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Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan is the best thing Star Trek has ever done and a recent Star Trek movie ranks as the worst. In the middle you’ll find things like Star Trek cruises, which even at their worst still serve margaritas.
By Joshua Tyler
| Published
Star Trek has existed for more than fifty years, and in that time, it has been everywhere and done nearly everything. Much of it has been good. A lot of it has been in film and on television, but not all of it. The godfather of all franchises has become an indelible part of American culture, and it pervades every aspect of our lives, from toys to food to vacations.
With so many things bearing the name Star Trek, which ranks as the best? Which Trek ranks as the worst? As one of the earliest online Trek commentators, I’ve been obsessing and writing about Star Trek professionally for more than 25 years. That makes me uniquely qualified to answer these questions, especially if you’re one of those people who trusts the experts.
I’ve got the answers you need in this comprehensive, ultimate ranking of everything Star Trek has ever slapped its name on, for better or worse. Mostly for the better, I think.

Here it is in order. Everything Star Trek has ever done, ranked in one living document. Check back regularly to see how the list changes and grows over time as more Star Trek is released and old Star Trek ages.
1. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan | The Best Star Trek Movie

Wrath of Khan is the Star Trek thing most often held up as a shining beacon of what Trek can be at its best, for a reason. It really is that good.
Wrath of Khan isn’t just a great Star Trek movie, it’s a great movie. The premise was wholly original and innovative and if it doesn’t seem that way now it’s only because so many other movies have tried to copy it, in the wake of its 1982 success.

Every time you watch a movie with a strong villain character to balance out the hero, please know the movie you’re watching wants to be Wrath of Khan. But no one can be Wrath of Khan, because that formula will never be better than it is here, in its original incarnation.
Ricardo Montalban is one of the screen’s best villains of all time as Khan Noonien Singh. William Shatner delivers the second-best performance of his entire career (the best being in a movie we’ll get to later), and oh, by the way, despite all the mockery, Shatner is actually a very good actor, given the right material in the right situation. The ending is a gut punch, a heart-wrenching goodbye, and one that at the time left audiences sobbing. I still hear Scotty’s bagpipes in my head.

Wrath of Khan is more than just an adventure movie or a battle movie (though it is those things), it’s also about something. Director Nicholas Meyer made a movie about what it means to get old, about dealing with the fact that you aren’t the man you once were, a movie about regrets and facing the mistakes of your past. All the best Star Trek is about something, but this one feels the most… human.
In the end, despite it all, Jim Kirk tells us, “I feel… young.” And so does Wrath of Khan.
2. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country

As an allegory for the cold war, The Undiscovered Country probably felt edgy and topical being released shortly after the fall of the Berlin wall in 1991. Today it’s only a great story well told, with elements of relevance woven in as beloved characters grapple with their own personal prejudice in the face of a new world.
Outside of Worf (whose great-grandfather makes a cameo), this is the most complete look Star Trek ever gives us at the Klingons, both the good and the bad. As a bad, Christopher Plummer is one of the best bads Trek has ever had, spouting Shakespeare in both English and the original Klingon as the eyepatch-wearing General Chang. Cry havoc! And let slip the dogs of war.
Wrath of Khan is the better movie, but Undiscovered Country has many of Khan’s best elements while also being lighter and more fun. It’s a romp through the universe with our favorite characters, one last sendoff before they sail into the sunset. Second star to the right and straight on til’ morning.
3. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine | The Best Star Trek Series

It’s especially appropriate that Deep Space Nine ranks right under the two best Star Trek movies on this list since this was the first (and last before Discovery) Star Trek series designed to play out like one long, seven-season movie. Back before linear storytelling was all the rage on television with shows like Game of Thrones and Breaking Bad, Star Trek: Deep Space Nine blazed a trail by being one of the first TV shows to tell one continuous story arc played out over multiple seasons.
It’s not number three on this list solely for its innovative method of storytelling, though. The stories DS9 told were top-notch, thoughtful science fiction as it tackled the reality of Gene Roddenberry’s Root Beer in a universe that does not like bubbles. Part of the reason it’s so good is Ron Moore, who would later go on to be known as the mastermind behind the brilliant Battlestar Galactica reboot. He honed his craft here, and a lot of the most successful moments of BSG can be directly traced back to roots he grew on Deep Space Nine.
The cast is almost without question the most talented in Trek, with people like Renee Aberjoinois (Shapeshifting Odo), Avery Brooks (The Sisko), Colm Meaney (O’Brien Must Suffer), Armin Shimmerman (Leader of the House of Quark), Nana Visitor (Terrorist in Charge), Andrew Robinson (Plain, Simple Garak) and Michael Dorn (Not a Merry Man) delivering Emmy-worthy (but unrewarded) performances.
Thanks to a rocky, uneven start in seasons 1 and 2 Deep Space Nine never got its due. But if you watched it and stuck with it, then by Season 4 or 5 you knew this was some of the best television in the history of the medium, and the third-best thing Star Trek has ever produced.
4. Star Trek

The series that started it all has aged but is still entirely enjoyable, thanks in large part to the remastered versions, which cleaned up the original prints and updated some of the FX.
CBS wanted Gene Roddenberry’s vision to be Wagon Train in the stars, but Roddenberry and the show’s staple of respected science fiction writers (like Harlan Ellison) had loftier ambitions. They used their platform to tell complicated and thought-provoking stories and to build interesting characters.
The camaraderie of the holy trinity (Kirk, Spock, McCoy) is the centerpiece of the show, which did its best to challenge the ideals of its viewers (as with the first-ever interracial kiss on television in season 3) and also entertain them. It’s funny too, in all the right moments, with the constant teasing and push and pull between McCoy and Spock providing the perfect angel and devil on Kirk’s shoulders as he makes all the big decisions.
The three of them: Kirk, Spock, and McCoy are some of the best characters in the history of television and the supporting cast of regulars like Scotty, Sulu, Chekov, Uhura, and even Nurse Chapel are unforgettable.
In Star Trek’s second season, Kirk admonished his crew to boldly go by telling them, “Risk is our business!” But it was Star Trek’s business too, and the franchise has always been at its best when it’s taking risks. Few have taken them better than the show that started it all.
5. Star Trek: The Next Generation

In 1994 Star Trek: The Next Generation was nominated for Outstanding Drama series by the Emmies. It deserved to be nominated more. The long-gestating television follow-up to the Star Trek of the sixties debuted in 1987 and immediately struck a different tone than its predecessor with a mature, effete Captain who seemed more like a father figure than a gutsy adventurer.
It worked. It worked for much the same reasons the original series did, by taking on challenging topics in a science fiction setting using great writing and being unafraid to take risks. It has stood the test of time because its lead, Captain Picard, became something of a father figure to the kids watching with their parents.
You want to BE Captain Kirk, the swashbuckling hero making all the tough calls and winning against impossible odds. You want to SERVE under Captain Picard, you want to stand with him, next to him, and soak in all his wisdom.
Whether you prefer Kirk or Picard is probably a function of who you are, but thanks to great writing and bold vision The Next Generation stands the test of time, responsible for some of the best moments in all of Star Trek. Characters like Data, Worf, and Q are some of its most enduring figures in all of pop culture.
6. Star Trek: First Contact

The Next Generation crew’s second foray into the world of feature films is inarguably their best. First Contact features the debut of one of Trek’s most beautiful starships, the NCC-1701-E, and drops it into a script that’s part Alien and part Close Encounters.
Both Picard and Data have some of their finest moments in this movie, and since they are the two best things about Next Gen, it makes sense that this would result in the best Next Gen movie. But it’s not just the Picard and Data scenes that shine; it’s the scenes on the ground, too, with Troi getting drunk and being hit on by Zefram Cochrane and Riker’s wry grin as she drunkenly tries to explain the situation.
I don’t know if Jonathan Frakes is a great director, but he’s a great director here in this specific film, working with this specific material. Every note is pitch-perfect. First Contact is taut and scary when it needs to be, fun and lighthearted when it doesn’t. It’s a shame none of the other Next Gen movies managed to be this good since First Contact proves this cast and crew had all the elements to deliver films just as good as the Kirk/Spock/McCoy originals.
7. Star Trek III: The Search For Spock

No movie could hope to follow Wrath of Khan and compare favorably, so predictably, Search for Spock is often overlooked at best and maligned at worst by Trek fans. It doesn’t help that Spock, perhaps the most beloved character in all of Trek, is barely in it, with Leonard Nimoy instead spending his time behind the camera directing.
But it’s good. Really good.
The first half is a heist movie, with Kirk and the crew plotting to steal their own ship. Starfleet’s finest officer goes against them to save his friend, and our space friends are all on board.
Towards the end of the film, some of the FX on the Genesis planet don’t hold up, and I’m not going to argue in favor of Shatner’s hammy fight with Kruge in a volcano. But the rest of it is excellent, particularly Shatner’s performance, which is without question the best of his career.
Watch Shatner’s reaction to the death of Kirk’s son if you’re looking for proof of his talent. On hearing the news, he attempts to sit down in his Captain’s chair and misses it entirely, ending up sitting on the floor where he moans in utter heartbreak, “You Klingon bastard, you’ve killed my son.”
The death of the Enterprise is brilliantly done and wrenching; it fits perfectly into the movie’s theme of life, death, and rebirth. McCoy sums it up best as the crew stands there on the surface of a dying planet, watching the hulk of the Enterprise blaze a trail of fire across the sky. There, McCoy tells Kirk it was, “What you had to do, what you always do. Turned death into a fighting chance to live.”
8. Star Trek: The Motion Picture

Long, slow, and boring are the words some Trek fans would use to describe The Motion Picture. It’s been called The Motionless Picture by many. But that’s because it’s not focused on action. Instead, it is perhaps the smartest, most thoughtful, and most clearly science fiction of all the Star Trek movies.
People looking for action and adventure aren’t going to find it here, but those things are never what made Star Trek so great in the first place. What you will find is a brilliant piece of science fiction which instead of trying to be Star Wars, as so many other films were trying to do in that era, tries to be a Star Trek version of 2001: A Space Odyssey. It works.
This is the movie that gave us the Enterprise Refit, arguably the most beautiful starship in all of science fiction. This was the movie that created the Star Trek score, the one we all know and love from every movie and every single episode of Star Trek: The Next Generation.
Sure, no one shoots anything, except that one weird scene where they blow up a meteor in a wormhole, but the stakes are high, and where Kirk and his crew end up is incredible. And I’m not talking about that crazy 70s gold medallion McCoy shows up wearing around his neck.
It’s time The Motion Picture got its due as an ambitious piece of art and not just an adventure film. So it sits comfortably here, at number eight on this list.
9. Star Trek: Picard Season 3

The first two seasons of Star Trek: Picard are so different from Picard Season 3 that they might as well be a totally different show. Not only did they bring in an entirely new cast, but they also brought in a totally new showrunner and a new creative team behind the scenes.
Since Star Trek: Picard season 3 is basically a different show, I’m treating it as a different show in these rankings.
The Star Trek: Picard team that took over for season 3 actually likes Star Trek and knows something about it. So they binned everything Picard had done previously and started from scratch. That includes rebuilding the show’s atrocious opening credits.
Picard season 3 is the perfect movie that the Star Trek: The Next Generation crew never really got. Along the way, he even managed to fix some of the franchise’s more egregious mistakes (everything that happened to Data, for instance).
It’s not only Matalas bringing back the entire Star Trek: The Next Generation cast (which is what the show should have done in season 1) that makes it good. Plugging in a bunch of old actors will only get your story so far, and the tone of the show is nothing like those classic Next Gen episodes.
Instead, Star Trek: Picard season 3 captures a tone akin to the original movie era of Star Trek: II, III, IV, V, and VI. The series’ hero ship (yes, we have hero ships again) is specifically designed to be reminiscent of the refit Enterprise from that era. The Titan-A is a Neo Constitution, and it may be the coolest ship Star Trek has produced since the Enterprise-E.
Matalas’s obvious love and dedication to all things Star Trek made Picard season 3 soar.
10. Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home

There was a time when Voyage Home would have been higher on this list, but this time travel story in which Captain Kirk takes his crew back in time to rescue some humpback whales hasn’t aged as well as some of the other films.
That said, watching the crew on a shaggy journey aboard a broken-down, captured Klingon bird of prey wryly named the HMS Bounty by Doctor McCoy, while simultaneously trying to understand 1980s culture, is still a joy.
This is without a doubt the funniest Star Trek movie, thanks in no small part to the direction of Leonard Nimoy, who would later take those unexpected comedy chops on to direct the comedy hit 3 Men and a Baby. It’s still good, even if the world has passed the very 80s tone of this adventure by.
11. Star Trek: Lower Decks

Star Trek: Lower Decks finished its run after five seasons. Paramount’s decision to end the show at five was a huge mistake. It’s one of the best things Star Trek has ever done.
Star Trek: Lower Decks is faithfully set during the Star Trek: The Next Generation era and uses what we already know of that world to create new stories. Sometimes, it uses that period-specific space setting to create comedy (inside jokes that only real Trekkies will get and broader humor for the newbies). It does it all seamlessly.
It deserves praise for, among other things, its consistency. Each episode of Star Trek: Lower Decks has a minimum level of quality. There’s not a bad episode in the show’s entire run, only some that are enjoyable and also episodes that are brilliant, epic, and among the best all time. Consistent quality in entertainment is rare, especially where Star Trek is concerned.
In season 5, they wrapped up all the show’s loose ends and fixed many of the wrongs committed by other, inferior Star Trek shows. For instance, the Lower Decks series finale erases Star Trek: Discovery from canon. That’s good news since that show ranks dead last on this list.
Lower Decks was, at the time of its release, the most Star Trek the world of Star Trek had been since the 90s. Effort like that deserves a high ranking, and so I’ve given it one.
12. Star Trek Beyond

The first of the Kelvin universe movies to even attempt to go out into the universe and see what was out there, Beyond comes closest of the new cast movies to capturing the spirit of what Gene Roddenberry’s dream is all about. It also does a better job of getting the characters right, with fewer of those rage-monster moments from Spock and a Kirk who isn’t some hothead idiot but actually a thoughtful, seasoned commander who knows when to take risks and when not to take them.
Aside from all of that, it’s incredibly fun, featuring the best use of a Beastie Boys song I’ve ever seen on screen and a new look at an old-school starship design that harkens back to the days of the Enterprise TV series era NX-01 design. There’s a lot here to love; it’s a rip-roaring adventure with a story to tell that isn’t a rehash of where other better Trek movies have gone before. Sure, the villain doesn’t quite work, and I have no idea how to explain what they’ve done to the Enterprise engine room, but Star Trek: Beyond boldly goes.
13. Star Trek: Enterprise

Star Trek: Voyager finished its run on television in 2001, and the show in general hadn’t been well received. Meanwhile, the most recent Next Generation movies were being savaged by critics and fans alike. It seemed like the perfect time to take Trek in a new direction, so instead of pushing forward in the era started by Picard back in the 80s, Trek head honchos decided to delve into Trek’s past with a prequel series set before Kirk and Spock.
Enterprise followed the crew of Earth’s first ever warp 5 vessel, the Enterprise NX-01, as humanity began its first push out into the galaxy with the help of the Vulcans. The show had an opportunity to show us the birth of the Federation, as humans journeyed around the cosmos, making new allies and encountering enemies like the Klingons for the first time.
It did not do that. Instead, the first season immediately got bogged down in a poorly thought-out time-travel plot which could have happened in any era of Star Trek and wasted the premise the show came up with in the first place.
Lackluster ratings and lackluster fan response caused its cancellation after four seasons in 2005, sending the entire Trek franchise into a total hibernation until JJ Abrams rebooted everything with his 2009 Star Trek film.
So why is it so high on this list? While they initially botched the show’s premise, the series began to find its footing at the end of the third season. By the fourth, they actually started delivering on the promise Enterprise showed us in the beginning. Also, they eventually ditched that terrible opening credits song. The fifth season could have been great, but we’ll have to settle for a third and fourth season, which showed hints of greatness in a series that never fully became what it might have been.
14. Star Trek Books

Star Trek is fantastic at creating ancillary apocrypha around the franchise and always has been. You can easily find books of Federation maps, technical manuals detailing Starship specs, andassorted yearly calendars that let you ogle the coolest Star Trek ships.
The franchise is even better when it comes to fiction. Some of the best and worst ideas Star Trek has ever had are in print. Hundreds of paperback books have been written in the Trek universe. Some have gone on to become best sellers, some are things you’ve never heard of.
The first-ever Star Trek novel was published in 1967. Written by James Blish and J.A. Lawrence, this first stab at fiction outside the television program didn’t start out giving the books titles. Instead they slapped numbers on the cover.
Eventually, Trek would take off in print, and by the 1990s, well-known and talented authors like Vona McIntyre, M.S. Murdock, Michael Jan Friedman, and Peter David—especially Peter David—were regularly publishing Star Trek books.
Several of Peter David’s books not only became bestsellers but also received much-deserved critical acclaim. His awkwardly named Star Trek: The Next Generation book Q-In-Law is without question the high water mark in Trek paperbacks and well worth a read no matter what you think of Star Trek.
Not every Star Trek book is Q-in-Law, and the varying levels of quality present in these hundreds of different books are what keep them collectively from being higher on this list.
15. Star Trek: Generations

The best part of Star Trek: Generations happens in the first fifteen minutes aboard the NCC-1701 B with Kirk, McCoy, and Scotty playing nursemaid to a new Enterprise crew captained by Ferris Bueller’s best friend Cameron. It’s really good. Then the meat of the movie starts, in which the Next Generation crew begins their big screen adventures by getting tangled up in the Star Trek equivalent of a What Dreams May Come scenario. Robin Williams did that better.
Sure, the film has other great moments. That’s why it’s so high on this list. Watching Picard and Kirk interact in the ribbon is well worth the price of admission. But it also has problems, oh so many problems. Riker gets the Enterprise destroyed for no apparent reason, the Duras sisters are terrible villains, and Data is a lot better without that annoying emotion chip. I’m still not sure how to feel about Captain Kirk getting killed by some random guy on a pile of rocks. The death he got aboard the Enterprise B was the better one.
Still, Star Trek: Generations looks incredible, the cast is excellent, and again, those first fifteen minutes aboard Enterprise B are so good that it’s easy to forgive everything that happens next. We’re lucky they followed this movie up with First Contact, or I doubt we would have gotten another Next Generation flick. Yet, had the franchise ended here, that would have spared us Insurrection. Maybe that would have been a better future. More on that later.
16. Star Trek 2009

The JJ Abrams reboot of Star Trek is a sloppily written shoot-em-up without any of the nuance or introspection present in any other incarnation of Star Trek. The plot largely makes no sense, and it glosses over many of the important details that made Star Trek, Star Trek in the first place. It’s clear from watching this that director JJ Abrams wanted to direct Star Wars, and this was his audition for the Star Wars job he later got.
That said, the 2009 reboot looks incredible, it’s well cast (even though again, they should have made a different film set in the same universe with new characters), and if you just sit back and enjoy the ride it’s a good one. The first ten minutes, featuring the death of the Kelvin and George Kirk, are ten of the best minutes you’ve ever seen in any Trek film ever.
They deserve some credit, too, for doing a passable job of connecting this series to the original films. Leonard Nimoy plays a pivotal role as Spock, we know, passing the torch, and the alternate universe plot is a good excuse for what they’re doing. At least it’s less insulting than pretending the original movies didn’t exist, so they can cast people whose kids might think are hot.
Or you could get hung up on the fact that they turned logical Mr. Spock into a rage monster, promoted Kirk from cadet to Captain in about five minutes, and blew up Vulcan for no good reason.
17. Star Trek: The Animated Series

Dwelling in the Star Trek dark ages between the cancellation of the original series and the revitalization of Trek with The Motion Picture is Star Trek: The Animated Series. Unlike almost every other animated version of something popular in live action, the Trek animated series features the vocal talents of everyone in the original cast and an extra dose of James Doohan, who, in addition to voicing Scotty, also provides voices for lots of other ancillary characters.
Working in its favor is the show’s ability to do things that they couldn’t do on a live-action TV show’s special effects budget. We get new alien characters like a three-armed navigator named Mr. Arex, whose odd limb arrangement couldn’t have been done with TV Trek makeup.
Many of the episode scripts are written by incredibly talented science fiction writers, too, and there is an attempt here to explore big ideas in the same way the live-action show did. But those big ideas are now being shoehorned into a 20-minute animated show instead of a 42-minute live-action one. There isn’t much time, and a lot of the episodes end up feeling rushed. Some of them are flat-out silly.
The quality of the animation varies a lot, partly as a result of the time in which it was created (The Flintstones was still the pinnacle of animation in 1973) and partly as a result of sheer laziness from the animators they used to bring their stories to life.
Star Trek: The Animated Series is an uneven ride but one that hardcore Trek fans won’t mind taking.
18. Star Trek: Voyager

Voyager began with the best premise any Trek show has ever had. A by-the-book Federation crew is stranded seventy years away from home with a bunch of terrorists. They’re forced to work together for survival and must claw and scratch their way back to the Federation in a hostile and totally unknown part of the universe.
For most of its run, Star Trek: Voyager ignored that premise and went with a technobabble script of the week.
When the central premise of the show was addressed, it was hampered by underdeveloped characters played by an unevenly talented group of actors. Robert Beltran may be the worst actor in all of Star Trek, and even if he weren’t, after seven seasons, literally the only thing we know about his character, the ship’s first officer, is that he’s Native American (cue the pan flute). Roxanne Dawson has turned into a capable television director, but as an actress, she has a range of emotions that run from pouty to whiny. That’s a problem when you’re playing a Klingon.
When it works, the show is carried by the raw talent of Robert Picardo as the ship’s lovable holographic doctor and Jerri Ryan after she joins the show as Seven of Nine in the fourth season. Their performances are fantastic, and they elevate everyone around them, including Kate Mulgrew, whose Captain Janeway is at her best when playing off Seven. Voyager’s worst episodes are among the worst television ever, and Voyager’s best episodes like “Equinox” are about on par with an average Season 5 episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine.
It’s after Voyager picks up Seven that the show has all of its best moments, which means if you watch it, you’ll have to sit through three seasons thirsting for the all too few moments when The Doctor is on screen. Voyager is one of Star Trek’s biggest disappointments, a perfect premise with huge potential, often squandered by bad writing and an inconsistent direction.
When Voyager is good, it can be very good. When it’s bad, it can be very bad. Nostalgia and a spate of newer, truly terrible Star Trek shows have probably benefited Voyager. These days it’s easier than ever to forget those terrible moments and remember the good times. So, in honor of those good times, Star Trek: Voyager sits here on the ultimate Star Trek ranking list.
19. Star Trek Comics

Comics set in the world of Star Trek have been produced almost continuously since Gold Key Comics published the first one back in 1967. In 1979 they had a run at Marvel Comics, before beginning arguably Trek’s most successful run in 1984 at DC.
Unlike Trek TV shows before Deep Space Nine, the Comics often explored longer, linear story arcs in print, fleshing out the various bridge crews and exploring different themes. Many of the best writers of the Star Trek paperbacks, like Peter David, contributed stories, and while not every comic has been gold, they’ve often gone where no other Trek has before. In those ink-stained pages, pre-dating Worf’s appearance on the Enterprise-D, Captain Kirk had a Klingon bridge officer named Konom.
Star Trek comics finished their run at DC in 1996, living for a while at Malibu Comics, where they featured stories written by such Trek actors as Mark Leonard Baker (Sarek) and Aaron Eisenberg (Nog).
Currently, IDW produces Star Trek comics, telling stories in classic Trek canon, the Kelvin universe, and more recently, the world of Star Trek: Discovery.
20. Star Trek: The Experience

After plans for a hotel shaped like the Enterprise fell through, Las Vegas built Star Trek: The Experience instead. The attraction opened in 1998 at the Las Vegas Hilton and lived there for ten years until its closure in September of 2008.
Inside Star Trek: The Experience, guests would find something that was supposed to be Quark’s Bar… but actually looked like a kind of Sci-Fi mishmash that vaguely resembled Quark’s Bar. Why they couldn’t construct a bar that actually looked like Quark’s Bar from DS9 is anyone’s guess, they clearly went to a lot of trouble and expense building the thing they called Quark’s Bar, but it did not look like Quark’s Bar, and since I didn’t see Mourn there, I think it’s safe to say it was not. But they did serve a blue alcoholic beverage called Romulan Ale.
In addition to various drinking opportunities, Star Trek: The Experience offered some half-assed Borg alcoves randomly stuck to the wall and a gift shop.
If you wanted to see any more, you had to start buying tickets. The right ticket would gain entry to The History of the Future Museum, showcasing items from Trek history. Another ticket gained entry to The Klingon Encounter, in which guests got transported onto the Enterprise D and then ended up on a shuttlecraft simulator ride battling Klingons. A similar attraction was later added with a Borg theme instead of Klingons.
The simulators were a lot of fun and let you go on an actual replica of the Enterprise D bridge. They also resulted in more than a few geeky videos from nerds pretending to be Captain Picard (or Data for the more fully functional ones). Sure, you had to pay for it, but there’s really no price too high to step on the bridge of the Enterprise.
But Quark’s Bar sure was disappointing. And I’ll never stop wanting that hotel shaped like the Enterprise, looming over the Las Vegas strip.
21. Star Trek V: The Final Frontier

What DOES God need with a Starship anyway? That’s the pivotal question at the center of Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, and it’s about as stupid as this movie. Seeing Leonard Nimoy’s success at directing Star Trek’s 3 and 4, Shatner wanted a turn behind the camera, and the result was the worst-ever outing for the original series crew.
It opens strong, watching the holy trinity (Kirk, Spock, McCoy), spending time together on vacation, climbing mountains, and singing songs around a campfire. But then suddenly Uhura is dancing naked, Spock has a brother who can make Kirk’s entire crew betray him for no apparent reason, and we’re on a mission to find God or is it the Devil? Also, somehow, Klingons get involved.
There are moments of greatness in this film, like the campfire scene. Kirk’s response to Sybok’s offer to take away his pain is a classic Kirk reply, which says something big in the way all great Star Trek stories do. Kirk: “I don’t want my pain taken away! I need my pain!”
But then there’s Scotty knocking himself out by running into a bulkhead.
I need my pain, and The Final Frontier is my pain. I’m glad it exists, but it’s not good. Shatner should have taken his own advice and gone to climb a rock instead of directing this film.
22. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds

As of this writing, Star Trek: Strange New Worlds has completed season 3.
In Season 1, Strange New Worlds demonstrated strong potential and got off to a great start. It was the best first season of any Star Trek show outside the original series. Since then, the writing has gradually degraded rather than improved. The stories have become increasingly illogical, turned into nonsense powered by emotional venting rather than relatable character motivations and carefully plotted drama.
Season 2 settled for maintaining the previous season’s approximate level of quality with slightly less logically consistent writing. Season 3 began with an episode that, from a plot perspective, made no sense at all. It then produced episodes that were either jokes or ripped off from other Star Trek shows.
Captain Pike is the show’s biggest strength, and he’s brilliantly played by Anson Mount. Unfortunately, he rarely gets much screen time.
The show isn’t cheaply produced. It has many special effects, including numerous lovingly crafted, detailed shots of the glorious, newly refitted Enterprise. It’s something other new Trek shows don’t always do. But it also relies too much on the use of obvious LED walls and dark interior shots.
Strange New Worlds had the potential to rank highly on this list, but as the series has progressed, it has fallen in these rankings. If there’s one thing to blame, it’s the show’s writing, which has become derivative and terrible. It could be saved, but that seems unlikely to happen.
23. Star Trek: Nemesis

Star Trek: Nemesis looks amazing. The Enterprise E finally gets her due in this movie (before they Swiss cheese her). Seeing her fly around in full regalia (instead of plowing through swamp gas as she does in Insurrection) is worth the price of admission. Patrick Stewart’s performance is, as always, brilliant. Unlike Insurrection, this screenplay actually gives him something to chew on, and chew he does.
Outside of Sir Patrick’s dialogue, though, that script… that script goes totally off the rails the minute it dives into a weird clone Picard plot and just keeps falling apart from there. It’s badly directed, and the editing is even worse. At one point, Data shows up to magically rescue Picard immediately after everyone on the Enterprise bridge stands around explaining that they have no idea how to help him. I have no idea why the Remans exist, and I was much happier when we knew nothing about them; the cliche mega ship of doom trope has been done to death… and then there’s the death of Data.
There was no need for Data to die. The plot hole here is so big you could drive the Enterprise through it. But Data sacrifices himself for his Captain and his crew. Ok. Remember when Spock did that in Wrath of Khan? Remember that amazing funeral scene, the heart-wrenching reaction of everyone who’d ever known him? Data gets none of that. Instead, they just power up his mentally deficient replacement model, and all just sort of move on like they’re going to need a new toaster.
Even if the rest of Star Trek: Nemesis were great, it would deserve to be pretty far down on this list for its treatment of one of Trek’s most beloved characters. But the rest of it isn’t great, so here it sits.
24. Star Trek: Prodigy

Star Trek: Prodigy was primarily aimed at kids in the 12 – 15 age range, but proved entertaining for adults as well, largely because it takes Star Trek seriously. After a premiere episode that was clearly an intentional homage to Star Wars, Prodigy stopped trying to be something else and settled into being Star Trek. It’s Star Trek for kids, but it’s still actually Star Trek.
The animated series is made up of short, mostly under thirty-minute episodes that follow the adventures of a group of kids who commandeer a lost Starfleet vessel named the USS Protostar. About the ship is a hologram version of Voyager’s Captain Janeway, who is there to serve as an instructor.
Janeway isn’t the only piece of Star Trek’s past included in the show. Unlike other new live-action Star Trek shows, Prodigy takes advantage of the Star Trek universe’s existing and established world. Rather than remaking Star Trek in its own image, Prodigy uses Star Trek to tell new stories using the world that we already know. Prodigy sets out to add to the Star Trek universe, not reboot it, and for fans of Trek, that’s a beautiful thing to behold.
Prodigy is simple and clearly aimed at kids but still a lot of fun. It’s perfect for getting the next generation involved in Star Trek and holds a lot of value for keeping adults happy and engaged. That’s good enough to earn Star Trek: Prodigy a spot around the middle of this list.
25. Star Trek: Insurrection

Jonathan Frakes directed Star Trek: First Contact, a film widely agreed to be one of the very best Star Trek films. So you’d think having him back would have yielded better results than this… the worst of all the Next Generation films. Yes, even worse than the one where they killed Data and treated him like a used toaster.
The plot revolves around a planet with the key to eternal life. The villains are these guys who need to use it to get better plastic surgery. F. Murray Abraham does his best, but the script doesn’t work. The problem here is that these bad guys, much like the bad guys in Star Trek: Generations, just shouldn’t be worthy opponents for Enterprise E. Yet, the script treats them like they’re about as powerful as the Borg.
Sorry, F. Murray Abraham is no Borg Queen.
It makes many of the same mistakes made by Star Trek V: The Final Frontier, relying on laughs that come at the expense of our hero characters while getting lost in pomposity about the meaning of life, which never pays off anywhere.
The movie’s low point happens when Riker decides to steer the Enterprise with a joystick ripped off a Microsoft Flight Simulator. It never recovers.
26. Star Trek Toys, Replicas, And Models

Star Trek toys started out as a tire fire and continued on as one until somewhere around the year 2000. The powers that be behind the franchise didn’t care about merchandising so they repeatedly licensed it out to idiots who churned out stuff that looked nothing like Star Trek but had the name of Star Trek or some Star Trek character stickered on it.
The business of making toys for Star Trek was such a disaster for so long that Netflix actually made an entire documentary about how bad it was. I don’t think there’s ever been a bigger missed earnings opportunity in the history of toy-making. They blew it.
In recent years,, things have gotten better. A lot better. Quality toy makers like Todd MacFarlane have gotten involved in making incredibly detailed and lifelike action figures from all eras of the franchise too. Highly skilled independent modelers have also begun making high-quality, scale models of starships with lights and sometimes even sound.
These days, you can even find some great, affordable replicas of props. I bought a phaser for my 7-year-old, and he plays with it non-stop. The biggest producer of Starship replicas, though, Eagle Moss, recently went out of business.
There are some big holes in the Star Trek toy game. Just try finding kids’ toy ships durable enough for your elementary schooler to play with. They don’t exist. You can’t let kids play with those awesome-looking Eaglemoss replicas… they tend to break if you breathe on them.
Star Trek toys have come a long, long way. But when you compare them to modern-day Star Wars or Marvel products, they still have a long, long way to go.
27. Star Trek Video Games

Star Trek video games were non-existent at first, and then mostly bad for a long time. The games have improved in the past decade, but there’s still a long way to go.
Many gamers are playing Star Trek: Online, though it’s mostly running around and resource collecting. Props to the incredibly talented people behind ST: Online for trying their best to make it work.
Some would agree that the best Trek game ever produced was Star Trek: Elite Force, a standard first-person shooter in which you run around Trek-themed places shooting Trek-themed stuff. That should seem strange since running around shooting stuff is not what Star Trek has ever been about. But in the video game world, some feel that’s the best Trek could do.
There are games like Star Trek: Bridge Commander that have been resounding successes. They continue to have a long life, years after their release dates, by allowing fans to create and modify their own ships and by adding new ships as they appear on various Trek shows. The more games that allow fans to create, the better they seem to be. Trekkies know what Trekkies want.
Trek games have, at times, been unfaithful to the spirit of the franchise and unplayable. In recent years, they’ve also made small strides toward community building and capturing what fans want. We’re still waiting for a game to fully deliver on the experience of sitting in a Captain’s chair and commanding a starship.
28. Star Trek Conventions

In the 70s, Star Trek conventions were a counter-culture extravaganza full of free-love weirdos, sexy outside-the-box thinkers, and collectors selling rare, never-before-seen items that couldn’t be found anywhere else. If the entire convention thing had stopped there, I’d probably have this higher on my list. But it didn’t.
These days, Star Trek conventions are minimum-effort affairs where some guys show up to sell stuff you can find better versions of online, and fans pay top dollar to be packed into a hotel convention hall and sit on uncomfortable folding chairs a hundred feet or so away from the guy who used to be Ensign Kim. If you’re lucky, incredibly lucky, Patrick Stewart will show up and announce a new TV show from high above on a stage, or some corporate executive will shovel carefully packaged tidbits at you about something you’re required to love even if it was made with absolutely no consideration for the fans sitting there with you in that convention hall.
I’m not against things going corporate if it results in a slick, better-produced version of the thing fans like, but that is not what has happened at these conventions. I’ve been to the biggest, Star Trek: Las Vegas, and the place they called “Quark’s Bar” was a couple of folding tables and two guys wearing rubber Ferengi masks.
I did walk past Nicole de Boer wandering the halls with her entourage, and they did have a lifesize cardboard poster everyone could pretend was the Guardian on the Edge of Forever.
That was nice, I guess.
29. Star Trek Apparel

I like Star Trek and would happily wear an amazing Star Trek t-shirt if most of them didn’t look like the picture of the one I’ve included here. That lacks creativity or style.
Most of the officially licensed Star Trek apparel comes from whatever the most recent Star Trek is, and if you do happen to find something from the era of Kirk or Picard, it’s probably going to look stupid. You can just forget about finding anything from Deep Space Nine.
There’s some unofficially licensed stuff, but most of that is garish and totally un-subtle. There’s not much variety to it. You’d think I’d be able to find a T-shirt with a tribble on it and nothing else, but nope, that’s not a thing you can get at all.
It’s even worse when you start looking into costumes. A lot of amazing cosplayers making their own stuff, but if you’re looking for an accurate Star Trek replica uniform, good luck. You can find something that looks sort of like it might have been worn by Uhura if she added six inches to the hemline and didn’t know how to sew, but it’s not going to be accurate. Not at all.
Star Trek is the oldest and one of the most popular franchises on the planet, behind only Marvel and maybe Star Wars (depending on how bad the most recent movie was). This should be a no-brainer. I should be able to get something cool with a small, tasteful picture of the Enterprise on it. Instead, I’m wearing this…

30. Star Trek Cruises

First, I’d like to say thank you to all the Star Trek actors who donated their time (for pay) to all the fans of the series by spending weeks with them trapped on a floating buffet. Also, if you’ve been on one of these floating buffets, I’d be happy to look at your photos and respond positively to your retelling of the “adventure”.
I’ll even go a step further and say that if you’re taking a Star Trek cruise, there is nothing wrong with you. You are probably a cool person who I’d like to hang out with outside of a cruise (not on one, obviously).
It’s the cruises that are the problem, not the people taking them.
Cruises are for eating and passing out drunk. Whether Robert Picardo is sitting next to me or not has no bearing at all on the quality of my experience. Why do I need him? What does being near enough to smell his pheromones actually do for me, except distract me from the cruise?
Mostly, I feel embarrassed that talented people like Picardo have been forced to sell themselves as glorified floating bathroom attendants, doling out their mere presence as some sort of fan aphrodisiac.
I’m not saying these things aren’t fun… maybe they are for the right person. I’m not saying I’m against actors profiting endlessly off their past work… ok maybe I am. I am saying the mere fact that these exist is an embarrassing stain on Star Trek fandom, and I feel bad for everyone involved while wishing them well and hoping they don’t sink somewhere in the Bahamas because Robert Duncan McNeill does not actually know how to pilot a ship.
On second thought, if the ship did sink, you might end up getting CPR from Terry Farrell, and that’s a world I want to live in. I feel like she’d know exactly what to do in a crisis.
Star Trek Cruises that sink belong higher on this list, but for now, I’m only rating the ones that make it back to port. Successful cruises with a low death toll sit here, just outside the bottom tier of worst Star Trek mistakes, because, even at their worst, they still have margaritas.
And Now The Worst Things Star Trek Has Ever Done
You’re probably wondering why anyone would rank an actual Star Trek TV series below the infamously terrible string of failures that are Star Trek toys or the embarrassments that are Star Trek cruises. Easy answer: No matter how terrible some of the things listed above are, at least part of the time, they had good intentions. In addition to being overall terrible, nothing you’ll find below this line has ever had good intentions. Not once.
These final items are the worst things Star Trek has ever done. A list of shame, a perfect confluence of ineptitude, carelessness, and bad intent. It’s a testament to how great some of the things at the top of this list are that Star Trek has managed to survive them all.
Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, Trek friends. The following abominations are the worst things Star Trek has ever done.
31. Short Treks

Star Trek: Short Treks are something CBS came up with to cheaply produce more content on their existing Star Trek: Discovery sets, thus maximizing their investment in building all those fancy blinking lights on the bridge.
The first few were hampered by truly bad scripts. I’m pretty sure “The Runaway” was written by Alex Kurtzman’s 7-year-old stepdaughter (if he has one), and “The Brightest Star” was just a bunch of guys wandering around in rubber suits looking worried. Calypso was the best of the first run, and it did the job of foreshadowing the plot of Star Trek: Discovery, but most of the plot doesn’t make a ton of sense if you stop and think about it.
The first really great Short Trek was The Escape Artist, directed by and starring Rainn Wilson as Harry Mudd. Given Dwight’s level of involvement, I’m tempted to give all the credit for making that one work to him.
The Escape Artist is still the anthology series’ high-water mark, but Short Treks failed to build on that success. They did, however, manage to crank out a couple of other tolerable shorts. That one where Edward tries to make everyone eat tribbles, despite not fitting in with the established tribble canon, was a lot of fun. Spock had some good questions in “Q&A”, even if questions is all he had. “Ask Not” was so short it was almost too short, but it had Anson Mount playing Captain Pike in it, and that’s always worth a watch.
Short Treks even dabbled in all-animated episodes. Those, like everything else Short Treks does, have been a mixed bag. The first two animated Short Treks released were “Ephraim and Dot” and “The Girl Who Made The Stars”. “Ephraim and Dot” is a fun, Looney Tunes-style adventure through all the original Enterprise’s greatest moments. “The Girl Who Made The Stars” is a bad folk tale that has nothing to do with Star Trek and isn’t worth viewing. One good, one bad, so they cancel each other out and have no effect on this ranking.
The best thing all these shorts have going for them so far is production value, but that production value is a leftover byproduct of what they’ve already done for Discovery and, more recently, Star Trek: Picard, so I’m not sure they deserve any credit for it. At least they’re short.
32. Very Short Treks

Not to be confused with Short Treks, Very Short Treks are a series of comedy bits animated in the style of Star Trek: The Animated Series and released by Paramount on YouTube.
The best thing about Very Short Treks is that they are very short. Also, the retro animation is a lot of fun. Everything else is nightmare fuel, and it feels as though it was made by people who hate Star Trek and want to destroy it.
It’s hard to believe these are actually produced by Paramount for Star Trek on purpose. They seem more like a Digital Short produced by Saturday Night Live to make fun of the franchise for people who don’t know much about it and aren’t actually interested in it.
33. Star Trek: Picard Seasons 1 & 2

In season 3, Star Trek: Picard became a completely different show run by totally different people. It’s so different it bears no resemblance at all to the show’s first two seasons. Thus, I’m ranking them separately.
Star Trek: Picard’s first two seasons weren’t a television show; they were a death cult. It’s where CBS sends all your favorite characters to die in the service of bad writers who can’t come up with anything better to get ratings. After fans suffered through the ignominious death of Data in Star Trek: Nemesis, season one of the series revolved around killing him again, only this time, they had him give up on life and commit suicide.
In season two, they killed off most of the Star Trek: Picard season 2 cast and also killed off a beloved character who was supposed to be immortal in Q. Why did Q die? They never bother to address it. But they were certain that the hug Picard gave him at the end was bound to elicit tears.
While they only sort of killed off Jean-Luc Picard in the show’s first two seasons, they might as well have gone all the way with it. The prim, proper, stoic captain, obsessed with posture and wearing a crisp uniform, was turned into a doddering elderly fellow who stands around with his hands in his pockets and moans a lot about his mommy. The real Captain Picard would rather be dead than slouch. The dried-up husk of a not-robot bearing his name in this show is absolutely nothing like him.


Star Trek: Picard season 1 was a disaster. It was so bad the series ended up ranked by fans as the worst small-screen program Star Trek has ever produced. In my review of the finale I accused Picard of lacking imagination, and that’s true. But coming up with imaginative plot lines is hard. Paying attention to the little details that make something Star Trek instead of any generic sci-fi franchise is easy, and Picard didn’t bother to do any of that, either.
Even if you liked the story of Star Trek: Picard’s first season, it’s undeniable that the production looked and felt cheap. In theory, this is the most expensive piece of television Star Trek has ever produced, but in practice, when they needed a fleet of ships, they made a really low-res model and then copy/pasted it two hundred times so they wouldn’t have to spend any money on good CGI. And it showed.
In season two, they saved money by sending the cast back in time to the present. They then proceeded to shoot all their scenes in a couple of alleys and a doctor’s office. They turned an already low-production-value show into a show that takes place next to a dumpster—it’s not even a space dumpster.
Star Trek: Picard’s first two seasons are cheap and full of plot holes that make no sense. It’s a clear cash-in that destroys the past and everything everyone loved about Star Trek: The Next Generation purely to give Patrick Stewart a big paycheck.
34. Star Trek Into Darkness

The stealth-remake Star Trek: Into Darkness is one of Star Trek’s worst movie efforts. It plays out as if writers Alex Kurtzman and Damon Lindelof photocopied all the pages from the Star Trek II: Wrath of Khan script, then threw away the best parts, shuffled the remaining lines to different characters, added unnecessary punching scenes, and filmed it.
Anyone watching this film has to admit Star Trek Into Darkness never really set out to be good in the first place. Their goal here was to elicit a feeling of nostalgia for something better you’d seen before and remembered. Instead of making something good, they reminded everyone of how good Star Trek can be by showing them what it’s like when it’s not.
I guess Lindelof thought it would be more exciting if all the problems encountered by their characters were solved by lots of shooting and magic space blood instead of by sacrifice, death, and horror.
35. Star Trek: Discovery | The Worst Star Trek Series

CBS’s attempt to pump up its streaming service by bringing Star Trek back to television launched with lofty ambitions on September 24, 2017. They spared no expense and delivered top-notch casting and fantastic production design for the first season. Unfortunately, they forgot to hire people who could write decent scripts.
In subsequent seasons, the scripts remained terrible, but the production budget plummeted. The show became not only badly written but also badly produced, with most external scenes that might require special effects hidden behind some inexplicable interstellar fog or, worse, happening entirely off-camera. “Captain the USS Voyager-J is attacking!” (Voyager is not shown).
The show is inexplicably focused on a second-rate commander who mutinies against her captain and then redeems herself only to run around threatening to mutiny again (though for good reasons this time, really!). That commander, Michael Burnham, mutinied so hard and so often that now she’s a Captain. The plot holes are huge, and the stories are poorly thought out most of the time, with a few notable exceptions, like any time Harry Mudd shows up on screen.
Huge mistakes in writing are regularly papered over by having characters high-five and shout, “I like science!” while doing nothing science-like at all. While season three attempted to correct some of this, it never really got all the way there, and the production value of the show declined almost in concert with their attempts to improve the scripts.
The show was canceled after five seasons. In Season 5, the scripts had slightly fewer plot holes, and they introduced a new, curmudgeonly first officer character who stole scenes. Those improvements were offset by the show’s sudden obsession with characters thanking each other.
36. Star Trek: Starfleet Academy | The Worst Star Trek Show

Starfleet Academy takes place in the far-off future,Star Trek: Discovery was quarantined away in, and follows the first group of cadets to train for Starfleet in over 100 years. Holly Hunter stars as the Academy Chancellor, and also the captain of the ship the Academy transforms into whenever they want to have an adventure in outer space. Robert Picardo appears as a hundred-year-old version of The Doctor, his character from Voyager. He’s largely there to make poop jokes.
The show is one of the most poorly written things on television, with dialogue steeped in modern slang and profanity. Characters overemote, and the show’s scripts seem written by an AI. The special effects are often totally disconnected from the show’s writing. At times, they contradict what the characters are trying to tell the audience is going on.
Worse, the series doesn’t seem to actually know anything about Star Trek. Basic, established characteristics of well-known alien races are ignored, and the things the show doesn’t ignore are only brought up to be trampled on. There’s nothing here worth watching. Starfleet Academy is the worst Star Trek series and also one of the worst shows in the history of television.
37. Star Trek: Section 31 | The Worst Star Trek Movie

Star Trek: Section 31 isn’t just the worst Star Trek movie; it’s the worst thing Star Trek has ever done.
There’s a strong case to be made that Star Trek: Section 31 isn’t Star Trek at all, so maybe it shouldn’t be part of this list. Still, like that ridiculous Spock helmet from the 60s, they slapped the name Star Trek on it, so in my mind, that means I have to rank it.
Section 31 is a direct-to-streaming movie, a spinoff of the series Star Trek: Discovery. It focuses on a single character from that show, named Philippa Georgiou. Philippa is a villain and an unredeemable genocidal maniac with no redeeming qualities. No one liked her much when she was on Discovery, and she’s even worse when she has the screen all to herself.
Her solo movie is rotten to the core, structured around making things like familicide OK as long as you’re a tough chick who gets it done. It also has little to do with Star Trek. In fact, there’s a strong case to be made that it’s part of an entirely different science fiction universe.
The choice is clear. Star Trek: Section 31 is the worst thing Star Trek has ever done.
I’m not done ranking Star Trek, of course. When there’s money to be made, there’s always something lurking on the horizon. See you back here for an update when the next new Star Trek thing is released or when someone finally builds an awesome Star Trek Hotel.
Entertainment
Young and Restless Early Spoilers March 23-27: Matt Turns Violent & Jack Left Heartbroken
Young and the Restless spoilers for March 23-27, 2026 expect Matt Clark (Roger Howarth) attacking and Jack Abbott (Peter Bergman) devastated.
As we always do on early edition day, we talk about what’s coming the rest of this week. Then we dig into what is ahead for next week.
Young and the Restless Spoilers Wednesday, March 18th: Lauren Accepts Phyllis’s Offer
So, on Wednesday, March 18th, we have Michael Baldwin (Christian LeBlanc). He is back in Genoa City. He has been gone for a trip to New York City and he really wants to take Lauren Fenmore (Tracey Bregman) and sweep her away on a vacation. But she tells Michael she can’t because she is considering running Newman Enterprises alongside Phyllis Summers (Michelle Stafford), who has renamed it Summers Conglomerate.
I don’t know that I love that name at all. Michael thinks Phyllis is going to fail simply because Victor Newman (Eric Braeden) will never stop and he will be relentless. But Lauren is not afraid of Victor. And while she says she feels bad for Nikki Newman (Melody Thomas Scott), she does not feel bad for Victor at all. She thinks this is a karmic slap that he deserved.
Y&R Spoilers: Lauren Accepts Phyllis’ Job Offer
Michael agrees that Phyllis really accomplished something. She did a thing. And Lauren thinks that running the company would be a challenge, but she’s absolutely up for it. And then she and Michael head over to see Phyllis, who’s expecting Lauren to reject her, and Phyllis is absolutely thrilled when instead Lauren accepts her offer to sit by her side. Phyllis needs a partner in crime.
Billy Abbott (Jason Thompson) is upset when he comes to see Phyllis on Wednesday that she gave Chancellor to Victor because Jack is free. No thanks to Victor at all. And Phyllis is surprised by this update. But the bottom line is she already gave the company to Victor and she did it for the Abbotts. So, he tricked her. Billy’s irate, but Phyllis insists she was not trying to do Billy dirty. And he worries that Victor is still going to be coming for Phyllis to get everything back that he lost.
Young and the Restless Spoilers: Noah Makes a Bold Move
Sharon Newman (Sharon Case) updates Noah Newman (Lucas Adams) and Sienna Bacall (Tamara Braun) and tells them that Nick Newman (Joshua Morrow) and Adam Newman (Mark Grossman) are in Las Vegas. They’re trying to find Riza to use her to get to Matt.
And Sharon’s worried about Adam, but I think we all know he’s not the problem brother right now. And Sienna says she thought Matt had been cheating and having an affair with somebody in Vegas, and that might have been Riza. She had seen some text from somebody with the initial R.
Plus, Noah gets another threatening text from Matt about making the most of the time he has left. And see you soon, you know, vague threatening stuff. So, Noah texts back and he calls Matt a coward and calls him out, you know, saying, “Come at me.” Sienna doesn’t think that Noah sending that message was a very good idea, but he already did it. He seems to have inherited that hothead gene from his dad, Nick.
Y&R Spoilers: Sally is Billy’s Rock
Billy tells Sally Spectra (Courtney Hope) that Jack is safe, but Diane Jenkins (Susan Walters) is enraged and that she has moved out of the mansion. And Sally hopes that the two of them will work it out. Billy tells her that Phyllis already gave Chancellor back to Victor.
Billy’s quite upset that he lost Chancellor again and Sally actually feels bad for him and says that he can always come work with her. And Billy admits that he had gotten obsessed again. He let it get away from him and he knows he needs to chill out.
Sally thinks Billy should take some time away, leave Genoa City, go see Jill Abbott (Jess Walton) and make things right with his mom, and Billy agrees to consider it and he’s very happy to have Sally’s love and advice. He’s very lucky to have all that.
Young and Restless Spoilers: Nick Tries to Get Rid of Adam
Meanwhile, Nick and Adam are in Vegas and Nick tells Adam he can always go back to Genoa City if this is too much for him. And Nick says that he can just get the info from Riza and go home. Adam’s wondering why Nick seems to be trying to get rid of him. I think I know why. And it rhymes with fentanyl.
Adam says that Riza isn’t going to talk to Nick and he needs to lie low, stay out of the way while he does this, but he gets hotheaded with Adam. And Adam says that he’ll go see Riza, he’ll get the information.
Then Nick can do whatever he wants to do with Matt once they have him. And Adam leaves Riza a message saying it is Spider. If you remember, that was his old card sharp name from years ago. Was it like 2019 when he came in as the recast?
Thursday and Friday on Y&R: March Madness Preemptions
Thursday, March 19th and Friday, March 20th, Y&R is preempted for CBS Sports coverage of March Madness. Boo to that. That’s what ESPN is for.
Young and the Restless Spoilers Week of March 23rd-27th: Adam Held at Gunpoint
The following week, March 23rd to 27th, we’re going to pick back up with new episodes. Christine Williams (Lauralee Bell) has some issues with Mariah Copeland (Camryn Grimes) and really needs Sharon to help and intervene. I suspect Mariah wants to plead guilty.
She said that before and I think she’s going to reiterate it instead of having Christine work on a temporary insanity plea. And Sharon’s worries intensify next week and she may beg Mariah to just let Christine do her job and do what’s best so she doesn’t ruin her future. But Mariah doesn’t feel like she deserves a future.
Nick updates Noah that Adam has reached out to Riza. And I wonder if Noah is going to tell his dad about the threatening text and especially that Noah is goading Matt and trying to get him to show his face. Sounds like he thinks Noah might be that Noah might think Matt is in town, but it definitely looks like he’s in Vegas.
Young and Restless Spoilers: Adam in Trouble
Adam winds up being held at gunpoint by his old Vegas pal, Riza. And I wonder if Matt has warned Riza about his beef with the Newmans. Lauren is ready to kick things into high gear with Phyllis. So, I do have a question. Who’s running Fenmore’s if Lauren is over at Summers Conglomerate and fighting off Victor, who isn’t going to stop coming for his company that he wants back?
Holden Novak (Nathan Owens) is going to circle back to Audra Charles (Zuleyka Silver) soon and press her on seducing Kyle Abbott (Michael Mealor). All of this is insane because Claire Grace Newman (Hayley Erin) was finally done with the Audra vendetta and was ready to let it go. And of course, this is going to reignite everything and result in her murdery secret coming out, which is Holden’s murdery secret, too. So, he shot himself in the foot.

Patty and Diane Face Off on Y&R
Patty Williams (Stacy Haiduk) is not done yet. We’ll see if she faces criminal charges. We know for sure that Patty has to face Diane, who is going to confront her soon and rage about her drugging and molesting Jack. We know Patty really hates Diane, and with good reason. And you know, Jack’s going to keep trying to explain himself, but Diane’s just too mad right now to even hear him.
Nikki and Diane are both staying at the GCAC, and I expect some unpleasant confrontations in the hallway over what Victor did to Jack and how he weaponized crazy Patty. And Jack’s going to keep trying to convince Diane to come home to him. And I also anticipate some more scenes with Jack and Nikki where he needs to tell her what’s going on.
Lily Comes Home
Lily Winters (Christel Khalil) is back soon and Nate Hastings (Sean Dominic) and Devon Hamilton (Bryton James) want her far away from Cane Ashby (Billy Flynn) who of course wants to make things right with his ex. Billy considers that trip to London to see Jill.
Chelsea Lawson Newman (Melissa Claire Egan) and Sharon cannot stop worrying about Adam and Nick and Adam may be increasingly worried about Nick who is increasingly off-kilter. Noah continues to provoke Matt and Nick’s gonna be out of fentanyl soon and desperate for more.
Shemar Moore and Vivica A. Fox Return to Young and the Restless
Also, we know that Shemar Moore and Vivica A. Fox are back. They have filmed new scenes for Young and the Restless that are airing in April 2026. And I feel like this might be some kind of memorial sort of thing for Neil Winters. If you remember, he passed away on screen April 23rd, 2019. And so with them coming in April, it feels like it has to be tied into a Neil-centric thing. We’ll see more on that soon.
Entertainment
The 8 most suspenseful thriller series streaming on Paramount+ right now
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The streamer carries classic mysteries and modern edge-of-your-seat series.
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Wax Figure Drops & Fans Can’t Even Tell Who It Is
Roommates, Kevin Hart had the internet in TEARS after a recent reveal didn’t quite hit like it was supposed to. At first, it gave standard celeb spotlight energy… a lil debut, a lil “ta-da!” moment. But the second Kevin peeped the finished product? Yeah… it instantly turned into a “y’all got me messed up” type situation.
RELATED: Caught Slippin’! Sexyy Red & Kevin Hart’s Backstage Face-Off Has Everybody Cracking Up! (VIDEO)
Kevin Hart Demands A Redo After Wax Fail
So boom—Kevin hit up Instagram after seeing a wax figure of himself at the Hollywood Wax Museum in Tennessee, and whew… he was NOT feeling it. The statue had him dripped in a black T-shirt, black pants, a leather jacket, and a long gold chain—but according to Kevin (and honestly, the internet), the face card declined immediately. At this point, Kevin said he’s demanding a redo—and honestly, Roommates… we might have to back him up on this one, because whoever that wax figure is? It’s giving “inspired by” at best. He wasted no time calling it out in his caption, joking:
“WTTTTFFFFF …. What did I do to these people…. This is an attack…. Who in the f**k is this?????? At this point these museums are just trying to make me cry 🥺😂😂😂😂….. This s**t has to stop…. I demand a redo d*mn it!!!!!!!”
Wax Figure Looks Like Everybody But Kevin Hart
The comment section? Oh, they had time. Fans flooded Kevin Hart’s post, clowning the figure left and right, with some saying it looked like “Kevin Hart’s distant cousin” and others straight-up comparing it to random celebs who ain’t got nothing to do with him. The video racked up millions of views in no time, proving once again that the internet stays undefeated when it comes to a good roast session.
One Instagram user @therock added, “It’s PERFECT Don’t change a thing“
This Instagram user @lala commented, “😂😂😂😂😂🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️🤦🏽♀️”
And, Instagram user @stefflondon joked, “Kevin Fart“
Meanwhile, Instagram user @enikohart shared, “ikyfl lmao“
While Instagram user @mrcommodore wrote, “Chris Rock Tucker In the face 😂😂😂😂”
Lastly, Instagram user @jazzma_kendrick said, “😂😂😂😂😂 Because WHO is that?!“
X Users Say “Who Is This Supposed To Be?”
Fans also ran over to X to cackle, with many saying, “ain’t no way they looked at that figure and confidently said, Kevin Hart.” The jokes were flying, and the consensus? Somebody clearly just guessed and hoped for the best.
That ain’t Kevin Hart. That’s Jake from State Farm. https://t.co/T7tTBsV9ax
— Tyronesaurus Rex (@CharleyBravoJr) March 12, 2026
I’m wheezing no way this supposed to be Kevin Hart 🤣😭pic.twitter.com/KMIc23whUs
— 444 🍃 💨 (@ClearlyDgaf_) March 13, 2026
Turned Kevin Hart into Justin LaBoy LMFAOOO https://t.co/ezEILD1cxl
— Broward Stern (@KnowbodysTweets) March 12, 2026
That’s Kevin Emoji Hart. Look like one of them Tyler Perry movie drug dealers. Whoever did Kevin like this has no Hart. https://t.co/IfIYmlxDhL
— Mr. Wholebean (@footballguy82) March 12, 2026
RELATED: What’s Goin’ On? Blueface Has The TL In Tears With His Reaction To Kylie Jenner & Zendaya’s Wax Figures (VIDEOS)
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Reginae Carter Spills On Her New Boo & Confirms She’s “In Love”
Roommates, it looks like Reginae Carter has heart eyes for someone new. The ‘Heir Time’ podcast host spilled all the tea about her new bae while chopping it up with Justin LaBoy. Now the internet is on a mission, hunting for clues to figure out exactly who’s making her heart skip a beat.
RELATED: Main Character Energy! 5 Times Reginae Carter Had The Internet On LOCK & Living For Her Energy (PHOTOS + VIDEOS)
Reginae Carter Opens Up About Her Love Life
Recently, Reginae Carter linked up with Justin LaBoy to chat about everything from her new relationship to where she stands with her ex, YFN Lucci, and the launch of her own podcast. Reginae revealed that she thinks she’s in love now. She admitted she’s excited about her new relationship. However, this time, she’s keeping it private because folks keep getting stuck on her past relationships.
Reginae didn’t share much more about the romance. But when Justin asked if her current man ever trips over her past public boos, she cleared the air. Nae said he doesn’t because he’s super confident.
“I wouldn’t say get worked up. I do feel like the person I’m talking to right now is very confident. She continued, “He’s like literally the male version of me.”
Additionally, Reginae confirmed her new man isn’t in the entertainment industry. In fact, she said she’s done with industry men altogether. As for what he does, Nae played it cool and joked that he’s a “businessman.” Also, she said he’s big on fitness and owns a few real estate properties. In her eyes, he’s a grown man who moves low-key!
Fans Are Here For Reginae Keeping Her New Love Low-Key
Once Reginae’s interview with Justin dropped, The Shade Room’s comment section went crazy! Some folks loved that she’s keeping her new love on lock, while others wasted no time calling Justin out for being messy.
Instagram user @tessybeee wrote, “Private is best! Keep it in the tuck 🤌🏽✨️”
Instagram user @lamourabney wrote, “Yea JUST KEEP IT PRIVATE 💯”
While Instagram user @itskaterryj wrote, “Smart move to keep your new relationship private.”
Then Instagram user @fivetenbae wrote, “The Shade Room police about to find her new man in 5 seconds 😂”
Another Instagram user @intheislandofwakikii wrote, “Keep it private … matter fact don’t even mention relationship nomo 😂”
Instagram user @no3ll3th3first wrote, “She done said she don’t talk to him in many different languages and he still asking. Justin is so messy.”
Lastly, Instagram user @_lalanigomez_ wrote, “PLOT TWIST: I REALLY DO THINK HER AND LUCCI WILL BE BACK TOGETHER, IF THEIR RELATIONSHIPS DON’T WORK OUT .😂😂 I COULD BE WRONG THO.”
Reginae Shares Her Status With YFN Lucci Following His Prison Release
Y’all already know Justin Laboy comes ready to get the tea. He didn’t skip asking Reginae where she stands with her ex YFN Lucci. Lucci was released from prison in January 2025 after serving nearly four years on multiple charges, including racketeering. Before that, he and Reginae dated from 2018 to 2021. While talking to Justin, Reginae kept it real and said they don’t speak right now, but they’re still “cool.” She added, “It’s all good, no beef.” She admitted that they have spoken after his release and he did reach out to her on her birthday in December 2025 but outside of that, they haven’t been in touch.
RELATED: Big Sis, Please! Reginae Carter’s Little Brothers Beg Her To Chill On Her Spicy Social Media Habits (VIDEOS)
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Bachelorette’s Peter Kraus Welcomes 1st Baby With Wife Hana
Bachelor Nation alum Peter Kraus found a new kind of love upon the arrival of his and wife Hana Ostapchuk’s first baby.
“Our sweet Andie girl is here 🤍 Born on Saturday afternoon, just hours before the biggest blizzard of the season – just as it was almost 40 years ago on Peter’s birthday 🥰,” the pair wrote in a joint Instagram post on Tuesday, March 17. “We each prayed for this baby girl long before we ever met. We talked about the idea of her since our first date. To now have her here — healthy, happy, and bundled – is the greatest gift.”
The caption continued, “Thank you God for this answered prayer. Thank you to the incredible nurses and staff at Meriter Hospital for such a beautiful birthing experience. And thank you to our parents, who were there for her arrival and continue to support us every single day.”
Alongside the message, Kraus and Ostapchuk shared several sweet images of the couple gazing at their newborn.
“It truly takes a village – and we are so grateful for ours,” the caption concluded. “You are already so deeply loved, sweet Andie. Our little Pi Day baby 🥧. We love you endlessly.”
Eight years after his stint on Rachel Lindsay’s season 13 of The Bachelorette, Kraus announced his engagement to Ostapchuk.
“Throughout it all, it was always you. I just had to find you. I love you. Words cannot express the love and happiness we feel. Last night was truly magical and only possible because of an amazing support system of incredible people in our lives! We are so thankful,” he captioned Instagram photos of his proposal in July 2025. “We are ENGAGED!!”
In September 2025, Ostapchuk revealed her pregnancy, debuting her baby bump in a black one-piece swimsuit.
“A new chapter, the best chapter 🕊️🤰,” she gushed via Instagram at the time. “One week after our engagement, we got the surprise of our lives. Gods [sic] plans are perfect, and our hearts are full of gratitude. Angel baby coming this March!! God is so so so good 💛 #14weeks.”
Two months later, the couple shared the sex of their baby in a sweet Instagram video, revealing the pink interior of a cake to discover they were having a girl. The couple embraced in an emotional moment captured on camera.
Amid the pregnancy, the parents-to-be teased their upcoming wedding in an exclusive September 2025 interview with Us Weekly.
“I’ll say that it’s in my mom’s backyard. I think we both knew we wanted to do a little backyard wedding, something intimate,” Ostapchuk told Us at the time. “I think when you have the luxury of getting married in your 20s, you sort of romanticize this huge thing. Now that we’re both a little bit older, we don’t need any of that stuff. We’re just gonna do a small wedding around the holidays in my mom’s backyard.”
Kraus and Ostapchuk ultimately tied the knot in December 2025.
“Thirty-nine years preparing for you,” he captioned their wedding photos via Instagram at the time. “Gods [sic] plan is always on time.”
Entertainment
Days of our Lives Early Spoilers March 23-27: Philip Reveals the Truth & Holly Reaches Rock Bottom!
Days of Our Lives spoilers for March 23-27, 2026 suggest Philip Kiriakis (John-Paul Lavoisier) is confessing and Holly Jonas (Ashley Puzemis) hitting rock bottom.
As we always do on early edition day. We start with what’s coming the rest of this week and then we jump into what is ahead next week.
Days of Our Lives Spoilers Wednesday, March 18th: Dimitri and Leo in Peril
So, on Wednesday, March 18th, we’re going to continue over from Tuesday. Leo Stark (Greg Rikaart) and Dimitri von Leuschner DiMera (Peter Porte) are in peril. Their lives are at risk. And we saw some of this at the end of Tuesday’s episode. We’ll see it again on Wednesday.
Somebody with a laser sighting sniper rifle took a shot through their hotel window and Dimitri tackles Leo and then is freaking out over him, worried he’s shot. And it looks like Andrew Donovan may show up at the end of Wednesday’s episode as Leo’s lying on the bed and Dimitri looks concerned. But most of the Andrew action happens on Thursday.
Philip is going to confess to Gabi Hernandez (Cherie Jimenez) that he is the reason Titan is in trouble. And it looks like Philip might come completely clean on the forgery of the letter from Victor Kiriakis (John Aniston).
And of course, Gabi already knows all of this because she spied on him and Xander Cook (Paul Telfer) and then she told Tony DiMera (Thaao Penghlis). So, as equally as Philip is to blame, Gabi is as well. And I wonder if she will come clean or if Philip’s confession makes her realize that she can never come clean.
DOOL Spoilers: EJ Interrogated by Belle
JJ Deveraux and Theo Carver (Cameron Johnson) do some bonding and we’ll see if Theo brings up JJ’s ex Gabi because he just, you know, is so infatuated. Liam Selejko (Hank Northrop) is stalked by Scarface henchman Klaus (Bassel Alzaro) who is in Salem to tie up loose ends that might lead back to Vivian Alamain (Louise Sorel) and tie her to the DiMera kidnappings.
DA Belle Brady (Martha Madison) Black interrogates her ex EJ DiMera (Dan Feuerriegel) and no doubt she’s questioning him about Stephanie Johnson‘s (Abigail Klein) kidnapping and whether he was involved like he was in the past.
So, Rafe Hernandez (Galen Gering) arrested EJ and hopefully Cat Greene (AnnaLynne McCord) did what he asked and called Rita and she’ll get him a lawyer over there ASAP. I hope it’s Melinda Trask (Tina Huang). That would be fun for EJ to have to lower himself to ask Melinda to rep him.
Days of our Lives Spoilers: Stephanie & Jeremy Suspicious
Stephanie and Jeremy Horton (Michael Roark) didn’t see or hear EJ, just Owen Kent (Wes Ramsey) and Dr. Wilhelm Rolf (Richard Wharton). But they may suspect that EJ was using Rolf as his go-between. And Rafe insisted EJ was the only person who knew that room was there. But Rolf did, too. And so did the construction people that built the secret lab. And they really have no evidence to hold EJ as far as I can see.
Days of Our Lives Spoilers Thursday, March 19th: Shawn Is Shot
Thursday, March 19th, Leo and Dimitri try to explain themselves to Andrew. And I’m sure Dimitri is going to say to the ISA agent that, you know, he was kidnapped. He was held against his will. He wasn’t involved with the kidnappings. And he was wrongfully arrested.
But Andrew wanted to play by the book. So, we’ll see. Dimitri wanted the ISA to look into that house where he was kept, but Gwen Rizczech (Emily O’Brien) was ranting at somebody, Vivian or Yvonne, presumably to shut that down. So, I wonder if that house is going to mysteriously burn.
And Klaus confronts Liam, who of course is terrified of the villain. JJ’s there, and so is Shawn-Douglas Brady (Brandon Beemer). And JJ pulls his gun, identifies them as police, tells Klaus to stop, put down his weapon. Shawn has his gun out too, and it looks like he and Klaus both fire simultaneously.
Shawn is shot and he goes down. JJ runs over to check on his partner. The question is, is Klaus dead and gone or just gone? Because when Shawn is shot, that might be a good chance for Klaus to run away. If he does get away, of course, Liam remains in trouble. And JJ is going to call for help, officer down, and get Shawn over to the hospital ASAP.
Days of our Lives Spoilers: EJ Surprises Gwen
Gwen is surprised by EJ, so he may be back at the mansion already. As I said, I can’t imagine that they have enough for Jada Hunter (Elia Cantu) to hold him and for Belle to press charges. EJ may update Gwen on all the drama, including that Rolf had to move Lexie Carver (Nikki Crawford) from the lab.
And then we’re going to have Paulina Price (Jackée Harry) lying right in Abe Carver‘s (James Reynolds) face when they’re hanging out at the Brady Pub. And I’m sure it’s about the secret lab and the person pod that Rafe found. Paulina knows that Lexie’s somewhere or else Rafe would have found her in the person pod. So, this bombshell could go off anytime, blow up in Paulina’s face on Days of our Lives.
Days Spoilers Friday, March 20th: Rachel Gives Tate More Psych Meds for Holly
Friday, March 20th, we’ve got Jada getting an update from Belle, and it may be about having to cut EJ loose. Owen is in custody, and he was accused and named by the two kidnap victims, Stephanie and Jeremy. Owen also named Dr. Rolf. And I’m sure that he’s either hiding out in the bowels of the hospital or in the bowels below the DiMera mansion.
Shawn wants the truth from JJ. And I wonder if this is about his prognosis from the shooting. Liam gets some TLC from Arianna “Ari” Grace Horton (Marissa Reyes) after his ordeal with the shooting. And I wonder if Liam’s just having PTSD or if he might have been injured by Klaus’s bullet.
Days of our Lives Spoilers:
Sarah Horton (Linsey Godfrey) and Holly do some more talking about what’s going on with her. She’s really scared, but she also doesn’t want to take Sarah’s advice to stop the skin supplements to see if that makes her feel better, because you know, having clear skin is more important than having a clear mind. I guess.
Rachel Black (Lorelei Olivia Mote) gives Tate Black (Leo Howard) the package from Sophia Choi (Madelyn Kientz) to give to Holly without mentioning Sophia’s name. But I guess Rachel has to claim she bought them for Holly. And obviously there’s more psych meds in this skin supplement bottle. I wonder if Tate’s going to give it to Holly. Probably. We’ll see. I guess it depends on how Rachel explains it.
Week of March 23rd-27th on DOOL: Rachel’s Court Hearing
The week of March 23rd through the 27th, we’ll find out about Rachel’s fate in court and whether Kristen DiMera (Stacy Haiduk) keeps her mouth shut in front of the judge and behaves at the hearing or if she gets sassy and Rachel pays the price for her mom’s smart mouth. Kind of hoping the judge bans Kristen from being near Rachel and says Brady Black (Eric Martsolf) is the only one fit to be around her.
Lexie should be waking up any day now and we should get a glimpse at where Rolf has stashed her. Stephanie and Jeremy may continue to keep quiet about Stephanie having to kiss Owen as part of the escape plan. And of course, Alex Kiriakis (Robert Scott Wilson) cannot fully understand the lengths his wife Stephanie went through while she was kidnapped and being tormented and for her to get loose.

Days of our Lives Spoilers: Will Tate Commit?
Steve Johnson (Stephen Nichols) may ask Brady to officially join Black Patch and follow in his dad, John Black’s (Drake Hogestyn) footsteps. He did great with this investigation. Brady was key in figuring out that Owen was behind Stephanie’s kidnapping. And since Brady is out at Basic Black, he needs something to do.
Holly may run back to Grandma Maggie Kiriakis (Suzanne Rogers) and move back into the Kiriakis mansion since she is fleeing her dorm room after Ari unfriended her in real life. She is fed up with Holly.
So, we’ll see if Tate gives her those drugged supplements, no questions asked. You know, she could OD on the psychiatric meds or just come completely emotionally unglued and have a nervous breakdown.
Days of our Lives Spoilers: Shawn & Jada Couple Up
Shawn and Jada are going to do some bonding as he recovers. And a Days social media post confirmed they’re a couple again soon. So that means a split with her and Theo coming with the question of who does the splitting. But does Belle still have feelings for her ex-husband that may crop up now that Shawn was shot?
We’ll find out if Owen’s going to make it to trial or if Rolf’s going to find a way to silence him permanently. We know that Owen is not sticking around, so that means he is disposable. Julie Williams (Susan Seaforth Hayes) is glad that Jeremy’s in the clear and he decided to stick around Salem for a while longer.
And I also wonder if Chanel Dupree (Raven Bowens) is going to insist that Johnny DiMera (Carson Boatman) take a step back from EJ now that he’s been sort of implicated in Stephanie’s kidnapping when she was softening on that point.
Entertainment
Lauren London Stuns In New Photos From Oscars Gold Party
Lauren London stuns in new photos from the 2026 Oscars Gold Party.
RELATED: So Sweet! Lauren London Gets Gassed UP By Son Kross For Her Youthful Look At Age 41 (PHOTO)
Lauren London Stuns In New Photos From 2026 Oscars Gold Party
Earlier this week, London took to Instagram to share a carousel with her more than 10 million followers. Furthermore, the initial photos featured a tagline which read, “The GOLD PARTY 2026.” For those unfamiliar, the party is an annual event thrown by Jay-Z and Beyoncé as one of the after-parties for the Oscars, per PEOPLE.
In the flicks, London donned an updo, gold hoop earrings, and matching jewelry, and a black flowy gown with a cut-out portion in the mid-section.
Social Media Reacts
Social media users remarked on Lauren London’s Gold Party look in TSR’s comment section.
Instagram user @laurenlondonfanpage.84 wrote, “Been that girl since her ATL days…”
While Instagram user @sexiestpossible added, “Lil miss beeen fiiine her whole life…”
Instagram user @malaikarashida_ wrote, “Gorgeous”
While Instagram user @teasearcher.r added, “Stunning…”
Instagram user @jesgotyou wrote, “She’s so beautiful…”
While Instagram user @__kennnw added, “Always was and will forever be gorgeous”
Instagram user @butterscotch_cream wrote, “She has and will always be beautiful…”
While Instagram user @attractivebeing added, “The beauty is effortless, just like it should be! 🤌🏽”
Instagram user @vababy75 wrote, “she’s been hottttt foreverrrrr…”
While Instagram user @breezzy_94 added, “Love the way she dresses … speaks volumes effortlessly… “
Lauren London Also Served In Photos From The 2025 Party
As The Shade Room previously reported, Lauren London also appeared at the 2025 Oscars Gold Party. Furthermore, at the time, she donned a metallic strapless gown.
“Kam and Kross Momma was outside again Gold Party ,” she wrote in the caption of the carousel she shared at the time.
RELATED: Been That Girl! Lauren London Stuns In New Photos At Oscars Gold Party
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Spicy Response To Ice Spice Has Fans Going Wild
Ari Fletcher had the girls gagging when she seemingly reunited with DreamDoll at Arrogant Tae’s birthday bash earlier this month — but now she has fans losing it after unlocking what looks like a new friendship with Ice Spice. Folks peeped Ice sliding into the comments of Ari’s latest pics with a question, but Ari’s response is what really has everybody begging to tag along.
RELATED: All Good? The Internet Pops OFF After Ari Fletcher & DreamDoll Seemingly Reunite At Arrogant Tae’s Birthday Bash (PHOTO)
Ari Fletcher Sparks FOMO After Responding To Ice Spice’s Comment
Roommates, it looks like Ari Fletcher and Ice Spice are slowly becoming the duo the internet didn’t know it needed. Ari dropped some new pics on Instagram, and fans spotted Ice Spice in the comments. No heart eyes, she was straight to the point, asking “wya” (where you at?). Ari didn’t miss the comment; she immediately replied and shared her location, writing, “@icespice home, your invited.” Right now, there’s no official confirmation that the girlies linked up, but fans are definitely lurking, refreshing their timelines, and patiently waiting for photos of them together to drop.
Fans Can’t Get Enough Of Ari & Ice’s New Friendship
Once The Shade Room reposted Ari and Ice Spice’s interaction, the comment section went wild. Some folks immediately said they wanted in on their hangout, while others gave Arrogant Tae props for apparently bringing the girls together.
Instagram user @imtayanamarie wrote, “I WANNA COME😋😭”
Instagram user @phlurtycurl wrote, “I’d like to third wheel 😂”
While Instagram user @breezylaboy wrote, “Need an update how it ended..”
Then, Instagram user @dominiquechinn wrote, “They built them a bond through Tae birthday. Tae brings all the baddies together. Love it 🥰”
Another Instagram user @princess_naibell wrote, “Can I just sit in the corner I won’t say nothing 😩😅”
Then another Instagram user @pootie_jb wrote, “Whole time Bag wrote the reply.”
While another Instagram user @elegant_sha wrote, “Looks like ice spice tryna make new friends love this for her.”
Finally, Instagram user @madiboyproductions wrote, “I just wanna be the fly on the wall.”
The Internet Is Curious To See If Ari & Ice’s Friendship Will Blossom
Fans had their eyes on Ari Fletcher and Ice Spice ever since videos from Tae’s birthday celebration hit the net. The clips showed the ladies turnt up and clearly having a good time. At one point, Ari even recorded Ice spitting some bars. There’s no word on whether Tae’s birthday was the first time they met, but either way, fans are waiting to see if their friendship blossoms.
@hiphopsnippetss ❤️#fyp #hiphop #icespice #arifletcher ♬ original sound – HipHopSnippetss
RELATED: What’s Tea? Ice Spice Has Fans Speculating That Michael Porter Jr. Is The Mystery Man In Her Viral TikTok Video (WATCH)
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Neil Sedaka's cause of death revealed
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Sedaka died at 86 on Feb. 27.
Entertainment
Marissa Springer Spills On Dana Tran, $25K Spree
Roommates, things are getting spicy in the Desmond Scott universe as Marissa Springer is spilling details about their previous involvement. From the high-end shopping spree to allegedly seeing Dana Tran blow up his phone, Springer put it ALL out there. For context, Marissa was first linked to the estranged husband of mega-influencer Kristy Scott in January after a video showed them kissing in a bar.
RELATED: Rodeo Romance? Report Alleges Desmond Scott Is Now Dating Mother Of Diddy’s Youngest Child (VIDEOS)
Marissa Springer Speaks
In a Wednesday interview with TMZ’s Charlie Neff, Marissa revealed that the day after their steamy make-out session, Desmond Scott allegedly handed her his credit card with a spending limit of $25,000. She broke down exactly what she bought—including YSL and Gucci bags—though she spent only around $10K of her full limit. While it all felt thrilling in the moment, hindsight has her wondering if the spree was more hush money than generosity. After all, Desmond didn’t even attend the shopping spree in person, and it all happened amid his very public split from Kristy Scott.
Furthermore, Marissa revealed that she and Desmond Scott last spoke about a month ago, agreeing to keep things “cordial.” She added there were never any plans to turn their fling into a relationship, especially with everything he’s going through right now. When asked about Desmond now allegedly dating Dana Tran, Marissa admitted she was “surprised.” She alleges she saw Dana’s name pop up on his phone during their time together, but he “never answered the calls” while they were together.
When pressed if she had anything to say to him, she concluded with a pointed warning: “Diddy’s out soon, so be careful.” At one point, she credited him for being an “amazing cook” but didn’t share when she had his food.
Folks Lit The Comments Up
Fans did not waste a second before storming TMZ’s Instagram comments, lighting it UP with reactions. Some were shading Desmond Scott for staying quiet, while others wondered if Marissa was just trying to ride the fame wave. Still, plenty of followers weren’t sweating it, pointing out that Desmond has the money and, honestly, he was already splitting from his wife—so what’s the tea really?
One Instagram user @sindylove89_ added, “Desmond not about to entertain this‼️”
This Instagram user @kaymccabetv said, “*sigh* Wish he would’ve met me…“
And, Instagram user @__sammibebe_ added, “‘Diddys out soon so be careful’ SAYS IT ALL . keep it safe Playaaa playaaa 😂😅”
Meanwhile, Instagram user @val_calv26 commented, “‘Out of character for him’ yeah cause she really ‘knows him’ 😂”
While Instagram user @thegrlboss_ shared, “This girl trying to ride that wave lmao“
Lastly, Instagram user @kia_gina wrote, “He got it, I see no issue lol“
Marissa’s Birthday Gifts Have Fans Asking Questions
Roommates, let’s talk about those gifts, because Marissa Springer just turned 24 and the haul she flexed on Instagram has people asking questions. Back in January, Marissa dropped a reel captioned, “What I got for my 24th birthday,” showing off a straight-up luxury lineup: iced-out earrings and necklace, a MacBook Air, a gold YSL bag, a mini Gucci bag, a YSL vanity, perfumes, makeup sets, two bags of Alo gear… and honestly, it looked like a whole department store showed up in her room.
Of course, fans immediately started wondering: were all these gifts birthday presents… or part of that alleged “shopping spree” Desmond reportedly handed her his credit card for? Let’s not forget, this all went down just weeks after Kristy Scott filed for divorce following an 11-year marriage, citing “adultery.”
RELATED: Who Cashed Out? Marissa Springer’s Latest Post Has Some Social Media Users Asking About Desmond Scott (WATCH)
What Do You Think Roomies?
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