Entertainment
23 Years Later, Jason Statham’s Crime Masterpiece Is Quietly Soaring on Netflix
Fresh off the success of Ocean’s Eleven in 2001 — the movie grossed $450 million worldwide against a reported budget of $85 million — Hollywood decided to focus on the heist genre like never before. Interestingly, the big-budget underperformers Swordfish and The Score were released a few months before Ocean’s Eleven. But their so-so box-office didn’t deter the industry from chasing success in the heist genre. Only two years later, Paramount got an A-list cast together for a big-budget heist movie that did solid business at the box office, received moderately positive reviews, and is now witnessing a viewership spike on streaming. The movie wasn’t exactly a remake, but was heavily inspired by a cult classic British film from 1969 starring Michael Caine.
The 2003 version was directed by F. Gary Gray, who’d return to the heist genre several years later with The Fate of the Furious and the Netflix hit Lift. Neither film received particularly positive reviews, although Gray’s 2003 film holds the highest score of the lot on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes. It was headlined by Mark Wahlberg, with Charlize Theron, Jason Statham, Edward Norton, Yasiin Bey (credited as Mos Def), Donald Sutherland, and Seth Green in supporting roles.
‘The Italian Job’ Sequel Never Took Off
By now, you’ve probably guessed that we’re talking about The Italian Job. The film is sitting at a 72% score on Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Despite some iffy plot elements, The Italian Job succeeds in delivering an entertaining modern take on the original 1969 heist film, thanks to a charismatic cast.” The movie was reasonably successful, grossing $176 million worldwide against a reported budget of $60 million. A sequel, tentatively titled The Brazilian Job, was stuck in development hell for several years before its writer, David Twohy, stated that no progress had been made on it. The Italian Job, however, remains a fan favorite. According to FlixPatrol, it was among the most-watched movies on Netflix worldwide this week, when the leaderboard was topped by the recently released romantic comedy Office Romance. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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May 30, 2003
- Runtime
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111 minutes
Entertainment
Could Million Dollar Nannies, Mormon Wives Have a Crossover?
Million Dollar Nannies introduced the world to NannyTok, so does this mean they will cross over with MomTok from The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives?
“Actually, there is a video that Hulu posted about introducing all the cast and Taylor Frankie Paul — out of nowhere — commented on it,” star Taylor Hayward exclusively told Us Weekly. “She’s Team Taylor and I love her so much.”
Hayward already found herself relating to Paul, adding, “I would love nothing more than to do a crossover and nanny for her and just to meet her in general. She ended up following me so maybe something will be there for me.”
Hayward’s fiancé, Mitchell Bienvenue, also held out hope.
“We met some of them at an event,” he recalled. “If we found ourselves in a situation down the road where there’s a potential crossover, I think it’s a great opportunity.”
Million Dollar Nannies, which is streaming now on Hulu, follows a young group of elite nannies as they head to Ibiza to launch an agency built for nannies.

“They’re promised VIP families, life-changing money, and a shot at something bigger than any of them could build alone,” read the official synopsis. “But fierce competition, personal drama, and a scandal from the past threaten to derail the dream before the summer sets.”
“I have watched a lot of reality TV before but [going into this I was concerned about] the vulnerability about being so vulnerable and alone,” Hayward shared with Us. “I just didn’t have high hopes for it. Honestly, I didn’t know what to expect out of it.”
For Bienvenue, the hope behind doing the show was showing a different side to being a nanny, adding, “When you’re in this industry and you’re working with these families, you never know what requests might come through. But at the end of the day, you have to stay true to who you are and to not overextend yourself in situations you don’t want to.”
Looking ahead, Bienvenue teased where the cast stands now.
“Things ended in a little bit of a rocky place in certain situations amongst us. There’s definitely tight friend groups within all eight of us,” he hinted. “Now, it’s been interesting to see new friendships form and we all stay relatively close. But I think there’s definitely stronger friend groups amongst the overall cast than others.”
He continued: “There’s a lot of things that are still to be spoken about and there’s a lot of things that can still find its way of clearing the air.”
Million Dollar Nannies is streaming on Hulu now.
Entertainment
Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo’s Most Revealing Quotes About Split
Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo are publicly discussing the end of their nearly 10-year marriage — and they’re doing it together.
Us Weekly confirmed on June 15, 2026, that Jelly Roll quietly filed for divorce from Bunnie in Tennessee one month earlier, citing “irreconcilable differences.” Days later, the country star and the “Dumb Blonde” podcast host both broke their silence on the split, addressing everything from the Mother’s Day argument that triggered the filing to swirling rumors about new romances.
Scroll below for the most candid things Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo have said about their divorce:
Jelly Roll Breaks Silence on His Divorce
During his Saratoga Springs, New York, tour stop on June 18, 2026, Jelly Roll told the crowd he wanted to set the record straight.
“I wasn’t going to talk about this tonight, but while we’re talking about liars… the internet is a liar,” Jelly Roll said at the time. “Me and my wife are best friends. We will always be best friends. We just got off the phone earlier today. Nobody cheated on nobody. She just did a whole podcast about it. You can go watch it. Every word of it is the truth.”
The singer ended his stage message by directly addressing his estranged wife, “Bunnie, I love you baby. Thank you for those 10 years. They were incredible. Thank you for the next 10 years of friendship and 20 beyond that.”
Jelly Roll and Bunnie Xo Broke Up After an Argument on Mother’s Day
On her “Dumb Blonde” podcast, Bunnie explained that she and Jelly Roll had a fight before the singer filed for divorce.
“On Mother’s Day, we had a little bit of an argument, which I don’t think the details are necessary,” she alleged in June 2026. “And, in that argument, I was so fed up and so tired that I just looked at him and said, ‘Well, then file the f***ing divorce papers.’”
According to Bunnie, the couple stopped having difficult conversations over the past year and a half, which created a “recipe for disaster.”
“Was I blindsided? And was this divorce mutual? No, it was not mutual,” she said.
Bunnie Claims Jelly Roll Has Started Dating
While shutting down rumors that Jelly Roll is dating singer Jessie Murph, Bunnie confirmed that her estranged husband is back on the market.
“Daddy Roll is probably in his finest season. He looks so good. He is healthier than he’s ever been,” she said on her June 2026 podcast episode, referring to Jelly Roll’s 200-pound weight loss. “He’s even started dating, which is great. I love that.”
As for herself, Bunnie said she’s not interested in another relationship. “I’m sorry to break your heart, guys. I’m about to be a player.”
Bunnie Shuts Down Chad Kroeger Rumors
Elsewhere on her podcast, Bunnie addressed speculation that she is dating Nickelback frontman Chad Kroeger after posting a throwback clip of him from a 2025 Las Vegas concert.
“I am not with Daddy Chaddy. There’s no f***ing way in hell that that would even be a thing. And no, I did not cheat on my husband and leave him for Chad, and like, none of that. Like, please,” she stated. “This is so wrong. I am not dating Chad Kroeger. I am so sorry to Chad and Nickelback for this happening. It’s embarrassing.”
Bunnie Xo Addresses Stepdaughter Bailee’s Reaction
Bunnie also spoke about Jelly Roll’s daughter, Bailee Ann, on her podcast in June 2026. (Bunnie helped raise Jelly Roll’s daughter, in addition to his son, both from previous relationships.)
“The only woman she has had consistently in her life, she feels, is being taken from her and it’s a weird transition that we’re gonna have to navigate,” Bunnie said of Bailee. “Of course she’s mad at me, because I was always the f***ing disciplining parent in the relationship because he’s f***ing fun dad all the time.”
She added, “That’s my baby. I love her. If she wants to be mad at me for f***ing two years, I’ll deal with it. But when she’s ready to come back, I will always be there for her.”
Bunnie Xo and Jelly Roll Still Plan to Have a Baby Together
Despite the divorce, Bunnie revealed she and Jelly Roll are continuing their IVF journey.
“You guys are going to be shocked to hear this but we’re still having a baby,” Bunnie said on her podcast in June 2026. “We’re still having a baby together, we’re going to coparent together. J has been so great about us still having a baby together and he wants the same thing. We’re just going to raise little Nugget as one big happy family.”
Jelly Roll’s ‘Divorce Vlog’ Plot Twist
On June 19, 2026, Jelly Roll posted a YouTube video titled “The Divorce Vlog,” in which he called Bunnie to plug her podcast episode.
“Yeah, y’all thought we were going to hate each other didn’t you?” Jelly Roll joked. “Plot twist, bitches!”
This story was compiled with the help of AI tools and edited by journalists.
Entertainment
Jennifer Aniston Reacts to James Burrows’ Death at 85
Jennifer Aniston is mourning the death of legendary TV director James Burrows.
“Oh boy … 💔Papa Burrows. The hardest thing about writing this is that you spent a lifetime making people feel loved, and now it feels impossible to put all of that love into a few paragraphs,” Aniston, 57, wrote via Instagram on Saturday, June 20. “He called us his ‘kids’ — ‘Where are the kids?’ ‘Let’s see if the kids can make the joke work.’ No pressure. ❤️”
Burrows died on Friday, June 19, after a brief undisclosed illness at age 85. James is survived by his wife, Debbie Easton Burrows, and their four kids.
“His own incredible children were generous enough to share him with all of us who were lucky enough to experience his unicorn presence,” Aniston added on Saturday. “He was a father figure to me. He always checked in on me. He worried about me, celebrated me, taught me, guided me and held me through the hardest times and the best of times. He spoiled us rotten.”
She continued, “Most of all, he taught us — the kids — how important it is to love and respect one another. To take care of each other. To have each other’s backs and support each other, no matter what. And we did just that.”
Burrows, who co-created Cheers, also directed numerous Friends episodes during the late-90s, early-aughts TV series’ heyday. Aniston, for her part, notably starred on the sitcom as Rachel Green, opposite Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, David Schwimmer and Matthew Perry. (Perry died in 2023 of an accidental ketamine overdose. He was 54.)
“On that show, [the test audience ratings] was through the roof,” Burrows said on the “Conan Needs a Friend” podcast in 2022, hinting Friends would end up a massive hit. “They loved those characters.”
He added, “I [directed] the first, I think, three or four [episodes] and there’s a story about me taking the cast to Vegas because I knew there was something special about this show. You know that happened on Will & Grace, that happened on Cheers. You can sense, in doing the shows, whether the audience reacts to it and I knew then and there how good that show was.”
As for Aniston, she will always hold her memories of Burrows dear.
“I miss your voice. I miss your laugh. I miss your brilliance,” she concluded in her social media tribute. “Wherever you are, I hope someone is asking, ‘Where are the kids?’ ❤️.”
Entertainment
Blake Horstmann and Giannina Gibelli’s Relationship Timeline
Blake Horstmann and Giannina Gibelli both Looked for love on reality TV before sparking their romance off camera.
Bachelor Nation met Horstmann when he competed for Becca Kufrin’s affections on season 14 of The Bachelorette. After finishing as the runner-up on the 2018 season, Horstmann came under fire during season 6 of Bachelor in Paradise after his pre-show hookups with Caelynn Miller-Keyes and Kristina Schulman were revealed on the beach. While the 2019 season was airing, Horstmann took to Instagram to share his text messages with Miller-Keyes.
Gibelli, for her part, appeared on season 1 of Love Is Blind, and got engaged to costar Damian Powers. While the pair split on their wedding day, they reconnected after the cameras stopped rolling. The duo called it quits for good in 2021 after he was accused of cheating on Gibelli with Too Hot to Handle’s Francesca Farago, which he denied.
Gibelli found love again by the end of the year, however, when she met Horstmann while filming season 1 of All Star Shore. In June 2026, the pair officially said “I do” while flanked by alums from their respective reality TV dating series.
Scroll through for a timeline of their relationship:
Entertainment
Blake Horstmann and Giannina Gibelli Are Married After 4 Years
Blake Horstmann and Giannina Gibelli have officially found their happily ever after beyond and away from the reality TV cameras.
The Bachelorette alum, 37, and the Love Is Blind alum, 33, tied the knot during an intimate wedding in Croatia on Saturday, June 20, surrounded by alums from both reality franchises, including Jason Tartick, Astrid Loch, Alexa Lemieux, Colleen Reed and Raven Ross.
Horstmann and Gibelli began dating in December 2021 after costarring on season 1 of the Paramount+ series All Star Shore. Us Weekly confirmed in January 2022 that the couple were officially an item, though they initially had to keep their romance under wraps since the reality show hadn’t premiered yet.
“We had to first keep basically six months of our relationship private, so that was fun in a sense because we didn’t have the public pressure, we didn’t have all the eyes on us, we could just kind of be ourselves,” Horstmann exclusively told Us in October 2022. “But it was hard too because it’s never fun to hide the person you love.”
Horstmann also revealed one of the keys to his and Gibelli’s relationship was their ability to communicate.
“We both handle conflict incredibly well,” he explained. “I’ve never had a relationship where, you know, if you’re in a fight … or conflict, instead of holding grudges or doing whatever, we talk it out. Or even if it’s, we’re not able to talk [it] out now, we go to separate rooms, we cool down and we come back and we talk it out. It’s kind of the first time too where we don’t have the same fight over and over because we’re able to talk it out and we get over it and we come to a conclusion, if you will.”
After nearly two years together, Horstmann and Gibelli announced in November 2023 that they were expecting their first baby. The duo welcomed their son, Heath, in March 2024.
Later that year, Gibelli hinted at the couple’s plans to eventually expand their family.
“I want the whole basketball team. I really do,” she exclusively told Us in August 2024. “I literally popped him out and I was like, ‘Let’s do it again!’”
Horstmann ultimately proposed to Gibelli during an October 2024 trip to Madrid, Spain.
“Our love story has been everything I’ve always dreamt it would be and more,” she told People the following month. “As soon as I met Blake, I knew he was my soulmate and I know the universe was always leading me to him. Being together forever and creating our family is literally the joy of my life.”
Horstmann, for his part, gushed: “We are over the moon and we can’t wait to be married in front of our loved ones.”
Gibelli and Horstmann confirmed in July 2025 that they were planning a destination wedding for the summer of 2026.
“I’m a very small and intimate kind of gal. Also, it’s far away,” she exclusively told Us at the time. “So you know who your people are. Whoever’s going to show up, I know you’re my people!”
Horstmann chimed in, “I think we’re going to invite a decent amount, but I think it’s going to end up being kind of an intimate, intimate [thing], it’s going to be fun.”
Entertainment
Jack Osbourne on Hate Over Attending UFC White House Fight
Jack Osbourne is addressing online backlash over his decision to attend the controversial UFC fight at the White House.
“Alright, I want to address me going to the White House to the UFC fight. First of all, some of the comments I’ve been getting are completely insane,” Osbourne, 40, addressed the camera in a video shared via his YouTube page on Thursday, June 18. “Like, what the f***? I went to a sporting event. That’s it.”
Osbourne then showed various screenshots of fans and social media users letting them know how they felt about his decision to attend the Sunday, June 14, event, in which UFC heavyweight fighter Josh Hokit called former first lady Michelle Obama “a man” during his postfight interview with Joe Rogan and after defeating Derrick Lewis.
“So disappointed,” one person wrote of Jack’s decision to attend the event, while another post read, “Who would want to go… baffling… embarrassing.”
“This is kinda devastating not gonna lie,” another fan wrote.
“Your birth country would be disappointed to say the least,” another commented.
“I recommend you listen to ‘War Pigs’ one more time,” one user wrote, referencing Jack’s late father, rock legend Ozzy Osbourne, and Black Sabbath’s 1970 anti-war ballad.
In his Thursday video, Osbourne argued that he didn’t attend the unprecedented sporting match as a political operative or potential politician — despite its obvious political location — but as a fan of the combat sport.
“I didn’t go and throw my hat into the ring for political office,” he said. “I wasn’t there going to endorse a politician or some kind of foreign affairs issue. Nothing. I literally went to the White House to go see UFC. I have been into combat sports my entire life. I started doing Taekwondo at 6. I used to go to Thailand every year in my late teens, early 20s to do Muay Thai. I have fought Muay Thai fights professionally.”
Jack continued, “In my 30s, I started doing Ju Jitsu. I have also attended UFC and Pride fights going back to the early 2000s. It is something that has been a part of my life since I can remember. So when I got invited by Dana White to attend the fight at the White House, of course I would go. Any person out there who would get an invite would have gone, I’m sorry. There is no one I could think of that would have been like, ‘Oh, no. I’m not going because I don’t approve of Orange Man.’ Or whatever the f***. That’s ridiculous. It was not a political event, or in my eyes it was not. It was a f***ing fight at the White House. Who gives a s***?”
Jack went on to claim that during the event he even asked his wife, Aree Gearhart, why the White House — also known as The People’s House — doesn’t play host to more sporting events on a regular basis.
“In fact, politicians back in the day used to do that, so just food for thought,” Jack continued, before adding people who evoked his father directly.
“As far as the people bringing my father into this, saying, ‘Oh, Ozzy would not approve. He is rolling over in his grave.’ Shut the f*** up,” Jack said. (Ozzy died on July 22, 2025, of a heart attack following a public battle with Parkinson’s. He was 76.)
“You did not know my father. You did not know where he stood with things,” Jack continued. “Yes, he wrote a song called ‘War Pigs.’ Anti-war song. He wasn’t anti-UFC. He wasn’t anti-going-to-an-event-at-the-White-House. He’s anti-war. Sure, fair enough. But, at the end of the day, my dad still attended the Correspondents’ Dinner back in the day when Bush was president. George Bush gave him a shoutout.”
Jack then played video of his father attending the 2002 White House Correspondents’ Dinner, in which the legendary rocker stood on a table and gave the peace sign after president Bush introduced him to the crowd.
“Additionally, my dad did USO tours, he went to Korea to see the troops. He attended events at Walter Reed Hospital to see the wounded soldiers and Marines and Air Force pilots, so shut the f*** up basically,” Jack added. “To bring my father into this, to say he would or wouldn’t approve, is completely insane.”
He concluded, “I simply attended a sporting event for a sport that I have a great amount of respect for and something that has been a part of my life since I can remember, so deal with it and I’m sorry you weren’t invited.”
Entertainment
Taylor Sheridan’s ‘Yellowstone’ Spin-Off Lassos 725 Million Minutes Viewed With Only 2 Episodes
Hit-maker Taylor Sheridan’s magnum opus, the Yellowstone universe, is now in the hands of Paramount. The studio will likely continue expanding the franchise for as long as possible, even after Sheridan departs to begin a new creative partnership with Universal. The signs are there already, with Spencer Hudnut receiving sole creator credit for the CBS spin-off Marshals. Hudnut has stressed that Sheridan was only a call away, and that he never wanted the show to come across as a cover version of Sheridan’s writing. The production of the franchise’s latest installment, however, was not as smooth. While Chad Feehan is credited as the sole creator of Dutton Ranch, he left the project ahead of Season 1’s release following disagreements with Sheridan and lead cast members.
Starring Kelly Reilly and Cole Hauser, Dutton Ranch premiered with two episodes on Paramount+ on May 15, and will conclude its nine-episode first season on July 3. According to FlixPatrol, Dutton Ranch has consistently ranked at the top of the Paramount+ viewership charts, but the latest Nielsen ratings provide a more detailed look at how the show has performed. The industry tracker typically shares streaming data a few weeks after the fact, which explains why the latest report tracks viewership for the week of May 11 to May 17. This is when Dutton Ranch premiered, and garnered 725 million minutes watched.
Taylor Sheridan’s ‘Yellowstone’ Universe Is Continuing Its Expansion
Dutton Ranch finished fifth on the streaming leaderboard, behind Netflix’s breakout hit Nemesis, the final season of The Boys, and The Roast of Kevin Hart. The show has received positive reviews and is now sitting at a “Certified Fresh” 89% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The aggregator website’s consensus reads, “Dutton Ranch takes what its predecessor perfected and carries the mantle well in a new town with the same well-worn trappings, perfectly dusted and ripe for entertaining.” The show follows Reilly and Hauser’s characters from the original Yellowstone, which concluded its five-season run in 2023. Meanwhile, Marshals averaged more than 6 million weekly viewers, according to Nielsen, often ranking among the most-watched narrative shows on linear television. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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May 15, 2026
- Network
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Paramount Network, Paramount+
- Showrunner
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Chad Feehan
- Directors
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Christina Alexandra Voros
- Writers
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Jacob Forman, Hilary Bettis, Chad Feehan, Hayley Tibbenham, J. Todd Scott, K.C. Scott
Entertainment
10 Greatest Superhero Shows Even Diehards Haven’t Seen
Superhero television may be a dime a dozen these days, but there was a time when that wasn’t the case. It wasn’t so long ago that shows like the Adam West-led Batman series from the ’60s or the 1977 The Incredible Hulk TV show were considered the most popular comic-to-screen programs, though that started to change come the 21st century. Now, we have everything from Marvel Cinematic Universe tie-ins to DC Comics prequels to comic book deconstructions like The Boys that have flooded the superhero-on-TV market, but that wasn’t always the case.
Before the Arrowverse erupted on The CW in the 2010s and the MCU moved from the big screen to the small with Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., it was slim-pickings for superhero fans. Smallville ruled (and still does) as the longest running live-action superhero series out there, but even that show wasn’t fully committed to tights and flights until the very end. Along the way, you’ve probably forgotten about some of the more unique superhero shows that aired for a brief time on television, but that doesn’t mean they didn’t have potential on their own.
‘Flash Gordon’ (2007–2008)
After he was killed off on Smallville, Eric Johnson bounced around for a few years before landing a superhero role of his own in the short-lived Flash Gordon reboot. Now, admittedly, Flash Gordon has a rough first few episodes. The show struggled to find an audience because the quality of this 21st-century take on the retro space opera failed to live up to the hype. It wasn’t great at first, but as the show progressed, it actually grew into a capable superhero series with genuine potential — it’s almost a shame it was canceled.
Flash Gordon follows its title hero as he’s transported to the world of Mongo and pitted against the tyrannical ruler, Ming the Merciless (John Ralston). As Flash builds alliances with those on Mongo and the series slowly pivots from Earth to the alien homeworld, Flash Gordon eventually finds its voice. However, it was all too little, too late. Audiences stopped watching after a boring batch of initial episodes, and Flash Gordon was put down before it ever had the chance to soar.
‘Legends of the Superheroes’ (1979)
If you’ve never heard of Legends of the Superheroes, that’s probably because DC has tried to bury the live-action debut of many of its superhero characters, including Green Lantern (Howard Murphy), The Flash (Rod Haase), Hawkman (Bill Nuckols), Black Canary (Danuta Wesley), and the Huntress (Barbara Joyce). This two-episode television special took place in the same world as Adam West’s Batman, as the Dynamic Duo appeared alongside the rest of this “Justice League.” And boy, is this a time capsule.
What makes Legends of the Superheroes “great” isn’t that it’s actually good, per se. It’s really not. But in addition to being a Batman reunion special (alongside Adam West and Burt Ward, Frank Gorshin also returns as The Riddler), the second part is actually a celebrity roast. It’s a superhero parody at its most strange, complete with the same flavor of humor that made Batman a national phenomenon — though perhaps not as grand as Batman‘s best TV heists. If that’s your style of superhero television, you probably won’t be disappointed.
‘Black Scorpion’ (2001)
Based on not one but two made-for-TV superhero comedy movies by Roger Corman (seriously), Black Scorpion was a single-season superhero series that briefly aired on Syfy (then Sci-Fi Channel) in 2001. As Angel City police detective Darcy Walker realizes that the badge isn’t always enough, she moonlights as the Black Scorpion to fight crime after dark. Though Joan Severance played the character in the previous TV movies, Michelle Lintel took over the role for the 22-episode television series.
Black Scorpion is a bit of a fever dream. It’s like if WB’s likewise short-lived Birds of Prey (a near-perfect DC show few remember) had an older cousin to learn from her poor choices. The titular heroine had a rogues’ gallery that included villains played by none other than Adam West and Frank Gorshin of Batman fame, as well as Cobra Kai antagonist Martin Kove. The bulk of the episodes were written by co-creator Craig J. Nevius, and serve as a largely enjoyable mix between the ’60s Batman series and Tim Burton’s ’80s Batman movie, albeit with a female protagonist.
‘My Secret Identity’ (1988–1991)
Perhaps the most beloved entry on this list, My Secret Identity has been all but forgotten by everyone except those who watched the original program back when it aired on syndication (or the later Sci-Fi Channel reruns). Starring Jerry O’Connell as teenage comic book enthusiast Andrew Clements, the show follows his adventures after he suddenly gets superpowers from a beam shot by his friend Dr. Benjamin Jeffcoate (Derek McGrath). Knowing what he must do, Andrew chooses the responsibility of a hero.
As the title suggests, Andrew hides his secret identity from everyone in his life, save Dr. Jeffcoate. A fun blend of adventure, science fiction, and comedy, My Secret Identity ran for three seasons and 72 episodes. With a killer theme song that will stay in your head for hours (trust us), this show is the perfect binge for those looking for some superhero-lite superhero TV. Funny enough, O’Connell would later voice Superman in his career, and it all started back in ’88.
‘Who Wants to Be a Superhero?’ (2006–2007)
From the mind of Stan Lee, this superhero-centric reality television series is actually a competition show. Who Wants to Be a Superhero? pits several contestants against each other to discover whose idea for an original superhero character would win the heart of Stan “The Man” himself. The winner would not only get their character turned into a Stan Lee-penned Dark Horse comic book, but would also be included in live-action in a Sci-Fi Channel original movie — Mega Snake being the first.
Although Who Wants to Be a Superhero? only ran for two seasons, the concept itself was an ingenious way to capitalize on the growing mainstream superhero craze. Unfortunately, the show aired about a decade too early, with Matthew Atherton‘s Feedback and Jarret Crippen‘s The Defuser being the only superheroes created from this short-lived phenomenon. It may not deliver everything you want from the superhero genre, but it was a unique idea that could only come from the mind of Stan Lee. ‘Nuff said!
‘Automan’ (1983–1984)
From Glen A. Larson, the mind behind the original Battlestar Galactica, came the Tron-inspired Automan. Somehow, this ’80s sci-fi comedy still holds up as it follows an artificial superhero, “the Automatic Man” (Chuck Wagner), created by police programmer Walter Nebicher (Desi Arnaz Jr.) to fight the crime that the cops cannot. Long before AI is what we know it as today, the potential seemed limitless, and the idea of turning a computer program into a superhero just made sense.
If you can get past the basic Tron comparison, Automan was loads of fun. However, the show only lasted a dozen episodes on the air before it was unceremoniously axed by ABC. Evidently, the program was too far ahead of its time — perhaps it would have done better in today’s market. (Call Ronald D. Moore, we have another Larson series he needs to update!)
‘Electra Woman and Dyna Girl’ (1976)
If you’ve never heard of Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, that’s not exactly a surprise. This superhero series was a part of the larger umbrella program The Krofft Supershow that was aimed specifically for kids. Deidre Hall played Electra Woman opposite Judy Strangis‘ Dyna Girl, as the pair of super-heroines fought crime when not working as newspaper journalists. Their bulky “ElectraComs” could do almost anything, and for 8 episodes (and 16 different 12-minute segments) they tackled some of the strangest villains.
The original Electra Woman and Dyna Girl series is a wholesome gem that has gone down in pop culture infamy. The WB even tried to make an “edgy” updated satirical superhero series in the style of Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law (albeit, in live-action) in the early 2000s, though the pilot was so terrible that the network ultimately passed. Likewise, a web-series revival made its way to screens starring a pair of YouTubers, but nothing quite beats the earnestness of the original ’70s program.
‘M.A.N.T.I.S.’ (1994–1997)
Before Carl Lumbly would voice Martian Manhunter in the Justice League animated series, he starred in M.A.N.T.I.S. as the first black superhero on television. After Dr. Miles Hawkins (Lumbly) is paralyzed and disheartened by a criminal conspiracy targeting the black community, he utilizes his company’s superhuman M.A.N.T.I.S. exoskeleton to fight crime after dark, which grants him super-strength, speed, and paralytic darts. For a single 22-episode season, M.A.N.T.I.S. brought a new flavor of crime fighter to television screens.
Created by the combined efforts of Batman scribe Sam Hamm and future Spider-Man director Sam Raimi, it’s kind of odd that this series didn’t last more than a season on Fox. After a relatively grounded TV pilot film, M.A.N.T.I.S. goes a bit off the rails, but isn’t that the case for really all superheroes when you think about it? The show is an odd duck, but it’s a fun watch even now when looking back on it.
‘Mutant X’ (2001–2004)
Despite the fact that it shares the same name with a ’90s Marvel comic series, and it was made with Marvel’s cooperation in mind, the Avi Arad-created Mutant X is only loosely connected to the X-Men franchise. Well, technically, it’s not connected at all, as this team of “mutants” received their powers not because of an evolutionary mutant gene, but due to genetic experimentation conducted by a mysterious government entity. With an ensemble cast, this X-Men-lite series ran an impressive three seasons in syndication.
“Protecting a world that doesn’t know they exist” was the Mutant X tagline, and under the leadership of Adam Kane (John Shea from Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman), that’s exactly what this group of rag-tag not-quite-mutants did. Clearly inspired by a combination of the Fox-made X-Men movies and The Matrix, Mutant X is the second-longest-running series on this list after My Secret Identity with an impressive 66 episodes. If only it were an actual Mutant X adaptation…
‘The Cape’ (2011)
Probably the most infamous show on this list, The Cape was set up by NBC to be the next big “comic book/superhero”-inspired show after the end of Heroes, but it never quite lived up to the hype. For one thing, the show was canceled before its first season even finished airing (with the finale being released online instead), with the failure of The Cape eventually becoming a recurring joke on Community. But there was something about the premise that was actually quite interesting and, as strange as it was, may deserve another look.
The Cape took the superhero concept back to its roots when “good cop” Vince Faraday (David Lyons) is framed and supposedly murdered by a supervillain, only to be taken in by a traveling circus who teach him the theatrical skills necessary to fight crime as “The Cape” (still considered by many to be among the worst TV superheroes) and win back his family. Superheroes themselves were often inspired by circus acts, and so tying the concept back to The Carnival of Crime was a unique way to update the idea. It may not have been able to carry “six seasons and a movie,” but The Cape could have lasted at least a full network TV season.
The Cape
- Release Date
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2011 – 2011-00-00
- Directors
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Deran Sarafian, David Jackson, David Straiton, Dennie Gordon, Ernest R. Dickerson, Karen Gaviola, Michael Nankin, Roxann Dawson
- Writers
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Tom Wheeler, William Wheeler, Craig Titley, Toni Graphia
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-
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Fernando Chien
ARK Trooper
Entertainment
Gerard Butler’s 98-Minute Sci-Fi Flop Officially Gets a Second Chance on HBO Max
While the horror genre has had a marquee year with breakout hits such as Obsession and Backrooms, a previously dependable genre — action — has had a difficult time at the box office. Action movies aimed at older male audiences have struggled, despite the presence of proven stars. One of the year’s first action underperformers was Jason Statham’s Shelter, which grossed $53 million worldwide against a reported budget of $50 million. More recently, Statham’s longtime partner-in-crime, Guy Ritchie, directed In the Grey, which made just $17 million worldwide against a reported budget of $70 million. In the Grey was headlined by Henry Cavill and Jake Gyllenhaal, both of whom have worked with Ritchie previously. However, an even more expensive action film delivered a worse performance at the box office in January.
The movie in question appears to have bounced back after its release on HBO Max, according to the latest Nielsen report. The industry tracker typically posts streaming viewership data a few weeks later, so the latest report covers May 11–17. The action movie in question was headlined by Gerard Butler and released theatrically on January 9, kicking off a rather unfortunate streak for the genre. It ended up grossing $44 million worldwide against a reported budget of $90 million. Coincidentally, the movie was directed by the same filmmaker who made Shelter: Ric Roman Waugh.
Gerard Butler Needs a Win
We’re talking, of course, about Greenland 2: Migration. Also featuring Morena Baccarin, the film serves as a sequel to the sci-fi sleeper hit Greenland, which was released in 2020 to moderate box-office success but was incredibly popular on home video platforms. Greenland 2 received mixed reviews and is now sitting at a 48% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The aggregator website’s consensus reads, “The world ends more with a whimper in Greenland 2: Migration compared to its predecessor’s big bang thrills, but Gerard Butler’s sturdy star power keeps this continuation reasonably compelling.” According to the latest Nielsen report, Greenland 2 was among the most-watched movies during the week of May 11 to May 17, and the only HBO Max title in the top 10 with 207 million minutes watched. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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January 9, 2026
- Runtime
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98 Minutes
- Director
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Ric Roman Waugh
- Writers
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Chris Sparling, Mitchell LaFortune
- Producers
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Basil Iwanyk, Gerard Butler, Alan Siegel, John Zois, Sebastien Raybaud, Brendon Boyea
Entertainment
Melissa Joan Hart Talks ‘Sabrina’ 30 Years Later
Although Melissa Joan Hart said goodbye to Sabrina Spellman of “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” in 2003, she’s still connected to the fictional character in more ways than one. In a new interview, the esteemed actress opened up about what she believes the witch would be doing today if the show were still on the air.
Recently, the cast of “Sabrina” gathered in Chicago for a reunion show celebrating the program’s 30th anniversary. Speaking with PEOPLE, Hart talked about the character that made her a household name, revealing what she thinks she’d be up to if the show were airing in 2026.
“I think married, kids maybe, still juggling around the witchcraft thing, not able to quite get a handle on it,” she said.
And Hart’s character wouldn’t be married to any average Joe. She’d likely be with her on-again-off-again love interest, Harvey, who was portrayed by Nate Richert. “I think she’s still with Harvey. I mean, look, the way they rode off on a motorcycle, there’s no coming back from that. You have to make that stick,” she joked.
Melissa Joan Hart Reflects On The Show Being 30 Years Old
A majority of the “Sabrina the Teenage Witch” cast gathered together at the Vic Theatre in Illinois to reflect on the show and its impact on pop culture. Present was Beth Broderick, Caroline Rhea, Soleil Moon Frye, Michelle Beaudoin, Jenna Leigh Green, Elisa Donovan, David Lascher, Richert, and, of course, Hart.
When Hart was asked how she felt about the show reaching the 30-year milestone, the actress joked, “I can’t believe it’s been [that long] because I’m only 30.” She added, “So, that’s impossible. I was 0 when we started this show.”
Hart went on to say how special the 30-year anniversary was and how much the show still means to her three decades later.
“It’s still so loved. It’s so international. So many people come to me and say it got them through a hard time or they learned English from the show,” she said. “All these amazing things that you hear that over time you hear it so much that you have to start to believe that it meant a lot to people.”
Melissa Joan Hart Says She Didn’t ‘Identify’ With Her Character That Much
While she’s grateful for the show’s reach, Hart revealed in a previous interview that she never felt as connected to the character as some probably believed. Hart was 20 at the time, playing a teenager, and, according to her, the challenges Sabrina faced were very different from what she was experiencing.
“She wanted to be the wallflower. She didn’t know what to do with these magical abilities. She felt very lost, and other people were trying to help her solve it,” she said.
There were a few things, though, that helped her connect with Sabrina, such as her costumes and magical mishaps.
“If she wasn’t always in different costumes and kind of getting put in these weird situations where I got to be Cinderella or Alice Wonderland or a trapeze artist or in Cirque du Soleil or whatever I don’t know if I would’ve enjoyed the experience as much as I did because I just didn’t identify with her very well,” she added.
Hart Opens Up About Growing Up As A Child Star

Before she originated the role of Spellman in “Sabrina,” Hart played Clarissa in the sitcom “Clarissa Explains It All.” She played the role from 14 to 18—her prime teenage years. But despite growing up in front of the camera, Hart said that didn’t change her.
In fact, working as a child star instilled in her a “good work ethic” and helped her learn new things about herself. “I pretty much had a normal childhood, even though I was acting since I was 4,” she said, praising the role her family played in helping keep her grounded, per The Blast.
“I think my family did a really good job…I was in Girl Scouts, and we would go on family ski trips and things like that. So there was a lot of normal mixed up with this weird, crazy world,” she said.
Did Hart Ever Want Her Kids To Become Child Stars?

Even though she did it herself, Hart wasn’t necessarily eager to turn her children into child stars. She previously revealed that her three sons once showed some interest in the entertainment industry, but for the wrong reasons—a mindset she quickly helped them move beyond. “It was for money and fame. It wasn’t because they love the craft,” Hart said.
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