Entertainment
10 Best Picture Winners That Have Aged Like Milk Under the Sun
The Oscars are the most prestigious awards in cinema and a celebration of the craft at its absolute best, designed to recognize and commend the most illustrious achievements across every discipline of the medium. However, the passage of time isn’t always so kind, and for all the acclaimed and timeless masterpieces that won Best Picture, there have also been plenty of Oscars dished out for titles that are pretty difficult to endure today.
It’s not to say these films are innately bad. Rather, we must observe how greatly society has changed over the past 100 years, and how movies that were once regarded as being the peak of cinematic artistry have dwindled even as some of their contemporaries have endured. From hits of early Hollywood that haven’t held up from a technical standpoint to mid-century melodramas and musicals that flaunt a frightfully outdated set of social values, and even to some more modern misfires that have quickly become questionable selections, these Best Picture winners have not stood the test of time well at all.
10
‘The Broadway Melody’ (1929)
A product of its era, The Broadway Melody is undeniably an important film in the history of the Oscars. It marks the first sound movie to ever win Best Picture and one of the first pictures to ever use Technicolor. Its pioneering ambition is commendable and impressive even when revisited today. Other elements haven’t aged quite so gracefully, with everything from its technical execution to its narrative, characters, and performances, and even its musical numbers being difficult to connect with now.
Its inconsistent sound mixing is its most distracting pitfall. It is an understandable complication of being one of the first “talkies,” but it still distances the viewer from the story at important beats. Furthermore, the weak and clichéd melodrama clashes unnaturally with its cheesy acting, a fact that only amplifies the shallow nature of its narrative and the outdated social values the film depicts. In essence, The Broadway Melody is an impressive product of its time, but it is still a product of its time, and its storytelling style, thematic interests, and clunky execution hold little to enrapture audiences almost a century on from its release.
9
‘American Beauty’ (1999)
The most obvious reason for American Beauty aging poorly may be Kevin Spacey’s well-publicized fall from grace, which makes any effort to watch him portray a lecherous character particularly unpleasant. Still, that certainly isn’t the only reason why the 1999 Best Picture winner has dwindled over the years. It follows a middle-aged man leading a seemingly idyllic suburban lifestyle as he backslides into depression, a misery that isn’t helped by his newfound yearning for his teenage daughter’s friend.
While the story’s premise can be seen as problematic, American Beauty does a reasonable job at executing it with a sense of melancholic earnestness that doesn’t treat Lester’s (Spacey) obsession as healthy or acceptable. However, its focus on the pitfalls of upper-middle-class life is narrow-minded, with the edges of Lester’s story littered with shallow caricatures. The story itself exudes a sense of self-indulgent pretentiousness that now, more so than ever, simply doesn’t resonate with the masses. Its satirical tone still has some bite, but it comments on a dated idea of societal angst. Given that 1999 also saw the release of such films as Magnolia, Eyes Wide Shut, Fight Club, and The Matrix, American Beauty’s Best Picture win is particularly difficult to stomach today.
8
‘The Great Ziegfeld’ (1936)
Like many of the other earlier Best Picture winners that have aged less gracefully, The Great Ziegfeld is an astonishing feat of production, especially for its time. Alas, its longevity is burdened by its shallow thematic impact and archaic storytelling. In the case of the three-time Oscar winner, it also serves as an overly glamorous and inauthentic biopic about Florenz Ziegfeld Jr., an American Broadway impresario who was a key figure in the field throughout the early part of the 20th century.
Produced with heavy input from Ziegfeld’s widow, Billie Burke, The Great Ziegfeld strays away from the more ruthless and immoral aspects of Ziegfeld’s (William Powell) life to instead present a rollicking musical drama highlighting his rampant rise through the 1920s, along with a love-triangle intrigue. It isn’t enough to sustain the film’s gargantuan three-hour runtime, ensuring The Great Ziegfeld has dwindled over time as a historically inaccurate and blunted biographical musical executed in a manner that simply doesn’t resonate with today’s viewers.
7
‘Cavalcade’ (1933)
Adapting a stage play to the screen is always a difficult task. Even modern movies that undertake such a venture often struggle to find the right balance between honoring the style and story of the original form and using the tools uniquely available to cinema to produce a spectacle befitting of the big screen. 1933’s Cavalcade suffers as a picture that is simply a static and stagnant recreation of Noel Coward’s 1931 play, bereft of cinematic ambition.
Told with paper-thin characters and an archaic vigor for old-world values, Cavalcade follows two London-based couples—the aristocratic Marryots and the working-class Bridges family—as they react to the changing times. It features historical events, including the Boer War, Queen Victoria’s death, the sinking of the Titanic, and the outbreak of WWI, that rattle the lifestyle they know. Like many old movies, it feels forced and overly exaggerated when viewed today, substituting quiet drama for heavy-handed dialogue and over-the-top performances that take what is an interesting story of societal change and strip it of all narrative cohesion and thematic impact. It won Best Picture as well as Best Direction and Best Art Direction at the 6th Academy Awards ceremony.
6
‘The Greatest Show on Earth’ (1952)
It is quite interesting how, while the Best Picture winners from the 1940s have aged immaculately, a lot of the major titles of the ’50s have grown grating over the decades. The Greatest Show on Earth is a perfect example of why. Following the ensemble of a traveling circus as they reckon with the postwar economy, the Cecil B. DeMille picture is bloated and rife with overexaggerated melodrama, weak plotting, and characters that aren’t interesting or nuanced enough to account for the 155-minute runtime.
It was even considered a controversial Best Picture selection by the Academy, given it was competing against such classics as High Noon, The Quiet Man, and even Singin’ in the Rain, which didn’t even garner a nomination. Frequently rated among the weakest Best Picture winners in Oscar history, The Greatest Show on Earth has only diminished over time, becoming an infamous blight on the Academy Awards and an arduous watch today.
5
‘Green Book’ (2016)
Marking what is the most infamous Best Picture winner in the past 20 years, Green Book has become much maligned as a movie that never should have won the award in the first place. The biographical drama aims to dissect racism as it follows acclaimed jazz pianist Dr. Donald Shirley (Mahershala Ali) on his tour in the South in the 1960s, accompanied by his driver and bodyguard, Tony Lip (Viggo Mortensen), a hard-edged bouncer from the Bronx.
For what it’s worth, Green Book does present a beautiful real-life friendship, a wonderfully acted feel-good tale of cultural differences overcome by the simple sincerity of human connection. However, its observations on racism and its ramifications are vague, short-sighted, and sometimes plain wrong, with many criticizing it as a movie that offers comfort when it should be critical and confronting. The fact that it was heralded as being a triumphant dismantling of bigotry and hate despite its relatively tame handling of such issues has seen it become a divisive film as well as a Best Picture winner that highlights the safe stagnancy that sometimes undermines the Academy Awards.
4
‘Around the World in 80 Days’ (1956)
Based on Jules Verne’s 1872 novel of the same name, Around the World in 80 Days was the big winner at the 29th Academy Awards, winning five Oscars in total, including Best Picture, a feat that saw it triumph over fellow nominees like The King and I and Giant, while classics like The Searchers didn’t even get a nod. With its globe-trotting story and its monumental 175-minute runtime, it is easy to see why the Verne adaptation was celebrated as a significant achievement in cinema, but its sensibilities and pacing are far more at home in the 1950s than they are in today’s world.
Its depiction of foreign cultures is uninspired to say the least, resorting to stereotypical and misleading simplicities, and even featuring Shirley MacLaine as an Indian princess. However, perhaps even more grating than its politically incorrect display is its dated pacing, with its agonizingly slow narrative progression relying heavily on celebrity cameos to keep the audience invested. It may have worked a charm in 1956, but the audacious fantasy Best Picture winner simply doesn’t have the same allure in 2026.
3
‘Gigi’ (1958)
Released as a lavish and light-hearted musical comedy in 1958, Gigi is widely regarded as a naïve and unnerving byproduct of a bygone era. It’s an incredibly awkward watch in today’s world, given its archaic perspective on gender dynamics and the sexualization of young women. Following the tentative and blooming romance between a Parisian playboy and a still-maturing teenager, the film was celebrated as a vivacious visual spectacle epitomizing the splendor of musical cinema.
While its production value remains an impressive feat, the nine-time Oscar winner has otherwise aged abysmally. Its central relationship between the “in-training” Gigi (Leslie Caron) and the far older and promiscuous Gaston (Louis Jourdan) isn’t only squeamish and predatory in its premise, but it is executed with a cheerfulness and charm that is, today, ill-suited to the subject matter. The inclusion of songs like “Thank Heaven for Little Girls,” the treatment of women as commodities to be chased, and even the nature of the storytelling certainly haven’t helped it stand the test of time either. Gigi is an uncomfortable relic of an era of chauvinism.
2
‘Crash’ (2004)
A movie that capitalized on the sorrow, confusion, grief, and trauma felt across America in the wake of 9/11, Crash exudes a certain self-importance with its mighty themes of prejudice, human nature, and social stratification. Alas, its scope is far too shallow and comforting to do anything of substance with such ideas. Transpiring in a time when Americans are still reeling from the events of September 11, it follows several interconnected stories of racial tension and social misunderstanding involving deeply flawed characters striving to do their best, even as they make horrific snap judgments.
Heavy-handed, simplistic, and propelling a white savior narrative that is frankly uninspired in its plot beats and progress, Crash is one of the more egregious examples of Oscar-bait cinema audiences have been bombarded with this century. It preys on the lingering cultural heartache of 9/11 while delivering moralizing and condescending tales that reduce America’s issues of systemic racism and societal belligerence to a series of individual flaws. Controversially, it upset the highly fancied Brokeback Mountain for Best Picture, an error in judgment that will stand as one of the Academy’s most confounding misfires for many years to come.
1
‘Cimarron’ (1931)
A sweeping epic that unfolds over 40 years, no one can fault Cimarron’s ambition and visual majesty, but its lethargic story and rampant insensitivities ensure that it is a movie that simply no longer has any narrative appeal. When she is dragged to Osage, Oklahoma, in the late 1880s at the behest of her husband, ambitious newspaperman Yancey Cravat (Richard Dix), Sabra (Irene Dunne) finds herself struggling to manage her inherited editorial duties while acclimatizing to a community where civilization is far from established. The couple is repeatedly separated and reunited over the ensuing decades as Oklahoma rapidly evolves.
Featuring belittling stereotypes of Native Americans, African Americans, and Jews while focusing on a supposedly triumphant tale of a white man’s burden to bring civility to the hostile and simple-minded natives, Cimarron oscillates between being boring banality and piercing controversy. It was ultimately awarded Best Picture because of the magnitude of its production and the epic ambition of its execution, but it has come to be widely viewed as the worst Best Picture winner of all time.
Entertainment
Taylor Frankie Paul Slammed For Her Response To Leaked DV Video
Taylor Frankie Paul is addressing the fallout after a resurfaced video tied to her past domestic incident began circulating online, reigniting controversy just as her reality TV career was ramping up. With production halted on one show and another already canceled, Taylor Frankie Paul is now facing intense scrutiny from both authorities and the public.
‘Mormon Wives’ Production Paused Amid Taylor Frankie Paul Controversy

Production on the fifth season of “The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” has been paused following a new alleged domestic incident involving Paul and her ex, Dakota Mortensen.
According to PEOPLE, filming was officially put on hold earlier this week. A spokesperson for the Draper City Police Department confirmed to the magazine that there is an open “domestic assault investigation” involving the former couple. Authorities also noted that “allegations have been made in both directions” and that “contact was made with involved parties on [Feb.] 24th and 25th.”
The ongoing investigation has cast uncertainty over the future of the series and Paul’s involvement moving forward.
Video Footage Of 2023 Domestic Violence Incident Gets Leaked

The situation escalated further when TMZ released video footage tied to Paul’s 2023 arrest stemming from a domestic dispute with Mortensen. Paul, who shares a son, Ever, with Mortensen, previously pled guilty to aggravated assault, and the incident was later featured on “Mormon Wives.”
In the video, Paul is seen throwing metal barstools at Mortensen and striking him during the altercation. Her daughter, Indy, whom she shares with her ex-husband, was just 5 years old at the time and is seen near Mortensen as the chairs are thrown. She can also be heard crying in the footage.
Taylor Frankie Paul’s Team Fires Back At ‘Reprehensible’ Leak

Paul’s camp is pushing back strongly against how the footage was released, telling PEOPLE:
“It’s sad to see the latest installment of his never-ending, desperate, attention-seeking, destructive campaign to harm Taylor without any regard for the consequences for their child. Releasing an old video, which conveniently omits context, on their son’s birthday is a reprehensible attempt to distract from his own behavior. Thankfully, the public has seen this act before and knows who he is and sadly, many will recognize this pattern of manipulation, both in his actions on the show, and from their own experiences.”
The statement frames the video’s release as a calculated move, shifting attention to the timing and intent behind it.
Social Media Erupts With Strong Reactions

Online, reactions have been swift and divided as viewers weigh in on both the video and Paul’s response.
One user wrote, “Context? I see Taylor Paul throwing chairs and hitting her child. Taylor wasn’t defending herself. She should be in jail.”
Another wrote, “Throwing metal bar stools at your ex in front of your young daughter is straight-up domestic violence,” while someone else replied, “So she just… failed to take any responsibility for destroying everything and painted herself the victim.”
Taylor Frankie Paul Calls It A ‘Heavy Time’ While Continuing Public Appearances Amid Fallout

Despite the controversy, Paul has continued to make public appearances. She attended a press event in New York City for her now-canceled season of “The Bachelorette,” where she opened up about how she’s coping.
“I think it’s been really difficult and heavy given, you know, all the headlines and what’s going on,” she told The Hollywood Reporter. “But I would say I am handling it like any normal human would, like struggling, but trying to show up at the same time.”
She echoed similar sentiments during an appearance on “Good Morning America,” again describing the situation as a “heavy time.”
Dakota Mortensen Files For Protective Order

The situation appears to have escalated even further in recent days. According to court documents obtained by TMZ, Mortensen filed for a protective order in Utah on Tuesday, outlining a series of alleged incidents that he claims occurred on February 23 and February 24, 2026.
In the filing, Mortensen said he was at Paul’s home with her and their son, Ever, when an argument between the two intensified. He alleged that during the dispute, Paul choked him, forcing him to physically remove her hands from his neck.
Mortensen also claimed she shoved him into a window and struck him.
Entertainment
Here's your first look at Leonardo DiCaprio (plus his mustache) and Jennifer Lawrence in Martin Scorsese's “What Happens at Night”
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The film marks the seventh collaboration between DiCaprio and Scorsese, and the second between the actor and Lawrence.
Entertainment
8 Horror Movies That Prove This Is Hollywood’s Best New Scream Queen
Maika Monroe has been making movies since 2012. She’s worked her way up through supporting roles, some absolute stinkers (we’re looking at you Independence Day: Resurgence), and in 2026, she had her biggest role yet as the star of the wildly popular Reminders of Him. Still, horror has always been the sweet spot for Monroe.
Recently, she was the villain in Hulu’s The Hand that Rocks the Cradle reboot, she had viewers weeping in her short film spot for Resident Evil Requiem: Evil Has Always Had a Name video game, and soon, she’ll be starring in Victorian Psycho. Over the last decade plus, Monroe has become a scream queen. These eight films are among her best, and two are in the running for the best horror films of the 21st century.
8
‘Greta’ (2018)
Co-written and directed by Neil Jordan, Greta stars Isabelle Huppert in the titular role, a piano teacher in New York City whose lost bag is returned to her by the lonely Frances (Chloë Grace Moretz). The two women bond and become friends, until Frances discovers that Greta might not be as nice and trustworthy as she first thought. The strange woman turns her sights on Frances and her friend Erica (Monroe) in a creepy game of obsession.
Huppert and Moretz are the stars of Greta, but Maika Monroe has an integral role, especially when it comes to the strength she shows in the shocking third act. It’s a silly, over-the-top movie at times, but the talent of Monroe and others keeps it from falling apart. This isn’t one of her best movies, but it shows what she can overcome with a lacking script.
7
‘Tau’ (2018)
The same year Greta was released, Monroe landed the lead role in the Netflix film Tau. Directed by Federico D’Alessandro and co-starring Ed Skrein and the one and only Gary Oldman, our scream queen plays Julia, a woman kidnapped by Skrein’s Alex, a tech wizard who just so happens to be crazy too. How so? He keeps Julia trapped in his smart house, where an AI bot named Tau (Goldman) uses its unwilling human hosts to develop a more lifelike consciousness.
Tau is held back by an unrealistic plot filled with stereotypes. It’s a flawed film, but it’s Monroe doing what she does best as the woman pushed down by a man who must fight back and overcome if she’s to see another day. Having to spend many scenes acting alongside Goldman’s bodiless voice puts so much on Monroe, and she pulls it off.
6
‘Significant Other’ (2022)
Significant Other, released on Paramount+, is hard to talk about without giving away the twist. Co-written and directed by Dan Berk and Robert Olsen, Monroe is Ruth, the girlfriend of Harry (Jack Lacy). Together, the struggling couple decides to go camping in the woods. Rather than running into some masked killer with a machete, they discover something more terrifying that will alter not just their lives but everyone’s.
Significant Other isn’t flawless, but it works by not telling you what’s going on. The viewer expects one type of movie and gets another. It’s part relationship drama, part sci-fi thriller, and part horror movie. Monroe carries it as the hero in a screenplay that only has a few characters to rely on. The film succeeds or fails on its lead. With Monroe in that position, this one is worth checking out.
5
‘Villains’ (2019)
Significant Other wasn’t the first time Monroe collaborated with Dan Berk and Robert Olsen — the trio actually worked together three years prior on the even better Villains. In the film, she is Jules, a lowly robber and the girlfriend of Bill Skarsgård‘s Mickey. You might think they’re the aforementioned villains of this movie when they break into what they think is an abandoned home, but when they find a tied-up girl in the basement, some much more terrifying antagonists are revealed.
More of a dark comedy than a straight-up horror thriller, the oddball approach might not be what some viewers are looking for, as you could argue that the silliness takes away from the tension of the plot. However, Monroe’s straightforward approach is by far the best part of Villains. She singlehandedly keeps it from floating away.
4
‘The Guest’ (2014)
2014 was the year of Maika Monroe and horror. We’ll get to the second film she made that year later, but first was The Guest. Directed by Adam Wingard, who also made You’re Next, Blair Witch, and two Godzilla vs Kong movies, Monroe is Anna Peterson, the sister of a man killed in the war in Afghanistan. They are surprised when one day a man named David (Dan Stephens), who says he was best friends with the brother, shows up at the family’s door out of the blue and ingrains himself in their lives. But is David who he says he is?
The Guest is a smart film, and Wingard creates an atmosphere reminiscent of iconic horror movies like Halloween and The Terminator, but Monroe isn’t a rehash of what Jamie Lee Curtis and Linda Hamilton established. Anna is the window into the plot as the character who notices something wrong with David long before anyone else does. If her family is going to survive, it will be because she takes the fight to their unwanted guest.
3
‘Watcher’ (2022)
Written and directed by Chloe Okuno, Maika Monroe is the one to watch in Watcher. She stars as Julia, a lonely wife new to Romania. With her husband gone all the time, Julia is often alone. That turns very bad when she notices a man (Karl Glusman) watching her from another building. Creeped out, Julia begins to follow him, convinced that he might be a serial killer on the loose, even though everyone else thinks she’s losing it.
Once again, Monroe is the put-upon woman who is aware when others aren’t. She is easily convincing as the smart character through whom a story can be told. Julia is a sad and quiet woman, but she’s not about to cower from a threat. Watcher‘s third act is absolutely terrifying. If you’ve never seen it, check out what you’ve been missing. It’s Monroe as a true horror scream queen.
2
‘Longlegs’ (2024)
Longlegs was the talk of the horror community in 2024 thanks to Nicolas Cage‘s wild performance as the titular serial killer in Osgood Perkins‘ masterpiece. In an homage to ’90s thrillers like The Silence of the Lambs, Monroe is a young FBI agent named Lee Harker. She has a special talent no one else in the bureau does and is able to track down the killer, who might just have her lined up to be his next victim.
There is quite a contrast between Cage and Monroe’s energy. As we’re accustomed to, the Academy Award-winning actor is a ball of chaos. Monroe’s character, however, is very subdued — a woman with a highly traumatic past who uses her gifts to help others, even though she can barely help herself. It’s so easy to look at her and see Jodie Foster’s Clarice Starling. And there’s no forgetting the scene when Longlegs and Harker first meet.
1
‘It Follows’ (2014)
This is where Maika Monroe became an iconic final girl and truly started her scream queen journey. In It Follows, written and directed by David Robert Mitchell, Monroe is Jay, a college student whose life is changed for the worse when she goes on a seemingly innocent date, only to come face to face with an entity attached to her through a sexual transfer. For the entire movie, it slowly stalks its victim. Will Jay and her friends be able to escape?
It Follows feels like a tribute to movies like Halloween and A Nightmare on Elm Street, with a group of friends in the suburbs battling an impossible monster. Mitchell purposely keeps things a bit off-kilter, and Disasterpiece‘s score is unnerving. As the victim of the entity, this is Maika Monroe’s movie. She spends the last two acts screaming and running for her life, but never backing down from a foe no one else can see except for her. Thankfully, a sequel is finally happening with Maika Monroe returning. We can’t wait!
Entertainment
Kerry Washington says “Scandal” abortion scene was 'cathartic' after her own experience with the procedure
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The actress opened up about the abortion she got in her 20s in her 2023 memoir “Thicker Than Water.”
Entertainment
Kyle Richards Details ‘Rough’ ‘RHOBH’ Season 15 Reunion
Season 15 of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” is nearing its end, and the cast has already filmed the reunion. Now, after sitting down with her co-stars and host Andy Cohen to hash out their issues, Kyle Richards is opening up about it. In addition to Richards, the “RHOBH” season 15 cast stars Dorit Kemsley, Sutton Stracke, Erika Jayne, Bozoma Saint John, Amanda Frances, and Rachel Zoe.
Kathy Hilton and Jennifer Tilly are friends of the show.
Kyle Richards Opens Up About The ‘RHOBH’ Season 15 Reunion

Richards hosted one of her Amazon Live sessions in March 2026, where she not only discussed products she uses from the retail giant but also teased the “RHOBH” season 15 reunion. During the stream, someone asked her to rate how “bananas” the reunion was, but she said she couldn’t do it.
According to her, “I think it would depend on the person you would ask. Some people it may have been a seven, some people it was probably a 10.” The “RHOBH” star continued, “It was rough.”
Kyle Also Discussed The Drama With Erika Jayne And Dorit Kemsley

Richards went on to mention the issues that she and Jayne are currently having with Kemsley, noting that they were also addressed at the reunion. Of course, she didn’t say if there was a resolution.
She explained, “Because, you know, the situation with Dorit, Erika, and myself is hard because we care about each other, and it’s gotten so bad. It’s just very difficult. So that part was for me, the most difficult part.
Later, a fan asked Richards to use three words to describe the reunion. According to her, “Torture, infuriating, and sad. Traumatic, long, I’m adding some words.”
Fans Have Mixed Opinions Of Season 15

Season 15 of “The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” premiered in December 2025. While the show has maintained good viewership, some fans have expressed concern over its quality. One of the most notable is actress Sarah Michelle Gellar, who appeared on Cohen’s “Radio Andy” in March 2026.
She stated in the clip that she felt the season was “slow” compared to others, but that it was “picking up.” In addition to Gellar, many viewers have made their feelings known on social media. One person said on Instagram, “It’s Kyle. Kyle is the problem. If she goes, it will allow the show to go in a new direction.”
Someone else said, “Dorit should go. In my opinion. Nothing fun about her. Boz too.” Another person stated, “Amanda needs to get the boot- love Rachel Zoe. She’s amazing.”
The ‘Housewives’ OG Recently Opened Up About Amanda Frances

Elsewhere in her Amazon Live session, a fan asked Richards if she believed Frances would return for season 16 or if she would be a “one and done.” The “RHOBH” OG responded in the clip, “You know what, people just sometimes are misunderstood, and she communicates differently.
She went on to joke that she had previously said Frances communicates like “a millennial,” which is one of the differences she has with the rest of the cast.
Richards then said, “She’s actually a smart girl. I know her business has come under scrutany but she’s successful.” From there, she noted that Frances had purchased her old home, as evidence of Frances’s intelligence.
A New Report Says ‘RHOBH’ May Be Revamped

As mentioned, some fans haven’t been happy with season 15 of “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.” According to a new report shared by The Real Housewives Zone, Bravo may feel the same way about the show.
The insider claimed, “Production staff are scared of being fired after the poor reaction to the latest season [of Beverly Hillls]. Bravo execs are not happy with the quality of the show, and Evolution Media has been made aware, including Alex Baskin.”
They then discussed the cast in general, saying, “As great as Rachel Zoe is she hasn’t lifted the show. Viewer reaction to Amanda Frances has been poor, but if it wasn’t for her, the show would be in dire straits. If anything, Amanda has kept the show afloat this season, so there is a strong chance of her returning next season.”
The source concluded about the future of “RHOBH,” “Bravo has Evolution Media on notice right now, the show must improve next season, or heads will be on the chopping block, expect a big shock firing after the reunion!”
“The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” airs on Bravo on Thursday nights. Fans can stream new episodes on Peacock the day after they air.
Entertainment
Netflix Exec Addresses Meghan Markle & Prince Harry Relationship
There is no bad blood between Netflix, Prince Harry, and Meghan Markle, at least that is what the streaming giant’s exec is saying.
Word from Netflix’s headquarters is that all is well when it comes to their relationship with the former working royals who inked a deal with them after their exodus from the United Kingdom to America in 2020.
Meghan Markle announced earlier in March that her lifestyle brand “As Ever” was ending its partnership with Netflix to become an independent venture with possible roots in multiple countries outside America.
Netflix Exec Claims There Are Movies In The Works With Prince Harry And Meghan Markle

The streaming company’s executive, Bela Bajaria, disputed earlier claims made by news outlets that things went sour between the business partners after their joint interview with Oprah Winfrey in 2021 and Harry’s 2023 memoir “Spare.”
Bajaria, at the “Next on Netflix” event on March 18, debunked these reports and urged people not to believe everything in the news, especially if a little fact-checking can help clear all the doubts. The company’s Chief Content Officer added that Netflix still has a very great working relationship with the couple and talks about movie development, which has been ongoing for a while now.
Bajaria referred to the couple’s amazing documentary with Netflix, which was their first-ever project with the company. As shared by PEOPLE, Bajaria assured everyone that everywhere is buzzing for the couple, both on the TV and film side, adding, “Deals come and go all the time. There are deals that are deals we don’t renew.”
What Was The Alleged Inside Scoop From Netflix About?

According to Variety, six highly connected personalities within the company who are aware of the deals between Netflix and the Sussexes confirmed that there is more than meets the eye when it comes to their relationship.
Describing it as majorly optics, the sources noted that Netflix got tired of selling repackaged versions of the same story, which is often about their exit from the royal world. The low ratings from some of their joint projects over the years did not help, as the company reportedly became doubtful of e-commerce being their best shot at anything fruitful with the royal couple.
Three insiders from Netflix reportedly confirmed that Netflix chief Ted Sarandos has had enough with the pair and has voiced his frustration directly to the Co-CEO about their projects. Bajaria was also mentioned in the discussion, as she has grown very tired of their partnership with the couple.
Netflix Spokesperson Denies The ‘Absolutely Inaccurate’ Stories From The Sources

Aside from her comment at the event about the fate of the couple with Netflix, Bajaria also earlier reacted to the Variety story. In her words, Harry and Meghan’s company, Archewell, has been a very thoughtful and collaborative partner who has made their partnership awesome. “They’re deeply engaged in the storytelling process and bring a unique, global perspective that aligns with the kinds of impactful projects our members respond to,” the executive added.
More close sources in Netflix also added that Sarandos and his wife, Nicole Avant, are frequent callers at Meghan and Harry’s social circle, in addition to their proximity as neighbors in Montecito. The Sussexes’ lawyer, Michael J. Kump, also debunked claims that the Netflix chief is insisting on only holding meetings with the couple in the presence of an attorney.
Last August, a second set of episodes from “With Love, Meghan” performed poorly compared to the first round. The company also reportedly sat on a surplus of products from “As Ever,” reaching up to $10 million in value, and the company had to start giving inventory to employees for free, and put the goods on card tables in various office buildings.
The Duchess Is Reportedly Eyeing An Independent Frontier For Her Brand

Following the end of their partnership, The Blast shared that the company and Netflix agreed on their respective problems, and their decision to part ways was an amicable one with lots of good wishes for everyone involved. Netflix wished the Duchess of Sussex well in her new endeavors with the brand, noting that it was proud to have been involved in the early stage of the brand’s development.
“As it was always intended, Meghan will continue growing the brand and take it into its next chapter independently, and we look forward to celebrating how she continues to bring joy to households around the world,” Netflix added. A statement from the former actress noted that her business witnessed immense growth in just one year with Netflix, and this has fueled their confidence to move ahead on its own and expand its wings to other areas.
Meghan Markle’s Camp Addressed Expansion Speculations

The “Suits” actress’ current standing with Netflix fueled rumors that the media personality has her eyes on expanding to other continents, especially as news dropped that she would be touring Australia alongside her husband in a few months.
As stated by The Blast, the speculations stated that she was looking to sell her brand in Australia rather than in the United Kingdom due to the tense relationship between herself and the royal family. However, a spokesperson for the brand affirmed to the press that while the team is strongly considering growth and international expansion, the direction and timeline to unleash the plan is yet to be determined.
The source shared that breaking into a new market is a process, and the brand knows this, but it is excited to grow in that direction and is strongly considering it in the future. Meghan launched the lifestyle brand in April 2025 in the United States, and the products dropped in conjunction with the first season of the former actress’s lifestyle series “With Love, Meghan” on Netflix.
Will the rumors about Meghan Markle, Prince Harry, and Netflix slow down now?
Entertainment
Where is the “First Wives Club ”cast“ ”now? See what became of the devious divorcees 30 years later
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Find out what’s happening with Goldie Hawn, Bette Midler, and the rest of the cast.
Entertainment
Body Found in Spain Identified as James ‘Jimmy’ Gracey
Spanish authorities have confirmed that the body they found on Thursday, March 19, does in fact belong to University of Alabama student James “Jimmy” Gracey.
The remains were discovered in the Somorrostro section of Barcelona, where Gracey had disappeared the morning of Tuesday, March 17, following a night out with friends who are studying abroad.
Gracey’s body was found not far from the popular beachside club where the 20-year-old was captured by surveillance cameras as left with an unknown individual.
At this point, investigators are handling Gracey’s death as an accident, and said there is nothing to suggest foul play in this case.
Gracey was last seen on March 17 at around 3 a.m. outside Shôko nightclub in the Port Olímpic area.
Gracey, who was known as Jimmy to friends and family, was last seen wearing a white T-shirt, dark pants, and a gold chain with a rhinestone-encrusted cross.
As friends were ready to go home, Gracey reportedly stayed behind at the club.
The Illinois native never made it back to his Airbnb, according to his mother, Therese Marren Gracey, who shared a Facebook post on Tuesday, March 17, about her missing son.
“My son is a university of Alabama student who is visiting friends in Barcelona who are studying abroad,” reads the missing man’s mother’s post, which was shared to a Students in Barcelona 2026 Facebook group. “They went to Shoko last night. … But he didn’t make it back to the air bnb. Has anyone seen him?”
Police have not said when Gracey first arrived in Barcelona, but relatives had noted he was due to return to the states on Saturday, March 21.
Gracey’s father had flown over to Spain on Wednesday, March 18, to assist police in any way he could.
It was unclear what method the police employed to confirm the body was Gracey’s.
There have been questions surrounding the location of Gracey’s phone, after Therese initially announced that police had found it soon after he vanished. However, investigators said they couldn’t confirm either way if they had the device in their possession.
A University of Alabama spokesperson could not be reached for comment on Gracey’s death.
Gracey had announced back in the fall that he had been elected to serve as the chaplain of the Alpha Phi Chapter of the Theta Chi fraternity.
Gracey was the nephew of CNN senior producer David Gracey, according to CNN and statements his family have made.
Funeral arrangements for Gracey had not been announced by press time.
Entertainment
10 Most Perfect Movies of the Last 15 Years, Ranked
Perfection in movies is a dangerous word, which is exactly why I like using it. It makes people uncomfortable. Good. It should. Because the second you call a film perfect, you are not just saying it is well-made. You are saying it leaves no dead space in your mind. You are saying it completely knows what it is, what it wants, how it should feel, how long it should withhold, when it should wound you, when it should turn the knife, and when it should mercifully stop.
And the last 15 years have given us more of these than people admit. Not just great films, not just awards-season darlings, not just movies that start discourse and then quietly age into respectable shelf pieces. I mean movies that feel terrifyingly complete. Movies that hit with such authority that every scene seems inevitable in retrospect, even when it blindsides you in the moment. These ten films do not resemble one another much on the surface. And that’s why this list would be bitter because perfection is not one tone.
10
‘The Banshees of Inisherin’ (2022)
I love movies that sound small when you describe them badly. It’s about one man suddenly deciding he doesn’t want to be friends with another man anymore. Fine. That is technically true. It is also nowhere near enough. The Banshees of Inisherin is one of the cruelest, saddest, funniest films of the last 15 years because it understands that rejection can feel apocalyptic when it arrives without language you can live with.
The film follows Pádraic (Colin Farrell) who cannot absorb what is happening because he is a decent, limited, open-faced man who believes niceness is still enough to hold a life together. Farrell plays him with such naked confusion and injury that the film gets under your skin almost immediately. Then there is Colm (Brendan Gleeson), played as a man who has been overtaken by a grim, almost embarrassing panic about mortality and artistic worth. That is why the film is so good. It never lets either side become easy. Colm is cruel, yes, but he is not fake. Pádraic is lovable, yes, but he is not purely innocent either. Everyone bleeds. Everyone diminishes. Everyone hardens.
9
‘Mad Max: Fury Road’ (2015)
There are movies with momentum, and then there is Mad Max: Fury Road, which feels like it has escaped from the laws that normally govern filmmaking. It does not move. It detonates forward. It is one of the few films of the last 15 years that made me feel, while watching it, that cinema as a physical medium was still capable of embarrassing almost everything else around it. What George Miller does here should be impossible. This movie is essentially one long chase, then a turn, then another chase, and somehow every minute of it feels newly invented.
And beneath the chrome and fire and sand and screaming engines, the film has something a lot of action masterpieces do not: anguish. Furiosa (Charlize Theron) gives the whole thing a human center strong enough to carry its mythic scale. Her hope is not abstract. Her grief is not decorative. That is why I think Mad Max: Fury Road is perfect. It’s better than its ancestors. And in addition to being technically jaw-dropping. It has moral velocity too. It knows exactly what this world is built on — ownership, rape, hoarding, domination and it turns a chase movie into a liberation movie without ever losing one ounce of speed.
8
‘Oppenheimer’ (2023)
I know people want to reduce Oppenheimer to an important biopic but make it loud, and I honestly think that reading misses how unnervingly specific the film is. This is not a cradle-to-grave prestige movie in the safe old sense. It is an engine of obsession, ego, paranoia, guilt, power, and self-mythology, built around a man brilliant enough to split the world open and vain enough to imagine he might still be able to control what that meant afterward.
Cillian Murphy’s performance is the reason the film has real poison in it. He plays Oppenheimer as a man whose mind is always running ahead of ordinary emotional behavior, a man whose brilliance becomes inseparable from vanity, and whose guilt is real but never pure. That matters. The Trinity test sequence is staggering not simply because of the explosion, but because of the unbearable silence before the sound finally arrives. That delay feels like history inhaling. And then the film keeps refusing relief. It will not let the bomb remain a triumph. It will not let political humiliation remain merely procedural. It ends where all truly great films about genius should end: with the horrible realization that achievement is not remotely the same thing as wisdom.
7
‘Saltburn’ (2023)
I do not care how divisive this movie is. Or perhaps disgusting to some. I admire divisive movies when the division comes from nerve rather than incompetence, and Saltburn has nerve pouring out of its walls. Emerald Fennell made a film so intoxicated by envy, class desire, erotic humiliation, performance, and fantasy that people mistook its excess for a lack of control. I think the opposite. I think it knows exactly how poisonous and ridiculous it wants to be.
What makes Saltburn so alive is that it understands yearning can be disgusting. Not in a moralizing way. In a human way. Oliver (Barry Keoghan) is given such watchful, craving, shape-shifting intensity that every scene turns into a question of appetite. Is he desperate to belong? To possess? To imitate? To consume? The answer is yes, and the movie is smart enough to know those distinctions blur when class desire gets eroticized. Felix (Jacob Elordi), in contrast, is not just the object of fascination; he is the kind of beautiful, careless center around which less powerful people destroy themselves while pretending they are merely in love with a lifestyle. That is one reason the film lands so hard. And yes, the movie is outrageous. It should be. This is a movie about rot in silk gloves.
6
‘Parasite’ (2019)
Some movies become instant classics because they are widely admired. Parasite became one because it is a trap that snaps shut more brutally each time you revisit it. The first time, you’re dazzled by how sharp, funny, and fluid it is. The second time, you realize the whole thing was already wired for disaster from the beginning. The third time, it starts to feel almost cruel in how perfectly it manages tone.
The Kim family are funny, loving, cunning, selfish, desperate, and inventive. The wealthy family are not cartoon demons. The film is too honest for that. Everyone exists inside a structure that has already arranged dignity unequally. The architecture of the house matters. The stairs matter. The smell matters. The weather matters. The basement matters. Every detail hardens into fate. The birthday party climax is amazing. The ending is devastating. Parasite refuses the fantasy it knows you want. It lets hope appear just long enough to expose how expensive hope is under a system built to keep people in place. That is not just great filmmaking. That is ruthless intelligence.
5
‘The Zone of Interest’ (2023)
I have very rarely left a movie feeling as sick, stunned, and morally scraped raw as I did after The Zone of Interest. This is not a Holocaust film in the conventional dramatic sense, and that is exactly why it is so horrifying. What the film does with sound should be studied forever. You hear the camp more than you see it. Screams, gunshots, machinery, dogs, distant terror, the whole sonic environment is contaminated. And yet the family at the center of the film keep gardening, eating, planning, swimming, hosting, arranging. That is the film’s unbearable thesis: human beings can normalize almost anything if it preserves comfort and status.
Hedwig Höss (Sandra Hüller) is committed to her home, her space, her little kingdom of domestic pride. Instead of a theatrical monster, her normality is horror. Rudolf Höss (Christian Friedel), meanwhile, moves through administrative evil with the deadness of a man who has professionalized his soul into absence. The Zone of Interest is perfect because it does not try to emotionally instruct you in the usual way. It does something braver and more punishing.
4
‘Whiplash’ (2014)
I have almost no patience for people who reduce Whiplash to an intense drumming movie. That’s like calling a knife fight a conversation about kitchen utensils. Whiplash is one of the great obsession films because it understands that ambition can feel holy and degrading at the same time. It understands the sick thrill of being told you might be special, and the even sicker thrill of enduring abuse because some part of you believes greatness might be hiding on the other side of it.
Andrew (Miles Teller) is ambitious enough to accept a warped value system if it gets him closer to transcendence. That is what makes the film so tense. You are not watching a young artist being brutalized. That’s a loser mindset. You are watching him collaborate with that brutality because he wants what it promises. And Fletcher (J.K. Simmons) — good lord. He is terrifying because the movie understands charisma can attach itself to cruelty when institutions keep rewarding results. He knows exactly how to weaponize shame, uncertainty, and the myth of genius. Every scene with him feels like someone tightening a wire around your throat. And yes, teachers like him aren’t really ideal in real life. But what if they are? That’s what iWhiplash leaves you with.
3
‘The Worst Person in the World’ (2021)
The Worst Person in the World refuses to simplify a kind of confusion that lesser films either romanticize or condescend to. Julie (Renate Reinsve) is not a symbol of modern aimlessness. She is not a cautionary tale, not a quirky disaster, not a generation think-piece with cute haircuts. She is a person whose inner life keeps outrunning the identities available to her, and the film treats that instability not as a joke or flaw to correct, but as something intimate, painful, and achingly recognizable.
The film’s structure is part of its magic. It moves in chapters, digressions, bursts of fantasy, erotic shifts, and emotional recalibrations that somehow feel both playful and inevitable. The frozen-city sequence is one of the most intoxicating romantic gestures of the last decade, and the movie is wise enough not to let that intoxication become the whole truth. Life keeps arriving after the rush. Bodies change. Time advances. People become memories while they are still alive. And then, quietly, the film becomes devastating.
2
‘Aftersun’ (2022)
Some films break your heart in the scene you are watching. Aftersun does something much crueler. It lets the heartbreak gather invisibly until you realize, too late, that the entire movie has been building an emotional truth you can no longer defend yourself against. That delayed devastation is part of why I think it’s one of the most perfect films of the last 15 years. On the surface, so little happens. A father and daughter go on holiday. They swim, talk, wander, laugh, play, drift.
But that’s the film reconstructing the way memory clings to textures, glances, awkward silences, cheap camcorder footage, half-heard remarks, and emotional absences you were too young to interpret in the moment. Calum (Paul Mescal) is one of the most beautiful performances I have ever seen because Mescal never forces the tragedy. Calum is loving, playful, trying, attentive, and yet always slightly elsewhere, as if some part of him is unreachable even when he is physically present. Sophie (Frankie Corio) is just as essential, because her love for him is total in the uncomplicated way children can love before they understand adult damage. A heads up though: this is a sad film and it will break you.
1
‘Portrait of a Lady on Fire’ (2019)
I do not think Portrait of a Lady on Fire is just the most perfect movie of the last 15 years. I think it is one of the most perfect films ever made, period. There is not a false note in it. Not one rushed beat, not one sentimental shortcut, not one lazy line, not one visual choice that feels merely decorative. Every scene breathes with intention. Every silence means something. Every look is earned.
Marianne (Noémie Merlant) and Héloïse (Adèle Haenel) are astonishing. They are intelligent women feeling their way toward each other through caution, curiosity, resistance, and recognition. The film respects their minds as much as their longing. That matters. And then the film keeps getting deeper. The abortion subplot is handled with such calm humanity that it broadens the film’s entire moral world. The nighttime fire sequence feels like a vision. The first time Héloïse says “Turn around,” the movie practically changes temperature. And the ending. God, the ending. The final concert scene is one of the greatest endings I have ever seen — memory can be both consolation and renewed violence.
Entertainment
Sofia Coppola Calls Britney Spears A ‘Symbol Of Women’s Rights’
Sofia Coppola is a fan of Britney Spears! The daughter of filmmakers Eleanor and Francis Ford Coppola is an actress and a filmmaker in her own right. She has won an Academy Award, two Golden Globe Awards, a Golden Lion, and a Cannes Film Festival Award, and is now using her platform in order to make a comment about the “Toxic” singer’s biopic, which one fan called “cheeky.”
Sofia Coppola Describes Britney Spears As A ‘Women’s Rights’ Symbol

In an interview with Elle, Sofia said that she is “kind of obsessed” with Britney Spears after watching documentaries made about her life and reading her memoir, “The Woman In Me.” In 2007, Britney made headlines for shaving her head, which Sofia referred to as a “punk moment” in history.
“She’s become this symbol of women’s rights. “That would never happen to a man,” she said, although she did not clarify what “that” meant, although she could be talking about her conservatorship. In the year following her mental health breakdown, she was subject to a controversial 13-year court-ordered conservatorship that lasted until November 2021.
Coppola Has A Cheeky Response To The Britney Spears Biopic
Although “Wicked” director Jon M. Chu is currently working on a biopic based on her best-selling novel, little is known about the project. In 2025, Chu told Entertainment Tonight that Britney would be “be very involved” in the project when it came to fruition.
“I haven’t really started anything fully yet, but she will be very involved in this. I have ideas and things, an approach, but it’s very early,” he said at the time.
In her interview, Sofia said, “Supposedly Jon Chu is doing it,” but added, “I hope, yeah, I would love to do that story.” A fan posted the screenshot of the interview on Reddit with the caption, “Love her cheeky comment about the biopic.”
Fans Debate Who Should Create The Biopic

Many fans immediately took to the comments with their opinions. Most expressed a desire to see Sofia direct the project. “I’ve always imagined Sofia would be the one to direct the biopic. I don’t see Jon Chu doing it right at all, and not merely because he’s a man,” one fan commented.
“Sofia gets ittt, girlhood & womanhood, the feeling of being trapped. She’d totally pack a punch with her interpretation and direction. This would mean a lot,” another user agreed.
“She’s my favorite director. The film would be stunning. But Jon Chu can really direct a musical number. So I’m assuming anything performance-related will be stellar in his take. But yeah, Sofia would craft a better film if the focus were more about her struggles,” a third fan chimed in.
They went on to write, “I think it’s gonna be more spectacle with Jon Chu. Ironic kinda. The real Britney has always been this delicate flower (I don’t mean weak or shy. Just burdened with a lot more than she should have ever had to deal with) behind all the manufactured spectacle. That’s the real story. Hope he finds it.”
Britney Spears Explains Why She Shaved Off Her Hair

In an excerpt of “The Woman In Me” shared by PEOPLE magazine, the “Lucky” singer explained why she shaved her head.
“I’d been eyeballed so much growing up. I’d been looked up and down, had people telling me what they thought of my body, since I was a teenager,” she wrote. “Shaving my head and acting out were my ways of pushing back.”
“Under the conservatorship, I was made to understand that those days were now over,” she continued. “I had to grow my hair out and get back into shape. I had to go to bed early and take whatever medication they told me to take.”
Britney Said The Conservatorship Made Her Feel Like A ‘Shadow’ Of Herself

Elsewhere in her memoir, she opened up about the struggles of performing during her conservatorship, including her Piece of Me residency in Las Vegas.
“I would do little bits of creative stuff here and there, but my heart wasn’t in it anymore. As far as my passion for singing and dancing, it was almost a joke at that point,” she writes. “Thirteen years went by with me feeling like a shadow of myself.”
“I think back now on my father and his associates having control over my body and my money for that long, and it makes me feel sick,” she continued. “Think of how many male artists gambled all their money away; how many had substance abuse or mental health issues. No one tried to take away their control over their bodies and money. I didn’t deserve what my family did to me.”
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