Related: Kyle Cooke Says Ciara ‘Had Evidence’ of West and Amanda Romance
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Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers for High Potential Season 2, Episode 12.Last week’s episode of High Potential ended with Karadec (Daniel Sunjata) rekindling things with his ex-fiancée, Lucia (Susan Kelechi Watson). Despite supporting Karadec and encouraging him to try again with Lucia, Morgan (Kaitlin Olson) had a sad look on her face as she watched them leave together. This seemed to be a clear set-up for the beginning of a possible feelings realization arc for Morgan, and sure enough, this week’s episode takes this to the next level in the very best way.
This week’s episode sees Major Crimes investigating the murder of the wealthy founder of a wellness company. Meanwhile, Oz (Deniz Akdeniz) tries to get his father’s headstone ready in time for a planned memorial service. This is a strong and fast-paced episode throughout, and it benefits from giving focus to each of the characters, and in particular, giving Oz his first subplot that’s completely separate from a case. Best of all, the case puts Morgan and Karadec in what appears to be a near-death situation, and it brings them closer than ever.
In Season 2, Episode 12, “The Faust and the Furious,” the Major Crimes team investigates the murder of Gabe Rafferty (Brad Raider), the founder of a wellness-focused technology company called Genegevity. Gabe was stabbed inside his house, but there’s no clear sign that somebody got through his very elaborate security system. Morgan and Karadec speak to Gabe’s assistant, Renata (Lyla Porter-Follows), who reveals that he shared his biodata with her through the Genegevity app. After Renata’s mom died, Gabe became a mentor to her and gave her a job. The goal of the company was to stop the aging process so that people could live forever, which started with the treatments that he was using on himself.
The investigation process takes Major Crimes to a number of people who would have had the motivation to kill Gabe. A woman named Siobhan McBriar (Hallie Samuels) was suing Gabe because Genegevity changed the ingredients in her vitamins without telling her, which disrupted her birth control and got her pregnant. Later, they learn that Gabe was embezzling money from Genegevity, and that he had cleverly found ways to make all of his employees blame each other for the company’s financial discrepancies. A message from Gabe beyond the grave assures his company that someone will be taking over for him soon if he’s ever killed. It turns out all of this money was going into creating a new robot version of Gabe that had all of his previous memories and knowledge uploaded.
Robot Gabe speaks to Morgan and Karadec and tells them that the Do Not Disturb system in Gabe’s house was adjusted by someone other than Gabe on the night of his death, making it turn on earlier than usual. Robot Gabe also gives them a list of people who had been threatening Gabe, then the robot is shut down and can no longer talk to them. Morgan and Karadec go to see Mika Aster (Brandon Engman), the founder of the tech start-up that created the robots. Gabe bought the company promising to keep Mika on, but then he pushed Mika out. Morgan and Karadec visit Gabe’s house and briefly get stuck in the room where he was killed. They realize that Gabe was locked in when the Do Not Disturb feature was turned on, and that the candles he lit in the room were laced with arsenic, so Gabe stabbed himself to die faster instead of slowly being poisoned.
The killer turns out to be Renata, who teamed up with Micah to kill Gabe, both for their own reasons. While Micah wanted revenge and his company back, Renata felt betrayed and hurt because Genegivity had originally been researching the genes responsible for her mother and sister’s cancer, which she also carries. When Micah went to confront Gabe about taking over his company, Renata learned that all the money for the research had gone into the robots instead. Renata ultimately confesses after Morgan and Karadec confront her, but she stands by what she did.
It was revealed last season that Oz’s father had died the year before. In this episode, Oz’s family tries to have a belated memorial for him, because they’ve been waiting for his headstone to be ready for a long time. A few days before they’re supposed to have the memorial (after it’s already been moved twice), Oz learns that the headstone was never confirmed with the cemetery. Oz goes to see his mom (Jacqueline Antaramian), and she says she used his father’s life insurance money to pay for the headstone. The costs then piled up, and before she knew it, the money was gone, and there was still no headstone.
Oz is angry with his mom, and she has to call Daphne (Javicia Leslie) to check on him because he won’t take her calls after that. Selena (Judy Reyes) then calls Oz in for a meeting, and he tells her that his mom spent $20,000 on a headstone that is now stuck in a shipping facility. Selena says that the funeral home took advantage of Oz’s mom, but Oz blames himself for not being there for her during his grief. Selena relates to Oz by telling him about her mother’s death, then she encourages him to stop being so hard on himself. Selena steps in to call out the funeral home for its predatory practices, and Oz’s mother gets a full refund. Oz’s father’s grave finally gets a headstone, and they have a memorial service for him. Oz gives a touching eulogy where he comes to terms with his grief, and then he calls the Major Crimes team his family.
Karadec and Lucia are still seeing each other after reconnecting last week, and they’re already getting serious again. The episode shows how Karadec’s job is no longer the obstacle in their relationship, and it seems to hint that Morgan will become a new obstacle. Morgan shows up to Karadec’s apartment to ask for a ride to work, where she sees Lucia. In the car, Morgan asks Karadec about his relationship, and he tells her that he’s happy.
Later, Morgan and Karadec are investigating Gabe’s house, when they get locked in the room where Gabe was killed, and they believe that the room is filled with the poison that killed Gabe. Morgan has a panic attack, terrified that she doesn’t know what to do, and that there is no way out. She tries to do a grounding exercise, but her mind is full of images of the people she loves the most and will lose if they both die there: her three kids and Karadec. Karadec hugs Morgan to calm her down, and then the door opens, and it’s revealed that there was no poison in the room. It’s one of Morgan and Karadec’s best moments yet, because, on this rare occasion where Morgan feels a loss of control, Karadec is the one who’s able to keep her grounded.
When he gets home from work, Karadec has a conversation with Lucia where they talk about their past breakup and start to move forward together. It’s clear that Karadec has learned his lesson from their breakup, but he also already clearly has feelings for Morgan, even if he doesn’t realize it. After Oz’s father’s memorial, Morgan and Karadec talk about what happened. She feels mortified and ashamed about falling apart instead of being able to help out in that situation, but Karadec tells her that they count on each other, and that she would’ve done the same for him. The show then sets up an upcoming breakdown for Karadec. He tells her that at some point he will have a moment like she did, and that he knows that out of everyone in his life, she’ll be the person who will know how to get him through it. The episode makes it clearer than ever that Morgan will be the obstacle in Karadec’s relationship with Lucia this time around, and based on his facial expression after that last conversation, he may know it, too.
High Potential airs Tuesdays at 9:00 P.M. EST on ABC.
September 17, 2024
Todd Harthan
Summer House star Kyle Cooke has seen his estranged wife, Amanda Batula, kissing West Wilson — which might have been a bridge too far.
“Was not prepared to see that,” Cooke, 43, wrote via Threads on Saturday, April 18, responding to the Summer House chain. “And that. And that 🤢.”
Cooke’s costar Mia Calabrese replied, “Kyle, I left you for 1 hour….”
The Bravo show’s thread had been abuzz since Batula, 34, and Wilson, 31, were spotted at the New York Yankees vs. Kansas City Royals baseball game on Friday, April 17. The duo even packed on the PDA when the stadium’s Kiss Cam panned to their seats.
Batula and Cooke were married for four years, announcing in January that they had separated. She confirmed her romance with Wilson just three months later.
“We’ve seen the growing online speculation, so while this is still very new, we wanted to provide some clarity. It was never our intention to purposely hide anything,” West and Batula wrote in a joint statement last month. “Given the complicated relationship dynamics involved and the scrutiny that comes with being on a reality show, we needed a little space to process things privately before speaking on it.”
They continued at the time, “We’ve shown up for each other as friends over the years, through all the highs and lows, and what’s developed recently was the last thing either of us expected. Our connection grew out of a genuine, longstanding friendship, which made it especially important for us to approach this with care.”
Cooke and his Summer House costars were shocked by the reveal, including Ciara Miller. The former nurse, 30, dated Wilson in 2023 and was close friends with Batula. She told Glamour in a Friday profile published before the MLB game that she found out about their decision to go public t less than one hour before the statement was shared online.
“It’s one thing to experience hurt behind closed doors,” Miller told Glamour. “To experience it so publicly is like another layer, and then to have to see what you thought was your life still play out in season 10. It’s a major mindf***.”
As for Cooke, he was recently seen kissing The Real Housewives of Orange County alum Meghan King on Thursday, April 16.
“Kyle didn’t know Meghan prior to being at the same event last night. She had pursued him the second she saw him,” a source exclusively told Us. “It’s nothing serious, but they did hang out all night even after the event was over, and made out several times in public.”
Nicole Kidman is reflecting on the moment she was told her mother Janelle Kidman had died right before she was about to go on stage to accept an award.
Speaking to Variety on Saturday, April 18, Nicole, 58, detailed how she found out about the loss at the Venice International Film Festival as she was preparing to accept a best actress award for her role in Babygirl.
“I was about to go out on stage, and I found out that my mother had passed,” Nicole told the outlet. “I went right back to my room in Venice, was getting into bed, and I was completely devastated.”
Nicole added that as she digested the sad news at the time, she thought to herself, “‘I’m not sure how I’m going to move forward or function now.’ She was so much a part of my existence.”
In September 2024, the Big Little Lies actress left Venice early to make her way home to Australia after learning of Janelle’s death.
Speaking to Variety on Saturday, Nicole also described her “harrowing” attempt to leave Venice in the middle of the night trying to return to her home country.
“I remember getting into a boat in the canal, literally at night, trying to find my way to the airport, and then turning around going, ‘I can’t even do this,’” she said. “Then I went back to bed. And I was alone. My husband wasn’t there, my children weren’t there. I was there to win an award, which should’ve been a beautiful thing. That there is the contrast of life.” (Nicole was married to Keith Urban at the time, with whom she shares daughters Sunday Rose, 17, and Faith Margaret, 14. Nicole and Urban finalized their divorce in January.)

Janelle and Nicole Kidman. (Photo by James D. Morgan/Getty Images)
At the time, Babygirl director Halina Reijn confirmed Janelle’s death as she read a statement on behalf of Nicole during a Venice International Film Festival panel.
“Today I arrived in Venice to find out shortly after, that my beautiful, brave mother Janelle Ann Kidman has just passed,” Reijn, 50, read on Nicole’s behalf. “I am in shock and I have to go to my family, but this award is for her, she shaped me, she guided me and she made me.”
The statement continued, “I am beyond grateful that I get to say her name to all of you through Halina, the collision of life and art is heart-breaking, and my heart is broken.”
Less than a week after their mother’s death Nicole and her sister Antonia, 55, took to Instagram to share a joint post thanking friends and fans for their condolences and well wishes.
“My sister and I along with our family want to thank you for the outpouring of love and kindness we have felt this week,” Nicole and Antonia wrote. “Every message we have received from those who loved and admired our Mother has meant more to us than we will ever be able to express. Thank you from our whole family for respecting our privacy as we take care of each other ❤️”
Having clearly appealed to fans across demographics, a new Prime Video movie is proving to be a major hit for the streamer amid much bigger titles. It was released in the wake of star-driven tentpoles such as The Wrecking Crew, led by Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista, and Mercy, the sci-fi mystery starring Chris Pratt and Rebecca Ferguson. Both films dominated the Prime Video streaming charts for several weeks before the all-female action movie came out of nowhere to take the number one spot. It remains one of the top 10 movies on the global Prime Video leaderboard, and recently passed a major milestone.
The movie, directed by Vicky Jewson, features a quintet of young women as ballerinas who must defend themselves against a sinister adversary played by Uma Thurman. The five protagonists are played by Lana Condor, the star of Netflix’s To All the Boys trilogy; Iris Apatow, who played a supporting role in the Netflix series Love; Millicent Simmonds, who starred in A Quiet Place and its sequel; Maddie Ziegler, who rose to fame after appearing in a couple of Sia music videos; and Avantika, who played a supporting role in the Mean Girls remake.
The movie in question is Pretty Lethal. It premiered on Prime Video on March 25 and, according to FlixPatrol, has spent more than 20 days on the streamer’s top 10 charts. Pretty Lethal received mixed reviews and is now sitting at a 56% score on Rotten Tomatoes. The aggregator website’s consensus reads, “Starting off with a fun hook and diluting it with a plethora of clichés, Pretty Lethal doesn’t reach its full operatic potential but doles out enough balletic action to remain reasonably en pointe.” In his review, Collider’s Ross Bonaime praised the film’s action sequences and noted its similarity to other movies produced by the original John Wick‘s co-director David Leitch. He wrote, “In one particularly inspired choice, these ballerinas decide to stick a razor blade between their toes and utilize their dance moves to fight off their attackers. Many of these fights are blunt and full of big, wild moments that mostly carry the film, despite its fairly weak narrative.” Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
March 25, 2026
88 minutes
Vicky Jewson
Kate Freund
Kelly McCormick, Mike Karz, Piers Tempest, Bill Bindley
There was a real variety of music that came out in the 1980s, which makes it difficult to even assess what the best of that decade even was, but there’s no harm in trying. Actually, there’s a little harm in trying. People might be a bit unhappy, but there’s some personal bias here. If you want to have a semi-biased and semi-objective stab at throwing out the names of 10 albums from the 1980s that are the best, go for it.
A few of the albums below are among the most popular of all time, and deservedly so, while others are a little more underrated, or perhaps classifiable as cult classics (if that term applies to the world of music). Also, yes, like, three of these albums had songs that were prominently used in Stranger Things. Stranger Things is not the reason those albums are here. But it’s being acknowledged right out of the gate, and no more, once the intro’s over. Which it is… right about… now.
Things for The Go-Betweens were not so good, in 1988, with tensions that often seem to come about from just being in a band for more than a few years, and also some romance-related drama, particularly because members of the band were – or had been – romantically linked. It wasn’t quite as infamously messy as Fleetwood Mac around the time of Rumours, but like that album, heavy feelings may have been put into music… specifically, the music heard throughout 16 Lovers Lane.
It was the final Go-Betweens album done as a full band, and is easily the best of the bunch. 16 Lovers Lane is incredible throughout, as far as the lyrics are concerned, and then musically, everything is catchy and immediate without being overly simplistic. It feels ahead of its time, as far as alternative (or almost even indie) rock goes, and maybe that’s why it wasn’t hugely successful upon release, and needed some time before people really started to recognize how borderline-perfect it was.
Resist them if you want, because Metallica are kind of to metal what U2 are to rock… well, maybe. Both bands were at their peak in the 1980s, and both became so popular that being a detractor of either is now kind of cool, especially because members of both bands are sometimes outspoken and a bit much. But… the music. It comes back to the music. And also, sorry to U2. The Joshua Tree was right on the cusp of being here, like at #11 or #12. That’s the only reason there’s been a big old U2 tangent.
You mightn’t even usually like this kind of metal or hard rock that much, but still find plenty to appreciate here.
As for Master of Puppets, it’s the best Metallica album, and there’s even an argument to be made that it’s the best metal album of all time. It certainly feels as though it could be the most approachable, because you mightn’t even usually like this kind of metal or hard rock that much, but still find plenty to appreciate here. It rocks. It’s an album that rocks. What more do you want?
There is an almost uncomfortable amount of introspection, self-doubt, and anxiety throughout Soul Mining, which was the debut album of a band somewhat frustratingly called The The. The The is sort of just Matt Johnson, though, and Soul Mining remains the greatest collection of songs he put out. But the struggles explored do have to be emphasized, since even the album’s sunniest song, “This Is the Day,” is one of those songs that’s got an energetic and possibly hopeful sound, but the lyrics get more cynical – maybe even more sarcastic – the more you think about them.
“Uncertain Smile” is also a highlight, as the centerpiece of the album (quite literally, being the fourth of seven tracks), with the piano outro being especially memorable. Elsewhere, Johnson pulls from the Bruce Springsteen circa-Born to Run playbook of having a perfect opening track and then an ideal – and epic-length – closing track, to really make a strong first and final impression (with Soul Mining, it kicks off with “I’ve Been Waitin’ for Tomorrow (All of My Life),” and ends with the appropriately named “Giant,” which runs for almost 10 minutes).
There were only four proper studio albums released by The Smiths during their rather short time together as a band, and of those, the third, The Queen Is Dead, is the greatest. It’s boring to say that, but the consistency here is undeniable, as is the fact that it contains so many of the band’s greatest songs (including the title track, “I Know It’s Over,” “Bigmouth Strikes Again,” and “There Is a Light That Never Goes Out”).
You also know The Queen Is Dead is good because it endures, even though Morrissey (the vocalist and lyricist of The Smiths) seems increasingly keen to be as polarizing as possible in his post-Smiths endeavors. It helps that there’s more than just Morrissey to appreciate on an album by The Smiths, and his lyrics and voice (as they were, back in the 1980s) were undeniably compelling and unique.
One more potentially niche album to put here alongside 16 Lovers Lane and Soul Mining, but Hats really is something special, and the way it also sounds so distinctly 1980s makes it easy to put here. It’s synth-heavy, but also a good deal more mellow than much of the full-on synth-pop that was popular throughout the 1980s, using that sort of instrumentation in a low-key and atmospheric fashion.
The Blue Nile did this, to some extent, on several other albums, but never quite as memorably as was done on Hats. Without visuals, you do feel like you’ve sat through some kind of movie through the music alone, and an album being able to create that sensation is remarkably impressive. It’s an undeniably beautiful album, and further, one that’s beautiful in a singular way, so it’s certainly worth celebrating.
There is a song on Thriller called “The Girl Is Mine,” a duet with Paul McCartney, that might well be the worst song to appear on an otherwise fantastic album. It is agonizingly corny. And, sure, there are other songs on Thriller that get a bit hammy and more than a little over-the-top, but not to such an eye-rolling extent. If it wasn’t on the album, then this album would be placed even higher.
Maybe it speaks to the quality of everything else that Thriller is still right up there, and very much a classic of its decade (and of all time, really) regardless. Of its nine songs, seven were released as singles, and many of those singles are among the most recognizable songs of the 1980s, with the music videos for a bunch of them certainly helping. One of the non-single songs, though, shouldn’t be overlooked: “Baby Be Mine,” the second track on the album, which is honestly kind of a banger.
Talking Heads released their first albums in the 1970s, and they were pretty great, but the band’s best single album, Remain in Light, came out right at the start of the 1980s. For what it’s worth, the band’s most popular album, Speaking in Tongues, came out a few years later (and it does have “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)” on it, which could be the band’s very best song), but Remain in Light is still the strongest.
It’s one of those middle-ground albums you can look back on and appreciate in hindsight, being a marriage of the slightly weirder stuff Talking Heads were doing in the late 1970s with the (slightly) increased emphasis on pop/rock later in the 1980s. You’ve got a balance here, yet even then, Remain in Light doesn’t sound quite like any other Talking Heads album, which might make it more worthy of being described as a “lightning in a bottle” kind of album.
There are earlier albums by The Cure that could be called “rock,” but Disintegration feels like the band drifting away from that genre to a greater extent than they had previously, and for the better. Not that there aren’t some more energetic songs on Disintegration, but many of them are more patiently-paced and drawn-out, which can be seen when you look at the album’s length of 72 minutes, and the fact that it houses 12 tracks… so, the average track length is about six minutes.
You really don’t mind, though, because of what is done across the length of some of these longer songs. “Pictures of You,” the second song on the album, is particularly impressive, and probably demonstrates, strongest of all, what the band’s going for with many of the songs here. It’s also an atmospherically unique and distinctly moving album, the latter so in ways that are admittedly a little difficult to put into words.
Yes, it’s the album with “Running Up That Hill” on it, and sure, it’s probably the best song on the album, and it comes first, so you might be worried about the rest of Hounds of Love. Well, the pace and quality are maintained. The remaining 11 tracks on Kate Bush’s greatest overall album are also phenomenal, with special mention to “Cloudbusting,” since it truly deserves to be regarded and praised alongside “Running Up That Hill” and “Wuthering Heights.”
There is much more to Kate Bush than Hounds of Love, and if you like her music being a little quirkier or experimental, maybe you’d prefer something that sounds a bit less immediate and punchy. Then again, Hounds of Love has the art pop dominate the first half of the album, and then the second half does go into more experimental and out-there territory, making Hounds of Love feel a bit like listening to two amazing (albeit quite short) albums back to back.
The placement of Prince over Michael Jackson on a ranking like this might lose you, but if it has, then it’s better you’ve been lost right near the end of the ranking than closer to the start. Silver lining to everything. But also, come on. It’s Purple Rain. It’s nine absolutely perfect songs that could’ve all been singles on their own (hell, a pretty impressive five of them were), and there are no weak tracks here; no corny duet with a former Beatle or anything of the sort.
And yes, Purple Rain is technically a soundtrack album, but in that case, it’s probably the best soundtrack ever. Purple Rain the movie is fine, and made a little finer because you hear the songs from Purple Rain (the album) throughout it, but the album is absolutely where it’s at. The album is Purple Rain. And Purple Rain is untouchable. It does also have to be noted that Prince was on fire throughout the whole of the 1980s, and albums like 1999 (1982) and Sign o’ the Times (1987) also deserve to be considered among the greatest of the decade. Still, nothing is as perfect as Purple Rain. In just under three-quarters of an hour, it lays out everything great about Prince, thoroughly laying bare why he was considered such a legend.
July 27, 1984
111 minutes
Albert Magnoli
Albert Magnoli, William Blinn
Apollonia Kotero
Apollonia
At a time when comedies and — more precisely, mid-budget comedies — are viewed as no longer viable in theaters, a movie from 2025 quietly delivered a solid box-office performance. The movie’s profile was no doubt boosted by a trio of popular stars and positive reviews, factors that seem to be working in its favor during its home-video run too. The film has passed a major milestone on the streaming charts, after having tripled its reported budget in theaters. The film stars an MCU alum, the co-lead of 2022’s biggest movie, and an up-and-coming actor who has often been rumored to be in the running to play James Bond.
The film was directed by David Freyne, and premiered at the 2025 Toronto International Film Festival. It was given a theatrical release by A24 in the domestic market in November 2025, where it grossed $35 million against a reported budget of $12 million, before debuting on Apple TV earlier this year. The movie combines romance and fantasy for a will-they-won’t-they narrative brimming with philosophical insight and tender observations about true love. It stars Elizabeth Olsen as a recently deceased woman who is trapped in purgatory, where she must decide whom she wants to spend an eternity in the afterlife with — her husband or her first love, played by Miles Teller and Callum Turner, respectively.
The movie in question is Eternity; it debuted in theaters at around the same time as another fantasy comedy, Good Fortune, starring Keanu Reeves, Aziz Ansari, and Seth Rogen. Both movies received positive reviews from critics and audiences. Eternity now holds a “Certified Fresh” 77% critics’ score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, where the consensus reads, “Marrying a clever spin on the afterlife with an infectious sweet streak, Eternity is a spiritual successor to classic romantic screwball comedies that’s worthy of their company.” But it’s the film’s “Verified Hot” 90% audience score that seems to be propelling its streaming success. According to FlixPatrol, Eternity has spent more than 40 days on the domestic Apple TV charts so far, despite competition from major titles such as F1, The Gorge, and Greyhound. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
November 26, 2025
114 minutes
David Freyne
David Freyne, Pat Cunnane
Tim White, Trevor White
Dylan Sprouse was involved in a scary incident after an intruder reportedly trespassed on his home he shares with wife Barbara Palvin.
According to multiple reports, Sprouse, 33, confronted the intruder on the couple’s Hollywood Hills estate in Los Angeles on Friday, April 17. (TMZ was the first to report the news.)
The Los Angeles Times reported that Sprouse tackled a man on the lawn after Palvin noticed “the creepy guy.” Palvin, 32, reportedly called 911 at 12:30 a.m., informing them that there was an attempted burglary at their home.
The Suite Life of Zack & Cody star reportedly had a gun and restrained the intruder until police arrived, per TMZ, who cited unnamed sources.
Police reportedly told The Times that the suspect was taken in on outstanding warrants and that no injuries were reported. Per the outlet, the intruder made it on to the property but not inside the couple’s house.
Us Weekly has reached out to Sprouse’s representatives for comment.
Sprouse first met Victoria’s Secret model Palvin at a party in 2017 and “clicked” but their romance got off to a slow start when she ignored his subsequent DM message for six months.
“I was very scared,” Palvin told British Vogue in February 2020. “I had this thought in the back, like, ‘Oh, but wait … are we going to get paparazzi’ed all the time?’”

Barbara Palvin and Dylan Sprouse. (Photo by Rich Polk/Getty Images for Universal Studios Hollywood)
After making their relationship official in 2018, the couple moved in together in Brooklyn in January 2019. Their relationship soared to new heights when Sprouse proposed in September 2022.
Sprouse and Palvin spoke about their engagement in a June 2023 interview with V Magazine.
“For me, at least, marriage is a promise of kind of loving you endlessly and being your partner. I’m nervous about the event,” Sprouse told the outlet. “Frankly, it’s about the first dance. I’m nervous about a choreographed dance.”
For her part, Palvin admitted that the engagement was more nerve-racking than the marriage itself even though she knew he was The One from the beginning.
“I mean, a man has time to prepare for the proposal — Dylan kept the ring for seven months before he asked the question — but for me, it was right then and there,” she said. “I knew since we started dating that I want to marry him, but it’s a big decision.”
In an interview with Vogue published in July 2023, Palvin recalled Sprouse’s proposal, which took place during a camping trip in California.
“It was very romantic,” she told the outlet. “I was suspicious and thought he might pop the question because he packed a shirt that was too nice for camping.”
The couple ultimately tied the knot in Albertirsa, Hungary in July 2023, exchanging vows at the same church where Palvin’s parents got married more than three decades earlier.
The year that saw the release of monumental sci-fi movies such as Christopher Nolan‘s Interstellar and Tom Cruise‘s instant classic Edge of Tomorrow also witnessed the quiet success of a movie that has grown equally in stature in the decade since. The movie cost a fraction of the budgets of Interstellar and Edge of Tomorrow, both of which carried reported budgets of around $160 million, and it marked the beginning of a particularly exciting studio-filmmaker collaboration. Both the studio and the director continue to work together to this day, with their latest project having recently entered production in England. Their first movie — the one from 2014 – is currently streaming on HBO Max, but not for too long.
It remains startlingly relevant even today. In fact, with its potent themes of artificial intelligence and technocrats ruling the world, it is perhaps more relevant now than it was back in 2014. The movie follows a programmer who is invited by a reclusive CEO to test a humanoid robot powered by AI. The film starred Oscar Isaac as the CEO, Domhnall Gleeson as the audience surrogate programmer, and Alicia Vikander as the robot.
We’re talking, of course, about the sci-fi masterpiece Ex Machina, directed by Alex Garland. The filmmaker had previously made a name for himself as a writer on Danny Boyle‘s 28 Days Later and Sunshine, as well as the underrated sci-fi movie Never Let Me Go. Ex Machina was his directorial debut and was distributed domestically by A24. It grossed $37 million worldwide against a reported budget of $15 million, and went on to receive an Oscar nomination in the Best Visual Effects category. The movie now holds a “Certified Fresh” 92% score on the aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, where the critics’ consensus reads, “Ex Machina leans heavier on ideas than effects, but it’s still a visually polished piece of work — and an uncommonly engaging sci-fi feature.” Garland went on to direct a string of genre movies for A24 – the divisive horror film Men, the dystopian thriller Civil War, the anti-war thriller Warfare, and the upcoming video game adaptation of Elden Ring. Ex Machina will be removed from HBO Max domestically on May 1. Stay tuned to Collider for more updates.
April 24, 2015
108 minutes
Alex Garland
Alex Garland
Allon Reich, Andrew Macdonald
The long-running drama between Kim Kardashian, Kris Jenner, and Ray J just took another explosive turn. A newly surfaced legal letter reveals Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner demanded a massive seven-figure payout from the rapper, alleging he violated a nondisclosure agreement tied to their past settlement.

The dispute dates back decades to Kim Kardashian and Ray J’s infamous 2002 Cabo San Lucas sex tape, later released by Vivid Entertainment in 2007 as Kim Kardashian, Superstar. While the tape helped launch the Kardashian empire, it has also fueled years of legal battles, including a 2023 settlement reportedly worth around $6 million, paid in installments.
According to reports, Kardashian and Jenner sent a legal letter in May 2025 claiming Ray J breached the NDA tied to that settlement. They alleged he must return the $5 million already paid and hand over an additional $1 million each due to the alleged violations. The letter also stated they were no longer obligated to pay the final $1 million installment.
In a follow-up letter dated October 3, the duo accused Ray J of having “materially breached” the agreement after discussing the settlement during a livestream. The warning was blunt, stating that “before he thinks about making further comments about Ms. Kardashian and Ms. Jenner, your client should understand that his future clout chasing comes with – at minimum- seven-figure consequences.”

The legal battle quickly escalated. That same October, Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner filed a defamation lawsuit against Ray J over claims made during a livestream in which he accused them of being investigated for racketeering. Ray J fired back with a countersuit, denying the allegations and accusing Kardashian and Jenner of violating the same NDA through comments made on their Hulu series, “The Kardashians.”
More recently, the mother-daughter duo suffered a setback in court. A Los Angeles Superior Court judge denied most of their motion to keep details of the 2023 settlement sealed, allowing more information to remain public.

The ruling emphasized that the case is not about “Kardashian engaging in sexual activities,” noting the tape has already been widely publicized. “Rather, the issue is whether the settlement agreement that the parties entered into in 2023 (and documents describing certain terms of that settlement agreement) should be placed or maintained under seal,” it said.
The court further stated Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner “have presented no admissible evidence that disclosure of the settlement agreement and its terms would cause them any harm,” calling their arguments “too vague, speculative, amorphous, and unsupported to support the requested sealing order.”

Despite the legal setbacks, both Kim Kardashian and Kris Jenner have strongly denied Ray J’s allegations. Ray J’s “claim that I had a plan with my mother and others to release a sex tape, defraud the public, and file a “fake” lawsuit against the porn company that released it to “create buzz” is a lie,” Kardashian said in a March filing.
Jenner echoed that stance, calling claims she orchestrated the tape’s release “absolutely false.” In her declaration, she denied the suggestion she “orchestrated or produced sex tapes involving [her] daughter,” adding that the accusations were “not only entirely untrue, but deeply offensive and harmful” and something which has “haunted [her] for decades.”
The 70-year-old further emphasized, “In no world would I ever be involved in any way, shape, or form of peddling tapes of my daughter like this.”

The ongoing dispute has also taken a personal and financial toll. Kim Kardashian said she “incurred expenses to combat [Ray J’s] lies and manage [her] well-being and reputation,” including therapy and working with communications and legal advisers.
Kris Jenner similarly revealed she faced mounting costs tied to therapy and crisis management following Ray J’s claims. Meanwhile, Kardashian has accused Ray J of revisiting long-disputed allegations tied to earlier legal battles involving her family and his mother, Sonja Norwood.
Everyone can agree that the sci-fi genre has always been unpredictable. It thrives on big ideas and expansive worlds. All that ambition comes at a price, though, because all of these concepts are only as strong as their execution. When a sci-fi story fails, it’s almost always because the scale overwhelms the storytelling. However, sometimes, the exact opposite happens.
Some shows in the genre are simply ahead of their time and experiment in ways that the audience just isn’t ready for. It’s only years later that people realize how far-sighted they were, when fiction starts feeling a little too close to reality. Here is a list of such forgotten sci-fi shows that have stood the test of time and aged like fine wine.
Fringe is one of the very rare sci-fi shows that has something new to offer on every rewatch. The series, created by J. J. Abrams, follows FBI agent Olivia Dunham (Anna Torv), scientist Walter Bishop (John Noble), and his son Peter Bishop (Joshua Jackson) as they investigate bizarre cases tied to what they refer to as fringe science. The show begins as a classic mystery-of-the-week procedural, but as the story progresses, it reveals a much larger narrative involving complex biological experiments, parallel universes, and alternate timelines. Fringe holds up so well today thanks to its commitment to character and plot development.
Viewers have consistently pointed out how the smallest of details pay off eventually, which gives the series a sense of purpose that becomes clearer with time. Its wild sci-fi concepts are grounded by the relatable, messy dynamic between Walter, Olivia, and Peter. Ultimately, Fringe isn’t a show about strange phenomena. Instead, it explores what happens when people react when they are dealing with the impossible. The science hooks the viewer in, but it’s the emotional depth that keeps them invested, and that’s a bar most modern series struggle to reach.
12 Monkeys, based on the 1995 film of the same name, follows James Cole (Aaron Stanford), a man sent back in time from a post-apocalyptic future to stop a deadly plague before it wipes out most of humanity. His virologist, Dr. Cassandra Railly (Amanda Schull), accompanies him on this deadly mission, and the two work against a ticking clock to track down the origins of the virus. The catch here is that even the smallest of missteps can result in entire timeline shifts that threaten the protagonists’ very existence.
From there, the narrative spirals out into a sense web of time-travel mechanics and paradoxes. By its later seasons, 12 Monkeys is juggling multiple versions of its characters and asking larger philosophical questions about fate and free will. Every twist somehow reframes the events that came before, but none of it is unintentional. 12 Monkeys is definitely ambitious, but it manages to make it all work by striking the perfect balance between highbrow sci-fi and a story that feels extremely human.
It’s unfair how short-lived Almost Human was, especially since the show blended elements of sci-fi and cyberpunk with a traditional police procedural. The series takes place in the year 2048 and imagines a world where technological advancement has led to crime rates increasing by 400 percent. To fix this, every human has been forcibly paired with a lifelike android partner. The story follows Detective John Kennex (Karl Urban), who survives a devastating ambush and a 17-month coma, and returns to duty with a prosthetic leg and a deep mistrust of robots. This trauma leads to him developing an extremely hostile behavior toward his android, Dorian (Michael Ealy), a discontinued android designed with emotional capacity. However, what he doesn’t know is that Dorian might just be more human than anyone else around him.
The show follows an episodic structure where John and Dorian deal with cases including black-market organ trafficking and illegal synthetic skin trade. At the same time, there are serialized threads like the details of John’s ambush, the mysterious inSyndicate gang, and deeper conspiracies within the system that contribute to an overarching narrative. Overall, Almost Human definitely leans on some predictable beats, but the show’s sharp writing, strong performances, and distinct visual style have turned it into an absolute cult favorite over the years.
Colony takes place in a near-future Los Angeles where people live under alien occupation, and that’s already a hook that reels most people in. The story follows former FBI agent Will Bowman (Josh Holloway), who is forced to work for the traitorous regime to protect his family, while his wife Katie Bowman (Sarah Wayne Callies) is secretly involved in the Resistance. That setup alone gives the show an immediate tension, because the conflict isn’t just outside, it’s also within Will and Katie’s household. Unlike many other dystopian shows, Colony grounds its horrors in logic that feels a little too real. The aliens mostly remain a mystery throughout the story. Instead, their presence manifests in checkpoints, rationing, surveillance, propaganda, mysterious disappearances, and the slow normalization of this life.
In fact, at times, the show feels like a political drama, with the sci-fi elements serving only as a backdrop. That’s not a bad thing at all, though, because this allows the characters and their choices to take center stage. Will is never presented as the perfect hero. He is always forced to choose between complicity and survival, while Katie has to live an entirely secret life. This dynamic is what makes the show so compelling, especially as the occupation grows harsher and stronger. Colony is the perfect example of intelligent sci-fi because it understands that a dystopia doesn’t have to be flashy to be absolutely horrifying.
Sense8 is easily one of the most ambitious sci-fi shows Netflix has ever produced. The show follows eight strangers across the world, who suddenly realize they are mentally and emotionally linked. These people can communicate across continents, step into each other’s lives, and even borrow each other’s skills when they need to. However, Sense8 is much more than just a story about psychic connection. The show is a masterclass in representation and does absolute justice to its characters, who are radically different in culture, class, gender, and sexuality.
Every storyline holds equal weight, and the entire narrative revolves around how these eight people slowly become one another’s safe place. As these sensates try to understand what is happening to them, they are also being hunted by forces that see their existence as dangerous. That gives the story a constant urgency without ever sacrificing its character arcs. Sense8 was filmed across multiple countries, and that scale obviously gives it a distinct visual richness that no other Netflix series has been able to match. It feels like pure cinema in the form of television, which makes its untimely cancellation all the more unfortunate.
Another show that deserved a longer life than it got is Firefly. The sci-fi series takes place in the year 2517 and follows Captain Malcolm “Mal” Reynolds (Nathan Fillion), a former Browncoat soldier, and his small crew as they survive on the outer edges of the galaxy aboard their ship Serenity. The group takes on smuggling jobs, transporting gigs, and anything else that keeps the ship running. Each episode presents a new job or crisis, but as the story goes on, viewers learn that there is something much bigger simmering under the surface. Firefly gradually builds its overarching plot and hints at something far darker within the Alliance than meets the eye.
This balance between the crew’s episodic adventures and a larger narrative is the show’s greatest strength. Not to mention that Firefly unfolds with a sense of realism that sci-fi rarely ever aims for. The series doesn’t present the future as polished or without flaws. In this world, ships break down, planets are underdeveloped, and technology can’t magically fix all problems. This is exactly why the world in Firefly feels so relatable. Add in the show’s documentary-style storytelling and visuals, and the viewers get an experience that feels both expansive and intimate, even if it didn’t end on the perfect note.
Continuum was, hands down, one of the greatest and most underrated sci-fi shows of the 2010s. The story begins in 2077, with law enforcement officer Kiera Cameron (Rachel Nichols) accidentally traveling back in time to 2012 alongside a group of revolutionaries known as Liber8. The show initially plays out like a chase where a cop is trying to track down terrorists across time. However, this dynamic evolves pretty quickly to show that Liber8 is actually fighting against a future where corporations have replaced governments and taken total control of society.
Kiera is at the heart of this conflict, where she is trying to preserve this very future and return to her family while also slowly realizing that the world she is fighting for might not be worth saving at all. Each episode blends procedural storytelling with larger themes of power, freedom, and control. As the timeline begins to shift, even the smallest of decisions leads to devastating consequences. Continuum constantly operates in a grey area as the audience is forced to pick sides, but that’s what makes the experience all the more immersive. The show is futuristic yet still grounded in a struggle that feels all too real.
2012 – 2015-00-00
showcase
Pat Williams, David Frazee, William Waring, amanda tapping, Mike Rohl, Jon Cassar, Simon Barry, Paul Shapiro
Sam Egan, Jeff King, Jonathan Walker, Jonathan Walker, Shelley Eriksen, Denis McGrath, Jeremy Smith, Matt Venables, Raul Sanchez Inglis, Sara B. Cooper
For most network procedurals, main character deaths are to be expected at any given turn, and viewers have to go in with the knowledge that their favorite characters could be killed off at any time. Such are the rules for intense and long-running series like Grey’s Anatomy, and Criminal Minds. There are other procedurals, though, that have lighter tones and have thus essentially guaranteed the safety of their core main characters, like High Potential, and — until this week — Will Trent.
Will Trent has never shied away from darker storylines, particularly through its characters’ tragic backstories and the heavy cases that they work each week. Still, though, the show has an unspoken agreement with its viewers that the main characters will always make it out alive, and that things will always get better. No character has had to survive the sort of lasting stakes that would change the status quo or destroy the show’s darkly comedic tone. As of this week’s episode, though, Will Trent has broken its core rule and irreparably damaged the show, with the shocking death of Amanda Wagner (Sonja Sohn).
Amanda Wagner has always been a fundamental part of Will Trent, and the show should never have killed her off, especially since she’s still alive in the Karin Slaughter book series on which the show is based. That said, if Amanda had to die, it would’ve made more sense to have her die from her gunshot wound last season. She could have died in an intense moment in the Season 3 finale after being shot, or in a quiet moment this season from long-lasting complications. Instead, Will Trent gave Amanda a disrespectful off-screen death that only seems to serve the purpose of furthering Will’s (Ramón Rodriguez) story arc. James Ulster’s (Greg Germann) serial killer daughter, Adelaide Trevens (Mallory Jansen), has been torturing Will since she abducted his uncle, Antonio (John Ortiz), several episodes back. In this episode, “The Blank Expanse of Nothing,” Adelaide has agreed to negotiate Antonio’s safe return with Will, on the condition that he doesn’t tell anyone.
9 Episodes After Ulster’s Death, ‘Will Trent’ Has Officially Found Its Next Great Villain
James Ulster has a disturbing successor.
Will has been faking an illness to take some time off work and deal with Adelaide. Nobody knows that he’s in contact with her, but Amanda finds out when she goes to Will’s house to check on him. Later, Amanda goes off on her own to look into The Commander, a child who’s working with Adelaide, before she’s then surprised by someone who sneaks up on her. This is the last time we ever see Amanda Wagner alive. At the end of the episode, Adelaide interrupts her meeting with Will to explode at him for telling Amanda. She then gives him a “surprise” that turns out to be Amanda’s dead body. Instead of an emotional on-screen death, all Amanda gets is a violent off-screen stabbing. To make things worse, her death is only used to show Will’s brief reaction, undercutting the emotional impact of this major loss.
There are absolutely certain procedurals that can get away with killing off main characters, but Will Trent is not one of them. It has a small, tightly-knit ensemble cast that will be forever changed by Amanda’s loss. Everyone cares about her, but Faith (Iantha Richardson) is losing her aunt and mentor, and Will is losing the person who named him and put him on this path. Will Trent is also a funny, silly show that regularly breaks up its dark cases with delightfully ridiculous dream sequences and quippy banter. There will be no going back to the silly humor or tight-knit GBI / APD dynamic of the Will Trent from before Amanda’s death — take 9-1-1, for example, which shifted away from being a hopeful show about found family and instead became a heavy show about grief after Bobby Nash’s (Peter Krause) death.
In a post-episode interview with Variety, Will Trent‘s showrunners, Liz Heldens, Daniel T. Thomsen, and Karine Rosenthal, explained their controversial decision. They teased a “completely new dynamic” and “a reset for our characters” that will change the entire show forever. The problem is, Will Trent doesn’t need a reset. Season 4 has been firing on all cylinders. The only weak spot this season has been that the show hasn’t given Amanda much to do beyond brief storylines related to her recovery from the shooting and a betrayal from her recent ex-girlfriend (Janina Gavankar) — both of which put her job in jeopardy. Will Trent has clearly been setting up a storyline where Amanda temporarily loses her job and gets replaced by the conniving Bill Appleyard (Jason Davis), so it feels very out of left field for the show to kill Amanda off at this point. By killing off Amanda, Will Trent has proven that it’s not wedded to consistency in its storylines, and it is no longer the show that fans fell in love with.
Will Trent airs Tuesday nights at 8:00 P.M. EST on ABC.
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