The mid-1990s were a golden age of space opera. Two of the best shows of this genre were Star Trek’s Deep Space Nine and the independent series, Babylon 5. Both shows centered on a space station with all the drama, diplomacy, and war of such a setting. The conflicts of both shows are compounded by the existential horror of knowing there are forces at play that are larger and incomprehensible than the “human” mind can process.
We are introduced to both settings following major conflicts, and the recovery that comes after is often dark and filled with its own dread. Both series confront the harsh realities of war and occupation. The depth of the stories expressed is what makes these two shows stand out above the rest. Both ask us questions on guilt, innocence, and the price of survival.
The Name Of The Place Is Babylon 5
Babylon 5begins in the aftermath of the Earth-Minbari War with an unsteady peace on the titular neutral-zone station. The Narn Homeworld was recently liberated from the Centauri Republic. Other minor powers are shown wanting a voice in station politics and to stop any wars. As the series progresses, the stakes are continually raised, with much of it framed by the Narn-Centauri conflict reigniting.
Overarching the politics of these various alien races are the machinations of the galaxy’s eldest races and the games they play. The Vorlon Empire has existed for millions of years and wanted to bring order to a chaotic galaxy. Resisting them is an even older species: the boogeymen of the series, the Shadows, with ships as black as the void of space. It is considered an ill omen to see even a shadow of their vessels. This ancient species believed that evolution began through chaos and conflict. Believing in the power of flesh and bioengineering, their ships were alive.
From the start of the series, audiences can feel the depth of lore. The ideologies of the Vorlon and the Shadow feel like universal truths. In Babylon 5’s clever cyclical storytelling, the young replace the old. Conflict will always happen. Order will always stand against disorder as the interests of the various alien species collide.
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Come To Quark’s, Quark’s Is Fun
Meanwhile, at the start of Deep Space Nine, the Federation has taken over the former Cardassian station, Terok Nor, now known by the titular Starfleet designation. The station becomes the hub of new exploration when a wormhole to the Gamma Quadrant is discovered nearby.
Early seasons build on the recovery of Bajor and continued issues with the Cardassian Union. Meanwhile, the plot slowly introduces the Dominion threat, first through the Vorta and later through their Jem’Hadar shock troops. Eventually, it becomes a fully blown war, taking up the later seasons of “DS9.”
The story of Deep Space Nine is not typical of many shows set in the Star Trek setting. It has a long, continuously evolving plot despite having individual episodes like any other Star Trek show. Characters experience true devastating loss, with episodes showing lists of lost vessels with crew either confirmed killed or missing. It cast the long, dark shadow of war across the remaining seasons of the show, raising questions about morality and ethics in the face of an unrelenting enemy and the lines they are willing to cross to ensure victory.
Parallel’s Beween DS9 And B5
There are many similarities between these two series: themes, settings, and conflicts, starting with the Earth-Minbari War and the Cardassian withdrawal of Bajor. Simmering tensions brewing between groups leads to active war in both series. Even the elder alien races are comparable: the Vorlons and the Shadows in the universe of Babylon 5 mirror DS9’s Dominion, led by the shapeshifting Changelings who view solids as bringing chaos and disorder.
Another parallel between the two shows is that we, as fans, are treated to some of the best dramatic acting in all of science fiction. Scenes between the Narn ambassador G’Kar and the Centauri ambassador Londo Mollari on Babylon 5 reveal a history that predates what we are initially shown, as seen in their emotion and pain over the love for their people and their home worlds. It mirrors the ongoing verbal duel between Captain Sisko and Gul Dukat as they debate their roles in history, how they will be remembered, and the motivations of their actions.
Babylon 5 Journeys Into Darkness Deep Space Nine Avoids
Perhaps the biggest difference between the two shows was the tone. Babylon 5 showed us a darker, more dystopian future. Despite the darkness, sorrow, and loss during Deep Space Nine, the characters remained Starfleet. They still acted nobly even when an easier path existed but crossed moral or ethical lines. Babylon 5 showed us more clearly the flaws, the inhumanities, and failures in its main characters.
The similarities between the shows eventually led to a lawsuit, but the creator of Babylon 5 ultimately decided not to pursue it so that both shows could succeed. We should be thankful that, as fans, we got to experience a quality of programming that is lacking in current productions.
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All that we have been lectured on, with modern norms pushed into places where they really don’t fit, like questions on race, colonization, and violence: these were all handled on two 1990s space stations with nuance lacking in modern science fiction. Fans of one will vastly enjoy the other, and both series are the real inclusive utopias today’s programming only wishes it could aspire to.
Check them out where you can: Deep Space Nine is part of Paramount Plus’s Star Trek collection, and Babylon 5 just got absorbed by YouTube.
Star Trek is a franchise that has always been known for its colorful villains: from the Klingons to the Borg, episodes have always given us over-the-top bad guys like nothing the audience had ever seen before. However, the most iconic villains of a beloved spinoff were actually modeled after a type of real-life criminal that the audience is all too familiar with. In Star Trek: Voyager, the alien Kazons were originally modeled after the street gangs of Los Angeles, but it took over an entire season before one writer helped shape them into this very specific mold.
During the development of Voyager, producers Rick Berman, Michael Piller, and Jeri Taylor wanted to create a new kind of villain that nonetheless represented very contemporary concerns. As quoted in Captains’ Logs Supplemental – The Unauthorized Guide to the New Trek Voyages, Taylor said that “We felt with the Kazon we needed to address the tenor of our times and what…was happening in our cities and recognizing a source of danger and social unrest. We wanted to do that metaphorically.”
The Bloods, The Crips, And The Kazon
Piller (who almost singlehandedly transformed Star Trek: The Next Generation into must-see TV) liked the idea of villains who embraced anarchy and might fight among themselves as much as they fight with Captain Janeway. He and the other producers retained the LA gang metaphor, internally comparing the differing Kazon factions to the Bloods and the Crips. They were all in on these new bad guys, which is why the Voyager premiere episode and its first season presented various Kazon factions as an ongoing concern in our crew’s quest to navigate the Delta Quadrant and eventually make their way home.
Unfortunately, audiences kind of hated the Kazon in Season 1, and Michael Piller came to believe that the writers had failed to turn these aliens into something truly unique. After Ken Biller wrote an initial draft of the Season 2 episode “Initiations,” Piller called him and (as reported originally by Cinefantastique) expressed his concern that the audience saw the Kazon as “warmed over Klingons.” In order to get these villains back to their roots, Piller gave Biller a pretty wild homework assignment: to go talk to actual gang members and report on “what you find out from the street.”
Biller did not take this frankly dangerous advice, but he did go buy a copy of Monster: The Autobiography of an L.A. Gang Member, written (inside a jail cell, no less) by Sanyika “Monster” Shakur. Insights from the book helped the writer create a better Star Trek: Voyager episode, and Piller was quite pleased with the final draft of “Initiations.” But what pleased him even more was that Biller went on to go above and beyond the call of duty in order to breathe new life into the Kazons.
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The Secret To Building A Better Villain
You see, Biller wrote a kind of mini-Kazon Bible that outlined their customs, history, and other major sociological factoids. This proved to be invaluable because Star Trek: Voyager had already planned to devote its second season to the Kazon, essentially giving itself a second chance to make a good impression on the audience. Whenever the writers had to craft a Kazon-heavy episode (like “Alliances”), they relied on Biller’s bible, one which finally made the Kazon feel like something other than Temu Klingons.
To this day, the Kazon aren’t necessarily fans’ favorite villains, but they are arguably the most iconic Star Trek: Voyager bad guys. In a show that would come to be dominated (or should that be assimilated?) by Borg episodes, the Kazon remain an original creation who helped shape Voyager into one of Trek’s most beloved spinoffs. But that never would have happened if Michael Piller and Ken Biller hadn’t teamed up to do the impossible: get these angsty aliens back to their inexplicable gangbanger roots.
Bold and the Beautifulfinds there is a lot of fan outrage right now over many of the storylines on the CBS soap. From Sheila Carter‘s (Kimberlin Brown) marriage being blown up to Eric Forrester‘s (John McCook) design disaster—not the designs themselves, but the way it’s playing out—and several other storylines that are just unsatisfactory to a lot of viewers.
We’re going to talk about five things that B&B is royally messing up right now. Let’s get into what has fans so riled up right now.
Fan Backlash Over Deacon Sharpe and Sheila Carter’s Crumbling Marriage on Bold and the Beautiful
The first thing I want to discuss that has fans steamed is the attack on Deacon Sharpe (Sean Kanan) and Sheila’s marriage. What’s crazy to me is that Brad Bell has twisted this around and managed to make Sheila sympathetic when we all know she’s a killer. But they’ve done it.
Bold and the Beautiful viewers do not like that Deacon is trying to cheat on Sheila after they turned their lives around and built this happy marriage. Deacon’s put his life back together after his terribly criminal past. He’s made a smashing success of things, and I do think that Sheila deserves credit for some part of that.
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Fans enjoyed the chemistry between Deacon and Sheila. We’ve watched their love story and their journey, and somewhere along the way, you started rooting for them. Now, Bold is ripping that all apart and doing it in a really skeevy way.
Bold and the Beautiful Has Taylor Not Acting Like Herself
We’ve got Sheila about to lose her husband to Taylor Hayes (Rebecca Budig), a noted psychiatrist who’s violating her professional ethics to kiss and get hot and heavy with a married patient. The whole thing where Deacon said, “Oh, I’m not her patient anymore,” is not how that works.
For a psychiatrist like her who’s an MD, they are never allowed to date or have any sexual involvement with a patient. It just can’t happen professionally. It’s one thing for her to catfight Brooke Logan (Katherine Kelly Lang) to try and get Ridge Forrester (Thorsten Kaye), but for Taylor to risk her medical license is bad writing and very out of character.
I saw a fan comment recently that I felt was thought-provoking. The question they asked was: Does Deacon really want Taylor, or does Deacon just want out of his marriage to Sheila? He may see Taylor as a springboard or a catalyst to end things with his wife.
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At long last, Deacon might have realized being with Sheila isn’t sustainable for his long-term happiness. Deacon’s kids hate Sheila, as do his employees and his customers. Taylor is somebody his family would welcome and wouldn’t hurt this redeemed reputation he has built.
Deacon’s kids and Taylor are all pressing him on the Sheila issue, so Deacon might have latched onto Taylor for the wrong reasons. Plus, to me, they said “I love you” way too fast. It feels sloppy, forced, and off.
Ridge Forrester’s High-Handed Attitude and Disrespect Toward Eric on B&B
The second thing fans are really sick of cuts across a lot of messy storylines, and that’s Ridge’s ongoing crappy attitude. He has been so unlikable for so long and it’s not getting better. He kicked Eric out of Forrester then half-heartedly apologized, but he can’t un-ring the bell.
On the day Ridge sprung the surprise party and told Eric to retire from the company he founded, Eric was planning to show Ridge his designs. Ridge wouldn’t even look at his dad’s work. Fast forward to this week, Eric’s designs are sitting out, and Ridge finally looks at them and says, “Wow, Dad, your designs are great. Let’s put them into the couture line.”
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Eric would have given those designs to Forrester already if Ridge had given him the chance. Instead, Ridge acts like he’s in charge of everybody from his dad to his ex-wife Taylor and her dating life. Ridge acts like he runs Forrester all by himself, even though he’s got a co-CEO. He’s very self-important and high-handed.
B&B Fans Appalled at Ridges Behavior
Fan comments have been on fire about this. One said, “All of a sudden he misses Eric, but it’s Ridge who booted him out.” Another fan called out Ridge, saying his fondest memories are working with Eric, yet Ridge was the one who put Eric out the door.
There’s a lot of hypocrisy and shiftiness. The way Ridge has been trash-talking Katie Logan (Heather Tom) non-stop, saying she’ll fail, is just ugly. If she wants to start a business, why does Ridge care?
When she and Bill Spencer (Don Diamont) showed up to check on Eric, Ridge was at it again. Brooke said they were looking at Eric’s fabulous new designs, and Ridge said he would show them to Katie, but “she tends to take things that don’t belong to her.”
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That was Ridge hitting at her over the Logan trademark. Forrester Creations never once used that trademark, and you cannot have a trademark you don’t use. Carter Walton (Lawrence Saint-Victor) and Ridge screwed up and didn’t renew it anyway. She didn’t steal it; they dropped the ball. Bottom line: Ridge is irritating fans in every storyline.
Is Katie Logan’s New Fashion House Already Doomed to Fail on Bold?
The third big fail we’re seeing with fans is that it looks like Bold and the Beautiful is about to kill Katie’s new fashion house. Brad Bell promised this big rivalry, but it hasn’t manifested. It’s basically just been Ridge insulting Katie behind her back and Bill planning a PR blitz.
Eric promised to teach Ridge and Brooke a lesson about disrespecting their elders, but now Eric seems to want to back out of Logan. Unless something changes, Katie’s fashion house seems doomed.
If we’re lucky, Katie will hire Deke Sharpe (Harrison Cone) and he and Eric will finish the line. Then once Katie launches Logan, Eric can retire on his own terms. But if Brad Bell does his usual nonsense, Logan is going to fizzle or wind up under the Forrester umbrella. Fans see this as a waste of time and attention if nothing comes of it.
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Bold and the Beautiful: Sheila Carter – Eric Forrester
B&B’s Generational Gap: Where is the Middle Generation?
The next gripe fans have is the characters that Bold is choosing to focus on daily. We get lots of episodes for the youngest generation. We’ve got “dumpster diving” Dylan (Sydney Bullock), “waffling” Will Spencer (Crew Morrow), and “inconsistent” Electra Forrester (Laneya Grace).
We’re also getting time with the oldest generation—Eric, Bill, Ridge, Donna Logan (Jennifer Gareis), Katie, and Brooke. But where’s the middle generation? Where are the characters in their 30s? They are supposed to be the next generation after Eric and Ridge.
Liam Spencer (Scott Clifton) and Hope Logan (Annika Noelle) are rarely seen. When they are, there’s no action, no sizzle, and no romance. We have Steffy Forrester (Jacqueline MacInnes Wood) and Finn (Tanner Novlan) having occasional sofa sex, but Finn is not around much.
The characters who should have inherited the front-burner storylines—Hope, Steffy, Liam, Thomas Forrester (Matthew Atkinson), Zende Forrester Dominguez (Delon de Metz), and Ivy Forrester (Ashleigh Brewer)—are rarely on screen.
Lack of Chemistry and Boring Pairings Killing the Drama
The last complaint I’m seeing a lot on soap social media is about the weird pairings and lack of chemistry. Fans are saying that Daphne Rose (Murielle Hilaire) and Carter don’t have the sizzle. They’re newlyweds; they should be on fire. Plus, people are annoyed that Daphne’s lie got buried and Carter never found out her true agenda.
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Hope and Liam, as I said, have about zero chemistry right now. They don’t even hug or kiss. It’s like they’re friends, not newlyweds. A lot of fans think Deacon and Taylor have no real chemistry and that Deacon had more sizzle with Sheila, even if the “daddy” thing was pretty cringe.
Electra and Will are lackluster for a lot of fans. Many people think Dylan has better chemistry with Will, and RJ Forrester (Brayan Nicoletti) was giving off “creeper” vibes with Electra. Thomas seems to be gone for good, but love him or hate him, Hope and Thomas had sizzle.
Katie and Bill have barely kissed since they reunited. Ridge and Brooke’s chemistry is sweet, but it’s not sizzling. Plots are falling flat because we’ve been promised big drama and big chemistry, and then everything just fizzles. Drop your comments on what plots are bothering you.
Before the brand deals, the packed inbox, and the millions in revenue, Rebecca McLeod was grinding with no co-sign and no shortcuts.
When she first stepped into the influencer world, it was cold. Established creators would not collaborate. Messages went unanswered. Networking attempts led nowhere. No reposts. No tags. No “let’s work together.” She was reaching out and getting silence back.
For a lot of people, that is where the story ends. For Rebecca, it was the beginning.
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Left On Read And Locked Out
Rebecca McLeod
Instead of chasing approval, she focused on what she could control. She studied the platforms. She figured out what worked and what flopped. She committed to consistency when growth felt slow and engagement felt unpredictable.
While others leaned on inner circles and group alliances, Rebecca leaned on discipline and self-belief. Week after week, she showed up. She refined her content. She sharpened her brand. She invested in herself when no one else would.
Eventually, the numbers started moving. Then they started climbing.
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From Solo Hustle To Serious Money
Rebecca McLeod
Fast forward to today and Rebecca McLeod is one of Australia’s most recognizable digital creators. She runs multiple successful businesses. She generates millions in annual revenue. Her following continues to expand across platforms, and her influence now stretches well beyond social media posts.
The industry that once overlooked her is now paying attention.
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Collaboration requests land daily. Brands want meetings. Creators want advice. Influencers who once would not respond are now reaching out to connect. The power dynamic has shifted, and Rebecca is firmly in control of her lane.
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Opening Doors Instead Of Closing Them
Rebecca McLeod
What makes Rebecca stand out is not just the success. It is how she handles it.
Rather than mirroring the exclusivity she once experienced, she chose a different route. Every single week, Rebecca and her team collaborate with three up-and-coming girls. They offer real guidance, real exposure, and practical support. Not as a publicity move, but as a consistent part of her business model.
She remembers what it felt like to build from zero. She remembers sending messages that went nowhere. So now, if she can help someone gain traction faster or avoid the early missteps, she does.
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People close to her say the early rejection shaped her leadership style. It made her independent, but it also made her empathetic. Success did not harden her. It clarified her values.
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The Tables Have Turned
Rebecca McLeod
There is undeniable irony in the fact that some of the same names who once ignored her are now asking for guidance. Rebecca does not dwell on it. She keeps building.
Her rise is not just a glow-up story. It is a case study in resilience. No shortcuts. No handouts. Just consistency, strategy, and a refusal to let silence define her.
Rebecca McLeod did not wait to be invited in. She created her own lane, scaled it, and made sure there is room for others to run beside her.
Here’s the first look at former Prince Andrew leaving a police station in England … and he’s in the back seat of a Range Rover.
Andrew was arrested earlier today on suspicion of sending confidential British trade reports to Jeffrey Epstein back in 2010 … allegedly revealed in Epstein Files documents amid his longtime friendship with the convicted pedophile.
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It looks like Andrew is trying to lie down in the back seat of the Range Rover to avoid being seen by a horde of press that was camped out at the police station … but a photog got the money shot.
As we reported … the disgraced ex-royal — who now goes by his name Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor — was arrested by Thames Valley Police officers on suspicion of misconduct in public office at his home today, on his 66th birthday. The arrest comes a couple weeks after an anti-royal organization asked authorities to investigate whether Andrew shared confidential British financial info in 2010 with Epstein.
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Andrew was Britain’s special envoy for international trade at the time, a position he held for 10 years.
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As you know, Andrew had close ties with Epstein for years while the notorious pedophile was allegedly sexually abusing underage girls. Andrew’s name is all over the Epstein Files, which were released by the U.S. Department of Justice after President Trump signed a bill requiring them to be released to the public.
Neither King Charles III nor Buckingham Palace , before cops swooped in and arrested Andrew … and in a statement, King Charles said, “The law must take its course.”
Days of Our Livessaw Philip Kiriakis (John-Paul Lavoisier) telling Gabi Hernandez (Cherie Jimenez) on their Miami trip that Titan is in big, big financial trouble. This is the same trip where she opened up about Stefan DiMera (Brandon Barash) being kidnapped by Vivian Alamain (Louise Sorel) and that he died still wanting to be with Gabi.
So, the Stefan news is awful, no doubt, but it might trigger a life-changing end result for Gabi that might also turn out to be life-changing. I wonder if Gabi is going to help Philip out of the jam that he is in. Let’s get into it.
Days of Our Lives: Gabi Hernandez’s Secret Corporate Espionage Against Titan Industries
Gabi’s been hiding a huge secret from Philip for many months. Last year, Gabi had been scheming with Tony DiMera (Thaao Penghlis) to seize control of Titan Industries, which had taken over DiMera Enterprises. As part of their plan, Gabi snuck a pen with a listening device in it into Xander Cook (Paul Telfer) and Philip’s CEO office.
That gave Tony and Gabi power because they found out Philips’ psycho surrogate mom Vivian Alamain had forged the letter from Victor Kiriakis (John Aniston) that led to Philip getting half the company. Gabi and Tony found out that Xander found out about it and beat Philip nearly to death.
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The forgery info and the assault info they got illegally was what allowed Tony to demand that Xander and Philip hand over DiMera Enterprises, which they had scored in a corporate takeover. They got some money out of the transaction, but in the end, it left Titan in a very precarious position, one that not even one smutty book could dig them out of.
Tony DiMera’s Betrayal and Theo Carver’s Growing Obsession on DOOL
Then if you remember, Tony double-crossed Gabi because Tony had promised Gabi the CEO position at DiMera Enterprises if she helped him get the dirt on Xander and Philip. But Tony never ever planned to honor that deal. Instead, he brought in his nephew Theo Carver (Cameron Johnson) to take over as CEO of DiMera Enterprises. Then, Tony up and left town and, of course, then was kidnapped. Now, Theo knows all about Gabi’s treachery. Theo knows that Gabi planted the bug.
He also knows that if Philip found out about it, he would probably break up with Gabi in an instant. And then this week, Theo is daydreaming about being with Gabi and kissing Gabi and sweeping her off her pretty little feet. Poor Jada Hunter (Elia Cantu) had no idea that’s where Theo’s head was when she caught him drifting off into thought when they were out at the pub on their Valentine’s Day date. Jada thought Theo was just distracted because their last dinner date at the pub didn’t happen because Peter Blake (Dan Gauthier) kidnapped Theo.
Philip Kiriakis Confesses the Truth About Titan’s Looming Bankruptcy on Days of Our Lives
But back over to Gabi. So, she’s off in Miami enjoying a little Heart’s Day holiday trip with Philip. And he’s been super understanding about Gabi’s melancholy over losing Stefan and finding out the ugly truth of it all.
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And that’s when Philip made his own confession that could prompt Gabi to try and make amends. Of course, Philip wouldn’t know that she’s making amends because Gabi’s still lying to him about planting the bug.
But you can see that she’s torn and she’s thinking about telling Philip the truth about spying on him and Xander. She almost confessed, but then Gabi saw that Philip was breaking out all over because he’d gotten stung by a jellyfish.
So instead of apologizing, Gabi took a hot shower with him and then was rubbing hydrocortisone on him. Then, talk turned to them flying commercial to Miami instead of private. Philip confessed to Gabi the reason they didn’t take the company jet was finances. Philip can’t afford any business expenses like flying him and Gabi on the Titan private plane to Miami.
Gabi’s Guilt Over Victor Kiriakis’ Legacy and the Family Mansion on Days of Our Lives
And Philip also told Gabi that a big loan is coming due soon and his late father Victor’s mansion is the collateral for the loan. Titan’s been struggling since Xander and Philip had to split Titan and DiMera back apart. Gabi looked really worried when Philip was telling her this.
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Not only does Gabi care a lot for Philip, but she also feels totally guilty for screwing Philip over with these dirty corporate games. I mean, Gabi was double-crossed by Tony, but that’s not Philip’s fault or Xander’s. Right now, things are great for Gabi. She got Gabi Chic away from Titan and DiMera. And she’s happy successfully running her business.
Meanwhile, Philip’s worried he’s going to lose his father’s legacy, the company. And the family home. And Gabi’s actions led to that. That’s a much worse double-cross than what Tony did to Gabi. And to make it worse, Philip is head over heels for the woman who betrayed him.
Days of Our Lives: Philip Kiriakis – Gabi Hernandez
Days of Our Lives: Gabi Hernandez Set to Become an Extremely Wealthy DiMera Widow
So this week, it seems like Rafe Hernandez (Galen Gering) is going to get confirmation from the FBI’s handwriting expert that Stefan’s signature on the divorce docs was forged. And that means Gabi is not his ex-wife, she is Stefan’s widow.
And this week, EJ DiMera (Dan Feuerriegel) was telling Cat Greene (AnnaLynne McCord) that Stefano DiMera’s (Joseph Mascolo) last will and testament is going to be read very soon. So, in the next couple of weeks, we could see Gabi go from successful businesswoman to that plus being an extremely wealthy widow worth a whole bunch more zeros.
I’m sure EJ and the other DiMeras might hate it, but Gabi could rake in a big chunk of Stefano’s estate. Even better, it would absolutely enrage Vivian. But I doubt Gabi can sit on that pile of inherited cash while she watches Philip lose everything, especially knowing that she played a role in it.
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Could a Titan Bailout Save Philip and Gabi’s Relationship?
So, we could see Gabi going to Philip and Xander. She might offer an investment to help Titan out, or Gabi might do one better and just go buy their loan from the bank and then give them more favorable terms.
She could do that actually, maybe even anonymously. But if she came in and offered an investment or some assistance, she could tell Philip that, you know, I’ll bail you out if you give me some equity in Titan.
That way it could seem like a business reason for her making this investment and not her doing it out of guilt if Gabi is not going to come clean to Philip.
Will Theo Leak the Truth and Destroy Gabi’s Future on DOOL?
But there could be a hitch in Gabi’s plan to help Philip if Theo keeps daydreaming about Gabi and decides he has to have her. Right now, Theo seems to be enjoying his time with Jada and the feeling seems to be mutual.
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But we know from confirmed Days of Our Lives spoilers that Shawn-Douglas Brady (Brandon Beemer) is with Jada soon, all coupled up. So, she might dump Theo over his fixation on Gabi if she figures it out. I mean, Jada is a detective. And Theo may turn around and spill the tea on Gabi’s corporate espionage for a very personal reason to break up her and Philip.
Theo might want to keep his name out of it so Gabi doesn’t find out that he blabbed, but he could leak the info indirectly to Philip or Xander. He could send it as an anonymous tip, tell Xander if he promises to keep it private. And then reveal that Gabi planted a bug in their office. Things may get pretty messy if Theo decides to play dirty to try and break up Gabi and Philip.
And in the meantime, wait to see if Gabi helps Philip when and if she gets that big pile of DiMera dollars because she is a DiMera widow. The big question from there is if Gabi bails out Titan, but Philip then finds out that Gabi spied on him and Xander, will Philip stick with her? Will he forgive Gabi or will he walk away from her for her sneaking and lying?
The action genre can be one of the most highly technical. From the stuntwork, explosive effects, and the endless amounts of choreography and coordination that go into making these movies, it makes it all the more impressive when they do it well. The best action movies are all technical masterpieces on one level or another, but some of them do it so well that they should legitimately be studied.
These are action movies that astound with sequences that seem too wild to be true, with such technical wizardry and precision filmmaking that they’ve often proven impossible to replicate. Every good action movie is technically impressive, but the great ones raise the bar. These ten are absolute masterclasses of action, elevating the genre and pushing it to its limits.
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‘Police Story’ (1985)
Jackie Chan hanging off a bus traveling at high speeds in Police Story (1985)Image via Golden Harvest
If you’re looking for premiere stunt work and fight choreography, there are few equals to Jackie Chan. The international action star has a filmography bursting with incredible action classics that have continually put Hollywood to shame. Wheels on Meals, Drunken Master II and Project A all offer incredible fight scenes and death-defying stunts, but if there’s one Chan film that is a true technical masterclass, it’s the original Police Story.
This action-comedy classic was made by Chan after his disappointment working on The Protector, an American co-production that failed to break him out as an international star. Beginning to end, Police Story features some of the most elaborate action sequences Chan ever accomplished, starting with a shantytown demolition derby and culminating in a mall-set finale that miraculously didn’t get everyone killed. For his part, Chan suffered second-degree burns and a dislocated pelvis from sliding down a two-story pole as part of this climax.
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‘Terminator 2: Judgment Day’ (1991)
The liquid metal face of the T-1000 (Robert Patrick) in ‘Terminator 2: Judgment Day’Image via Tri-Star Pictures
The Terminatoris a grungy, gritty sci-fi action slasher that fueled James Cameron‘s career. It has a lot to love about it, but it was merely an apéritif to the four-course action feast that Cameron cooked up for the blockbuster sequel. The director was able to supersize every aspect of his time-travel cyborg adventure, adding massive action sequences and a dynamic new villain, accomplished with groundbreaking visual effects.
The T-1000, the liquid metal death machine that was sent in the sequel to kill John Connor, had originally been intended for the first film, but Cameron wisely understood he didn’t have the visual effects capability to accomplish the character in 1984. For Terminator 2: Judgment Day, Cameron reteamed with Industrial Light & Magic, the effects house that had created the iconic water tendril for The Abyss. Combined with incredible practical effects by Stan Winston, the resulting villain was a landmark for photo-realistic CGI, much of which holds up remarkably well over thirty years later.
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‘Hard Boiled’ (1992)
Chow Yun-fat aiming two guns in Hard Boiled.Image via Golden Princess Film Production
While Cameron and crew were breaking new ground for visual effects, over in Hong Kong, John Woo was crafting his action magnum opus without any help from computers. Hard Boiledfeatures a cops versus criminals plotline on which Woo and his stunt team are able to hang three of the most breathtaking action sequences ever captured on film. It was the director’s final film before making his way to Hollywood, and it remains his greatest action masterpiece that few films have come close to touching on a technical level.
The film opens with a bullet ballet in a tea house, as Chow Yun-fat dual-wields his way into the action hero hall of fame. From there, it moves to an explosive gunfight in a warehouse that must have depleted the squib supply of Hong Kong. The extended climax set in a hospital is where Hard Boiled truly schools every action filmmaker to come before, with floor after floor of intense action perfection. The most iconic moment is an extended long take of action that follows Chow and Tony Leung for three minutes straight of gunfighting on two floors.
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‘Heat’ (1995)
Al Pacino holding a rifle in ‘Heat’Image via Warner Bros. Pictures
Michael Mann‘smuscular, sprawling crime saga Heatisn’t nearly as action-packed as the other films on this list, but pound for pound of pure adrenaline-fueled gunplay, it is every bit their equal. The film begins and ends with expertly choreographed action scenes, but it’s the broad daylight armed robbery turned downtown gunfight that is its action centerpiece. It makes Heatthe apex of action-oriented heist films, and no other film has come close to reaching its heights.
Shot in the glass canyon of downtown Los Angeles, the shootout sees Robert De Niro‘selite team of thieves trading bullets with Al Pacino‘spolice unit. The actors all trained for months with former SAS soldier Andy McNabto become proficient in their weapons handling, and from the tight editing to the use of the real sounds of the gunshots echoing off the buildings, the sequence is a top-to-bottom assault on the senses. Mann is known for being a meticulous director, and the painstaking effort taken by him, his crew and the actors is clearly evident in one of the greatest gunfights ever filmed.
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‘The Matrix’ (1999)
Carrie Anne Moss as Trinity fighting with a police officer in The MatrixImage via Warner Bros. Pictures
The influences on The Matrixare all clearly evident. From the man versus machines plotline, to the slow-motion gun-fu, to the gravity-defying fights pulled from numerous martial arts classics. Even the iconic bullet-time effect of the film had its origins in commercials and music videos before the Wachowskis ever utilized it for their film. No matter how many giants the filmmakers were standing on the shoulders of for their action classic, it doesn’t detract from how perfectly implemented every single element is in the final film. The Matrix is far more than just the sum of its parts.
To understand the true ingenuity behind The Matrix, you only need to look at any of the myriad imitators that were released in the wake of its success, including its sequels. While many of those films are technically impressive in their own right and had far larger budgets and access to more resources, they all feel like pale imitations. The low-tech solution to accomplish the iconic slow-motion action using a complex rig of still cameras gives the effects in The Matrix a timeless quality that no amount of technological advancements has seemingly been able to improve upon.
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‘Children of Men’ (2006)
Theo and Kee walk amongst soldiers in ‘Children of Men.’Image via Universal Pictures
Alfonso Cuaron‘sdystopic thriller Children of Menfeatures action sequences in the same way that Saving Private Ryandoes. It’s meant to be harrowing and chaotic, all while still getting your pulse to race and your knuckles to whiten. In depictinga near-future police state where women have become infertile, the action is designed to be as immersive as possible, through incredible cinematography mixed with seamless digital work.
The most famous sequence in Children of Men is the car assault, accomplished with a complex camera rig that captures several long shots that were then stitched together in post-production to produce an action sequence that never takes a breath. There are several extended shots throughout the film that put audiences into the thick of the action, all of them captured with such breathtaking precision by cinematographer Emmanuel Lubezki. The action in Children of Men will leave you breathless.
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‘Redline’ (2009)
Cars racing at high speed during the anime film Redline.Image via Tohokushinsha Film
There are many technically impressive animated action movies, from classics like Akirato the more recent Predator: Killer of Killers. If there’s one film that comes off the line at full tilt and never lets its foot off the gas, it’s the nitro-boosted sci-fi racing film Redline. Produced by animation studio Madhouse, who were also responsible for other animated actioners like Wicked City and Vampire Hunter D: Bloodlust, the film was the directorial debut for Takeshi Koike, which makes it all the more of an impressive endeavor.
The film had a prolonged production period of seven years, due to the fact that it was all hand-animated and features over 1,000 individual frames. The result of that time-consuming work and dedication is animation that’s smooth as silk and some of the most exhilarating action ever produced in any medium. While Redline wasn’t an immediate success, it has gained a well-deserved cult following and remains one of the purest examples of handmade craftsmanship of the 21st century.
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‘Inception’ (2010)
Image via Warner Bros.
Few directors are as dedicated to, or have the creative power to demand, practical effects as Christopher Nolan. Whether it’s flipping an 18-wheeler in The Dark Knightor crashing a full-size 747 airplane in Tenet, the director emphasizes real stunts and effects over CGI whenever possible. Even when he does utilize CGI, it’s of the highest fidelity and blends beautifully with the more tangible effects work. Nowhere is this marriage more technically proficient than in his mind-bending action heist film Inception.
Setting the film within the architecture of the mind allowed Nolan and his team to go bigger and bolder with action setpieces than ever before. The most notable sequences feature a train barreling through traffic and a gravity-defying fight sequence. The latter involved the use of a massive rotating set that allowed the actors and stunt performers to fight across the walls and ceilings. Inception won a multitude of awards for its visual effects, sound design and cinematography, and it remains a high bar for Nolan as an action filmmaker.
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‘The Raid 2’ (2014)
A young man wielding two sticks while covered in mudImage via Sony Pictures Classics
The Indonesian action masterpiece The Raidbrought a fresh level of brutality to the action genre in the 2010s that inspired a decade-plus of ultraviolent cinema. It’s a brutalizing film filled with outstanding fight choreography, frenetic camerawork and bruising stunt work, and its sequel outdoes it in every single respect. The Raid 2is an epic action film filled with muddy melees, bloody fight scenes, and a breakneck car chase.
Following the first film’s protagonist, played by martial arts star Iko Uwais, as he goes undercover in the underworld of Jakarta, the sequel trades the first film’s contained setting for sprawling set pieces. It begins with an epic prison brawl and only gets crazier from there. It’s a maximalist action movie that moves from one blood-soaked set piece to the next with an unrelenting pace. The Raid 2 is the best kind of sequel that elevates everything you loved about the first film to the extreme.
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‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ (2015)
Max, played by Tom Hardy, strapped to the front of a vehicle with mask on in Mad Max: Fury Road (2015).Image via Warner Bros. Pictures
While the rest of Hollywood was trying to play catch-up to the international action filmmakers that were ten steps ahead, George Miller went back to the drawing board to reinvent his classic action franchise for the 21st century. The original three Mad Maxfilms all offer unique evolutions to Miller’s motorhead action premise, but Mad Max: Fury Road supercharges it to a whole new level. Combining modern digital effects with old-school stunts, it’s an epic car chase across the desert that is as technically perfect as an action film can get.
Shot by legendary cinematographer John Seale, who came out of retirement to do the film, Fury Road has a vibrant color palette and utilizes center-framing as a means to keep the audience consistently oriented to the subject of each shot during the frenetic action. The editing is rapid-fire, and the frame rate ramps up and down throughout the entire runtime. Few action directors are ever in as complete control of the entire frame as Miller is here. The film has often been compared to the relentless energy of Looney Tunes, and Miller is the mad artist behind it.
The Bridgerton family with Luke Newton, Luke Thompson, Claudia Jessie, Phoebe Dynevor, and Ruth Gemmell.Image via Netflix
This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available.
Rom-com fans this is for you. Do you find yourself switching between the swoon-worthy Regency-era drama Bridgerton and one of the latest rom-coms to hit the market, People We Meet on Vacation? Now the two come together as the upcoming adaptation of Emily Henry‘s first novel, Beach Read, casts Bridgerton‘s Phoebe Dynevor. She’s set to play the lead, January Andrews in the adaptation of the novel set on Lake Michigan from 20th Century Studios. No cast has been announced for her love interest, Gun Everett. The logline for Beach Read is as follows:
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“A romance writer who no longer believes in love and a literary writer stuck in a rut engage in a summer-long challenge that may just upend everything they believe about happily ever afters.”
This is a developing story. Stay with Collider for the latest updates.
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Release Date
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January 9, 2026
Runtime
116 minutes
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Director
Brett Haley
Writers
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Yulin Kuang, Nunzio Randazzo, Amos Vernon
Producers
Wyck Godfrey, Marty Bowen, Isaac Klausner
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This article covers a developing story. Continue to check back with us as we will be adding more information as it becomes available.
Young and the Restless reveals hunky Detective James Burrow (Matt Cohen) officially staying in Genoa City, so that means he’s eventually going to need romance. He’s too hot to not give him a love interest.
I’m wondering which single lady is going to catch his eye, or will go after him because he caught their eye. We’re going to talk about who might be Burrow’s first love interest in Genoa City. We have an inkling of who it might be, and it would be a huge shocker for a really cool reason.
Matt Cohen Joins Young and the Restless
James Burrow was introduced to Young and the Restless fans in October of last year, but he was only seen sporadically as Burrow at first because Matt Cohen needed surgery on his ACL. He had to recover. He was in a wheelchair and then on crutches, and then he could walk around, but he couldn’t stand for very long.
They were having to rearrange things, and then we got lots more of Burrow once he healed and could stand for scenes. His storyline started heating up. Now he just helped Abby Newman (Melissa Ordway) and Devon Hamilton Winters (Bryton James) get their kid, Dominic Chancellor (Ethan Ray Clark), back, and he’s officially part of the Genoa City character canvas as the one and only cop the town seems to have.
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They’re not going to waste Matt Cohen’s pretty face and leave him single for very long. That pretty face needs another pretty face to kiss. And with Burrow settling into his new day job at the GCPD, there is nothing stopping him from looking for a date.
Young and the Restless: Detective James Burrow
Will Sharon Newman and Detective James Burrow Find Romance on Y&R?
One person to consider that might be paired with him is Sharon Newman (Sharon Case). I think Burrow impressed Sharon because he was really kind and very understanding to Mariah Copeland (Camryn Grimes) when she hit rock bottom when she got busted for kidnapping Dominic.
Despite the terrible crime, Burrow was very sensitive. So, Sharon’s appreciative, and she respects Burrow. They might become friendly soon. Plus, we know Matt Clark (Roger Howarth) is going to be back soon as a threat, and Sharon may need protecting.
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Burrow might save her and they have a little spark. I know some of you guys want to see Sharon with Nick Newman (Joshua Morrow), but I don’t think Josh Griffith wants it. Sharon and Nick are going nowhere fast, and they have been for so long.
It went from a slow burn for Sharon and Nick to a no burn. And Nick’s about to be addicted to fentanyl. That’s not very romantic or sexy. So Sharon might be so distraught over Mariah’s looming consequences, Nick spiraling into drugs, and Matt Clark being back.
Sharon may lean on Burrow. They end up becoming friends and then more. He would be somebody new and fresh for Sharon, and she needs a love interest honestly, and Nick’s not panning out.
Phyllis Summers Needs a Fresh Start with Genoa City’s Newest Cop
Sharon’s not the one I was referring to as the big shock. Neither is this next lady I want to talk about, which is Phyllis Summers (Michelle Stafford). Even though Cane Ashby (Billy Flynn) tells Phyllis this week he wants to continue the personal part of their relationship, even if she agrees, I don’t see them lasting that long because Cane still wants Lily Winters (Christel Khalil).
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Lily is back to Genoa City in just a few weeks. Phyllis needs somebody that might help get her on a better path in life. That is a perfect task for a very sexy detective like Burrow. Maybe Phyllis needs somebody that will firmly shut down her antics.
Burrow could be the person to finally get Phyllis to change her ways. I know, crazy, right? I think he could be a refreshing change of pace for Red. Daniel Romalotti (Michael Graziadei) and Summer Newman (Allison Lanier) might even ease up on their mom if she started making better life choices, starting with dating a decent guy.
Could Lily Winters Rub a New Romance in Cane’s Face on Young and the Restless?
Speaking of Cane and Lily, when she’s back in a few weeks, I don’t see her running right back into Cane’s arms. She dislikes him so much that she agreed to pretend to let Victor Newman (Eric Braeden) kidnap her. I don’t see Lily giving Cane a shot for a good long while, if ever, again.
Lily might be looking for a new romance that she can rub in Cane’s face, and getting with the very handsome Detective James Burrow could be just the ticket. I’m sure Lily would like a stand-up guy like him, who is about as different from Cane as you can be.
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Burrow also risked his life going undercover to try and take down Matt Clark in the fentanyl operations. He protects and serves. And Lily hasn’t had the best luck. She dated unfaithful Daniel, unreliable Billy Abbott (Jason Thompson), and now untrustworthy Cane was trying to get back with her. Lily might go for a handsome and ethical guy.
Is Audra Charles the Right Match for James Burrow?
Again, Lily is not the shocker either. So, another single lady that might be good for the new hunk in town is Audra Charles (Zuleyka Silver). She’s single and she’s drop-dead gorgeous, and she also needs a good man in her life. She’d like to have Nate Hastings (Sean Dominic) back, but he’s moved on with Victoria Newman (Amelia Heinle).
He still says he’s not sure he’s ready for a romance, but that’s the direction he’s headed. Meanwhile, Audra is still hot for Kyle Abbott (Michael Mealor). He is never going to fall for her, though. Maybe he might fall back in bed with her, but he’s never going to fall in love with her.
I’m not sure, though, given Audra’s past with the dead guy in LA. There’s a question of whether she would date Burrow since he’s a cop, but they would be a very pretty couple. I will say that. And who knows, Audra might have met Burrow in LA.
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Maybe they had a spark and then they revisit it now that both of them are in Genoa City. Burrow would be attracted to Audra. I think anybody would, but she does like to bend the rules sometimes, so I don’t know if Burrow would be a good fit for her.
Since she is single and ready to mingle, I had to mention her as a possibility for Burrow. Plus, I do think Audra is going to keep playing cat and mouse with Kyle. I don’t think those two are done yet. Far from it.
The Shocking Chemistry: Why Claire Newman and James Burrow Are the Perfect Pair on Young and the Restless
Now let’s talk about the potential shocking pair-up for them. The woman that Burrow might get with that would be really surprising is Claire Grace Newman (Hayley Erin). And here’s why. Over and above her being single, there’s a big reason.
We know Kyle still wants Claire and Holden Novak (Nathan Owens) does, too. But Claire already dumped Kyle and she is dumping Holden this week. Here’s why it would be a shock, a bit of a twist, if she got together with the cop.
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I can guarantee you right now that Claire and Burrow would have amazing chemistry as a couple. And here’s how I know. The two actors who play them, Hayley Erin and Matt Cohen, had great chemistry as a couple on another soap.
They were both on General Hospital, and they were a fan-favorite couple. Over on GH, he played Dr. Griffin Munro, who was a very sexy former priest turned doctor, and she played this character Kiki Jerome. At first, Griffin was dating Kiki’s mom, but then she was a villainess, so he moved on to Kiki.
We saw Hayley Erin and Matt Cohen as this on-screen couple, and they were amazing. They had this incredible chemistry, but then Hayley Erin’s character Kiki was murdered by this horrible serial killer that just happened to be dating her mom.
Matt Cohen’s character Griffin was absolutely devastated by her death. It was great work all around. People were so upset that she was killed off, but she was ready to leave General Hospital. For those fans of Young and the Restless who also watch General Hospital, you already know this is true.
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Putting Burrow with Claire would be an instant hit. I’m excited to see who the devilishly handsome detective winds up dating, and hopefully, Burrow finds romance soon. But my money is on wanting to see Claire with Burrow because I know how well those actors work together and they have got the sizzle that I think would be great for Y&R.
2024’s Relay taught me something very important about myself that I still don’t know how to process. If I were ever caught between an evil corporation that wanted to kill me for leaking damaging information, forcing me to contact a third-party agency to return missing documents in exchange for my silence, it wouldn’t take long before I’d be found dead in a garbage can somewhere. While I think I’m pretty smart when it comes to navigating adult life, I’m a visual learner, and I’m simply not built to follow elaborate instructions delivered through a burner phone without immediately messing up how I’m supposed to carry myself based on those instructions.
While I’m admittedly not bright enough to navigate a massive conspiracy that could kill millions of people through its coverup, Ash (Riz Ahmed) and Sarah Grant (Lily James) are up to the challenge, and they know they have to act fast. If it were me in either of their shoes, I’d try my best, but I’m telling you now I would mess something like this up so quickly that everybody would wonder why I was ever perceived as a threat in the first place.
A Reverse Whistle Blow
Relay’s conflict is complicated, but it’s easy to digest because its stakes are laid out with clarity from the start. We’re introduced to Sarah Grant, a former employee of Cybo Sementis Research Institutes. Sarah is in danger and knows she’s being tracked by company operatives Dawson (Sam Worthington), Rosetti (Willa Fitzgerald), Ryan (Jared Abrahamson), and Lee (Pun Bandhu).
She’s constantly looking over her shoulder because she knows the genetically modified strain of wheat their company synthesized has deadly consequences. Her concerns are brushed aside because the company is on the verge of a billion-dollar merger built around that very product. After stealing hundreds of pages of documents when they attempted to buy her silence, Sarah starts having second thoughts. She fears she won’t live long enough to leak the information in any meaningful way before they get to her and decides to back down in exchange for peace.
Desperate for an out, Sarah agrees to return the documents and keep her mouth shut as long as Dawson and his team stops tailing her. She reaches out to Tri-State Relay Service, run anonymously by Ash, because the company specializes in rectifying the exact kind of situation Sarah finds herself in.
The phone calls between Sarah and the relay service are facilitated by Ash, who communicates through a burner phone hooked up to a specialized keyboard system meant for the hearing impaired. If Sarah fails to follow instructions to the letter, Tri-State Relay Service will drop her as a client, leaving her on her own once again.
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Why You Should Never Pursue Romance When Compromised
The only contact Sarah has with Ash in Relay is indirect. Either she calls the service, or they call her. There’s an elaborate system of codewords and protocol that involves shipping packages to specific addresses and destroying her phone after every exchange. Through these interactions, Ash grows sympathetic to Sarah’s predicament, and he lets his guard down at the worst possible time. Their daily check-ins start to feel less professional, and Ash gets sloppy just as the folks from Cybo Sementis begin closing in.
As Relay progresses, both Sarah and Ash lose sight of who they can trust. The entire operation becomes an exercise in paranoia, mistaken identity, and corporate impropriety that could compromise countless lives. Ash is driven by guilt, which rears its ugly head once things begin to heat up. Before helping people like Sarah, he had been paid for silence under similar circumstances in a previous professional life, and he starts to question whether following through with the document exchange that sparked this relationship is the right move.
Relay has a lot of moving parts, but it never feels convoluted. While Ash and Sarah are far more coordinated than I would ever be in this situation, I enjoyed it as a form of wish fulfillment for that reason alone. I’d love to receive instructions, snap my phone in half, and run through an alley toward a safe house, but I’d probably jot down the wrong address, panic, and give up before I even hear the dial tone.