season 6, but for now he’s focused on his new projects and life as a father of two.
Carson announced in October 2025 that his wife, Maris Rowland, gave birth to their second baby, a son named Asa. The couple, who tied the knot in 2021, also share 2-year-old daughter Eden.
Gwyneth Paltrow’s famous family includes more than her children.
The Oscar winner is the daughter of Hollywood royalty Blythe Danner and Bruce Paltrow. Gwyneth also has a brother named Jake Paltrow, who also followed in their parents’ famous footsteps.
Gwyneth married Coldplay singer Chris Martin in 2003. The pair welcomed daughter Apple and son Moses in May 2004 and April 2006, respectively. The actress and Martin split in 2014 after more than a decade of marriage.
Amid her divorce from Martin, Gwyneth moved on with Brad Falchuk. The duo wed in 2018. The couple have a blended family as Falchuk is stepfather to Apple and Moses while Gwyneth is stepmother to the producer’s daughter Isabella and son Brody, whom he shares with ex-wife Suzanne Bukinik.
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Keep scrolling for a complete guide on Gwyneth’s family:
Blythe Danner
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Gwyneth seemingly followed in her mother’s footsteps and Danner is an actress as well. Danner made her acting debut in the 1970 TV film George M!. She’s appeared in multiple projects since, including Adam’s Rib, The Great Santini, Mr. & Mrs. Bridge, The X-Files, Meet the Parents, Will & Grace and more.
Danner won two Emmys for her supporting role on the TV series Huff. She also won a Tony for Butterflies Are Free.
Bruce Paltrow
Gwyneth’s father was a director and producer. Bruce worked on the TV shows The White Shadow, St. Elsewhere, Tattinger’s as well as films A Little Sex and Duets.
In 1999, Bruce was diagnosed with oral cancer. He died at age 58 in 2002 while on vacation in Italy with his family for Gwyneth’s birthday. Bruce’s cause of death was due to complications from oral cancer and pneumonia. Gwyneth’s grief of losing her father inspired Martin to write “Fix You” and Coldplay’s album X&Y was dedicated to Bruce.
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Jake Paltrow
Jake is Gwyneth’s sole sibling. Her brother followed in their dad’s footsteps as he pursued a career behind the camera. Jake is a director and writer who has worked on NYPD Blue, The Good Night, Young Ones, Boardwalk Empire and more.
In 2010, Jake wed wife Taryn Simon. The couple share two children.
Apple Martin
Gwyneth and Chris welcomed daughter Apple in May 2004. Apple graduated from Vanderbilt University in May 2026. She has pursued modeling with campaigns for Gap and walking the runway for Chanel. Apple will make her acting debut in an upcoming Nancy Myers film.
Moses Martin
Gwyneth gave birth to Moses in April 2006. Moses is a student at Brown University. He is also in the band People I’ve Met.
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Brad Falchuk
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Gwyneth and Falchuk first crossed paths on the set of Glee in 2010 but things didn’t turn romantic until four years later. The couple tied the knot in 2018.
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Following their nuptials, Gwyneth and Falchuk worked together on the series The Politician. Gwyneth starred in the Netflix series while Falchuk wrote and produced it.
Isabella ‘Izzy’ Falchuk
Izzy is Brad’s daughter from his first marriage and Gwyneth’s stepdaughter. According to her LinkedIn page, she studied performing and media arts at Cornell University. She has previously interned at The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Warner Bros. and the office of Senator Cory Booker.
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Brody Falchuk
Brody is Brad’s son and stepson to Gwyneth. He is a student at Yale.
The upcoming Supergirl film is going to be much more of a cosmic adventure than Superman (2025), with the Woman of Steel traveling the stars to help her faithful pooch, Krypto. That means we can look forward to seeing many wild alien designs onscreen, including that of Jason Momoa’s Lobo. Supergirl is only the second feature film in James Gunn’s growing DCU, and it looks like it’s going to stretch the boundaries of this cinematic universe further than ever. Recently, though, DC got in trouble for flying Supergirl into a very familiar galaxy far, far away.
With Supergirl about to fly into theaters on June 26, DC has been doing all kinds of things to promote the upcoming film. This includes selling various licensed collectibles, one of which was a metal print of Millie Alcock’s Supergirl surrounded by many of the wild aliens she encountered in the film. It’s a beautiful print, but there was just one problem: the artist included Lexo Sooger, who is the most obscure character in Star Wars. Obscure or not, though, that’s a character owned by Disney, and DC subsequently removed the metal print from their online store for fear of legal action.
Up, Up, And Away (From A Lawsuit)
The promotional art print above is drawn by Bilquis Evely, one of the artists who worked on the Woman of Tomorrow comic that Supergirl’s story is based on. In the print, we can see Alcock’s Woman of Steel surrounded by several wacky alien designs. The one that got DC in trouble, however, is the hunched-over dude, wormy dude behind her with the blinged-out necklace. As it turns out, this is Lexo Sooger, an obscure Star Wars character. How obscure are we talking? He was only featured in the deleted scenes for The Last Jedi, meaning that the vast majority of Star Wars fans have never seen or even heard of this guy.
Once DC realized this artwork featured a Star Wars character, they stopped selling the metal print and removed its page from their online store. How, though, did a character from a galaxy far, far away end up on Supergirl artwork in the first place? It’s not actually the artist’s fault. According to IGN, Evely was sent images of Lexo Sooger for reference when designing this print. While neither she nor DC has publicly commented on this snafu, it seems like whoever sent the reference image is the one to blame.
Somehow, Lex Sooger Returned
However, that unnamed person may have simply made an understandable mistake. You see, one of the weird aliens in Supergirl looks a lot like the aforementioned Star Wars character: gold necklace, white robe, and long neck. It’s possible that whoever provided the reference image really thought Lexo Sooger was the Supergirl character. Or, more pessimistically, it’s possible that the alien in the film was originally a rip-off of Sooger, and the designer thought the Star Wars character was too obscure for anyone to notice.
If that’s the case, they forgot the first rule of online fandoms: somebody always notices. At any rate, what’s done is done. DC stopped selling the print (which has now, hilariously, become a collector’s item), and Disney hasn’t taken any action against either DC or Warner Bros. Supergirl is scheduled to superhero land in theaters on June 26, where we’ll get to see the weird alien who looks just like a forgotten Star Wars character. Here’s hoping that Millie Alcock takes one look at him before staring right into the camera and uttering those four immortal words every fan wants to hear: “somehow, Lex Sooger returned.”
When Star Trek: The Next Generation came to the big screen, it mostly followed in the footsteps of the movies that came before. The films based on The Original Series established a strange pattern where the odd-numbered films were weaker and the even-numbered films were stronger. The Motion Picture was slow and plodding, for example, while The Wrath of Khan was exciting and action-packed. As for the TNG crew’s movies, Generations was an uneven, nostalgic mess, while First Contact was an unqualified banger. When Insurrection turned out to be nothing more than a prolonged episode of Next Generation, fans consoled themselves that the next, even-numbered film would blow us all away.
Sadly, Star Trek: Nemesis was a trainwreck that brought the TNG movies to a crashing halt and very nearly killed the franchise. Now, nearly a quarter of a century later, fans are still debating where that ambitious movie (Picard fights an evil clone played by Tom Hardy!) went wrong. We don’t have to wonder any longer, though. On Jonathan Frakes’ and Brent Spiner’s hit podcast, they recently had Nemesis alumnus Ron Perlman as a guest. They all took turns blaming that movie’s failure on director Stuart Baird, whom Perlman decried in the bluntest possible way: “He was not a director, he was a f***ing editor that the studio owed a favor to.”
A Head-To-Head Podcast
In case you don’t know, Jonathan Frakes and Brent Spiner have a new-ish podcast, Dropping Names With Brent and Jonny. It’s not designed as a Star Trek podcast, but the two of them keep hosting guests from the franchise that made them both famous. In a recent episode, they hosted Ron Perlman, the Hellboy actor who appeared in Star Trek: Nemesis as a creepy Reman. Once the conversation turned to Nemesis, Perlman didn’t pull any punches regarding director Stuart Baird, someone he said that the Star Trek: Nemesis cast agreed had “had no people skills whatsoever.”
After this, Perlman kept going, declaring that Baird “was not a director, he was a f***ing editor that the studio owed a favor to.” Elaborating, Perlman claimed that Baird “saved a lot of their turkeys. They would bring him in when they had a turkey, and he would recut it and turn it watchable. So he was a very talented editor, but he was not a director… He’s not a filmmaker.” This is in reference to Baird being an acclaimed editor who had previously worked on fan-favorite movies like Lethal Weapon and the original Superman. Later, he worked on two of the best modern James Bond films: Casino Royale and Skyfall.
When Hell Met Boy
As for the two Star Trek: The Next Generation actors, Brent Spiner was more moderate in his criticism: he agreed that Bair “was not a director” but gave the man his props as an editor. This is fair, really: Baird might have been the worst possible choice for directing Nemesis, but his killer editing work for some of the coolest franchises in the world earns him a place in the geek hall of fame. Frakes was more direct in his criticism, noting that Baird turned down offers of advice from himself and Patrick Stewart “because we’d done 182 episodes and three movies together.” However, the director “was not interested in talking to us at all about how we rolled.”
Pretty much everyone in the room agreed that Baird was a very gifted editor. However, Ron Perlman was convinced that such an inexperienced director getting the job was an indication that Paramount had no respect for Star Trek: Nemesis or the skills it would take to bring that movie to life. “[It’s] that attitude, like, ‘anybody can do this, you know, let’s just give it to that guy.’”
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I’m Sensing A Terrible Director, Captain
Regardless of who you blame, Nemesis was arguably the worst movie in Star Trek history. Its critical and commercial failure spelled the end of the films featuring the Next Generation crew. When the franchise did come back, it was in the form of Star Trek (2009), a complete reboot of The Original Series. Weirdly enough, that movie also featured the Enterprise fighting an advanced Romulan warship led by a bald, charismatic commander. Such a creative rip-off might make you wonder if JJ Abrams (Trek’s filmmaker) was ever a very good director. But at least he’s a good editor, right?
I mean, one who forgot to remove all those lens flares. Oh, and forgot to make The Rise of Skywalker make any sense. But, uh, otherwise gifted, we promise!
Next year, Star Trek will have been on the air for sixty years. Fourteen movies and almost a thousand TV episodes later, the franchise can still look back to the very first episode that was ever aired, “The Man Trap,” for inspiration. Its blend of science fiction, horror, action, and thoughtful introspection set the show on the past that it would ultimately follow for six decades. It all started with the death of one character who was never really seen on-screen: Nancy Crater.
Star Trek: The Original Series premiered on NBC on September 8, 1966, with “The Man Trap,” a tale of lost love, extinction, and salt vampires. The brainchild of Gene Roddenberry, it introduced viewers to a cast of characters who are still gracing televisions to this day: William Shatner‘s stalwart Captain James T. Kirk, Leonard Nimoy‘s stoic, logical Mr. Spock, and DeForest Kelley‘s cantankerous, hot-headed Dr. Leonard “Bones” McCoy. Although it was ultimately cancelled after three seasons, it would accrue a legion of fans, living on in syndication and spin-offs to this day.
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What Was the First Episode of ‘Star Trek: The Original Series’?
However, “The Man Trap” wasn’t even supposed to be the first episode of Star Trek. The first pilot for Star Trek was “The Cage”: it starred Jeffrey Hunter as Captain Christopher Pike, and was rejected by the network. However, Lucille Ball, whose studio, Desilu, was producing the series, still thought the project had legs and commissioned a second pilot. That episode, “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” replaced Pike with Shatner’s James Kirk, and won over the network; parts of “The Cage” would later be used in a two-part episode, “The Menagerie,” which established Pike as Kirk’s predecessor.
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Collider Exclusive · Sci-Fi Personality Quiz Which Sci-Fi Hero Are You Most Like? Paul Atreides · Captain Kirk · Princess Leia · Ellen Ripley · Max Rockatansky
Five iconic heroes. Five completely different ways of facing an impossible universe. One of them shares your instincts, your values, and your particular way of refusing to back down. Eight questions will tell you which one.
🏜️Paul Atreides
🖖Capt. Kirk
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✊Princess Leia
🔦Ellen Ripley
🔥Max Rockatansky
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01
How do you lead when the stakes couldn’t be higher? The way you lead under pressure is the most honest thing about you.
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02
What is your greatest strength in a crisis? The quality that keeps you alive when everything else fails.
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03
What is the thing you’d sacrifice everything else for? Your deepest motivation is your truest compass.
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04
How do you relate to the people around you? Who you are to others under pressure is who you really are.
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05
You’re facing a threat that no one else believes is real. What do you do? How you respond when you’re the only one who sees it defines everything.
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06
What has your heroism cost you personally? Every hero pays. The question is what — and whether they’d pay it again.
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07
How do you feel about the rules of the world you’re in? Every hero has a relationship with the system. What’s yours?
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08
When everything is on the line, what keeps you going? The answer is the most honest thing about you.
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Your Hero Has Been Identified Your Sci-Fi Hero Is…
Your answers point to the iconic sci-fi hero who shares your instincts, your values, and your particular way of facing the impossible.
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Arrakis · Dune
Paul Atreides
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You carry a weight most people would crumble under — the knowledge of what you’re capable of, and the burden of what you might have to become.
You see further ahead than others and you plan accordingly, even when the vision frightens you.
You are driven by loyalty to your people and a sense of destiny you didn’t ask for but can’t escape.
Paul Atreides is not simply a hero — he is someone who understands the cost of power and chooses to bear it anyway.
That gravity, that willingness to carry what others won’t, is exactly you.
USS Enterprise · Star Trek
Captain Kirk
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You lead with instinct, warmth, and an absolute refusal to accept a no-win scenario — because you’ve always believed there’s a third option nobody else has thought of yet.
You take the mission seriously without ever taking yourself too seriously.
Your crew would follow you anywhere, not because you demand it, but because you’ve earned it.
Kirk’s genius isn’t tactical — it’s human. He reads people, bends rules with purpose, and wills outcomes into existence through sheer conviction.
That combination of warmth, audacity, and relentless optimism is unmistakably yours.
The Rebellion · Star Wars
Princess Leia
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You are the kind of person who holds the line when everyone else is losing faith — not because you’re fearless, but because giving up simply isn’t something you’re capable of.
You lead through conviction. Your voice carries because your belief is unshakeable.
You gave up everything ordinary the moment you chose the cause, and you’ve never looked back.
Leia is not a supporting character in her own story — she is the moral centre of the entire rebellion.
That same fierce, principled, unbreakable core is what defines you.
The Nostromo · Alien
Ellen Ripley
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You are not reckless, not grandiose, and not particularly interested in being anyone’s hero — you just refuse to stop when it matters.
You see threats clearly, you document the truth even when no one listens, and when the time comes you handle it yourself.
Ripley’s heroism is earned, not performed. She doesn’t have a speech — she has a flamethrower and a plan.
You share her composure under the worst possible pressure, and her refusal to pretend the monster isn’t there.
When it counts, you don’t flinch. That’s everything.
The Wasteland · Mad Max
Max Rockatansky
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You have been through fire that would break most people — and what came out the other side is something the world underestimates at its peril.
You don’t ask for help, don’t need validation, and don’t wait for anyone to tell you the rules no longer apply.
Your loyalty, when it finally arrives, is absolute — but it’s earned in silence and tested in action, not in words.
Max is not a nihilist. He is someone who lost everything and found, against his will, that he still has something worth protecting.
That bruised, stubborn, ultimately human core is exactly yours.
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However, when it came time to decide what episode would be broadcast first, there was some debate. “Where No Man Has Gone Before” had too much exposition, and another episode, “Mudd’s Women,” was seen as too salacious. Thanks to its horror elements, “The Man Trap” was chosen as the series’ pilot.
What Was TV Horror Like in the 1960s?
On TV, horror was the domain of The Twilight Zone and its rival, The Outer Limits. The Twilight Zone was the brainchild of Rod Serling, who was Roddenberry’s longtime friend, and had ended its run in 1964 after five seasons; both Nimoy and Shatner starred on memorable episodes of the show. George Clayton Johnson, who penned the episode, was a veteran of the series as well; one of his episodes, “Nothing In the Dark,” featuring a young Robert Redford, is one of the series’ most acclaimed entries. However, by 1966, both series were off the air, and a new flavor of horror was in the air.
For decades, horror had been seen solely in black and white. The American horror canon was strictly monochromatic, from the silent horrors of Lon Chaney Sr., to the Universal Monsters of the 1930s and 40s, to Alfred Hitchcock‘s chilling Psycho. However, the genre was moving into color, challenging censors and moral guardians, with the horrors of Britain’s Hammer Film Productions spattering crimson all over movie screens on both sides of the Atlantic. Star Trek was filmed in vibrant color, one of several contemporary series meant to sell color TV sets, and it was about to bring full-color horror to America’s living rooms.
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What Happens in ‘The Man Trap’?
Captain Kirk (William Shatner) teases Doctor McCoy (DeForest Kelley) in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “The Man Trap.”Image via NBC
The episode opens with the USS Enterprise paying a visit to the planet M-113 and its only inhabitants: Professor Robert Crater (Alfred Ryder) and his wife, Nancy (Jeanne Bal); years ago, Nancy and Dr. McCoy had been lovers, but they hadn’t seen each other in decades. It’s clear from the start that there’s something unusual about Nancy: Bones sees her in the flower of her youth, Kirk sees her as middle-aged, and Crewman Darnell, who accompanied them, sees her as a different woman entirely. She leads him off alone, and the next time we see him, he’s dead, with his cold flesh covered in lurid sucker-marks.
His death presages the many “redshirts” who would come to gruesome ends in future episodes, although he wears blue. Nancy is the culprit; she’s a shapeshifting vampiric creature, subsisting off salt leeched from living beings. Nancy, disguising herself as another dead crewman, makes her way aboard the Enterprise and begins stalking the ship’s crew. In two tension-filled scenes, it encounters, but does not attack, Uhura (Nichelle Nichols) and Janice Rand (Grace Lee Whitney); befitting the horror tropes of the time, they’re both women, although the Nancy-creature clearly doesn’t discriminate.
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What Happened to Nancy Crater?
Shape-shifting alien revealed in the Star Trek: The Original Series episode “The Man Trap.”Image via NBC
Eventually, Kirk and McCoy learn from the half-mad Crater that the real Nancy is long-dead, killed by the very creature that now impersonates her. Desperate for companionship, he allowed the creature to take on her form and kept it alive with salt tablets. We are left to imagine that the comfort the creature provided him was solely emotional; anything more would have been far too horrifying for 1960s network television. After it kills Crater, his usefulness now seemingly at an end, Kirk, Spock, and Bones finally confront the creature aboard the ship, where it reveals its true, monstrous appearance. Here, too, it is a more visceral monster than those featured in its predecessors; it resembles a cross between an ape, a lamprey, and a desiccated human corpse. Spock, whose Vulcan blood makes him unappetizing to the creature, cannot harm it, even with his prodigious strength.
It’s up to Kirk to finally end it once and for all with a phaser blast. However, the creature is not simply a monster to be killed and forgotten about. Professor Crater likened the creature to the American buffalo, which once roamed the plains in vast herds before being exterminated. The creatures exhausted the planet’s salt supplies and died out; the one that impersonated Nancy was apparently the last of its breed. As the episode ends, Kirk ponders having rendered their species extinct, and tells Spock that he was “thinking about the buffalo.”
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“The Man Trap” wouldn’t be the last time Star Trek ventured into the horror genre. In The Original Series alone, Psycho‘s Robert Bloch adapted his own “Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper” into “Wolf in the Fold,” a tale of the undying spirit of murder, and penned “Catspaw,” a Halloween-themed episode featuring a haunted castle, an eerie pair of aliens, and a sinister black cat. Subsequent series have dabbled in horror, as well, with everything from the corpse-like Borg to a race of mind-controlling, body-invading bugs. Strange New Worlds‘ third season just featured an episode set on a planet inhabited by ravenous, mindless zombies. The blueprint for it all is in “The Man Trap,” the story of a woman who was killed and had her killer take her place by her husband’s side.
All episodes of Star Trek are available to stream on Paramount+ in the U.S.
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Release Date
1966 – 1969-00-00
Showrunner
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Gene Roddenberry
Directors
Marc Daniels, Joseph Pevney, Ralph Senensky, Vincent McEveety, Herb Wallerstein, Jud Taylor, Marvin J. Chomsky, David Alexander, Gerd Oswald, Herschel Daugherty, James Goldstone, Robert Butler, Anton Leader, Gene Nelson, Harvey Hart, Herbert Kenwith, James Komack, John Erman, John Newland, Joseph Sargent, Lawrence Dobkin, Leo Penn, Michael O’Herlihy, Murray Golden
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Writers
D.C. Fontana, Jerome Bixby, Arthur Heinemann, David Gerrold, Jerry Sohl, Oliver Crawford, Robert Bloch, David P. Harmon, Don Ingalls, Paul Schneider, Shimon Wincelberg, Steven W. Carabatsos, Theodore Sturgeon, Jean Lisette Aroeste, Art Wallace, Adrian Spies, Barry Trivers, Don Mankiewicz, Edward J. Lakso, Fredric Brown, George Clayton Johnson, George F. Slavin, Gilbert Ralston, Harlan Ellison
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