Entertainment
Emily Osment Addresses Her Age Difference With Montana Jordan
Georgie and Mandy’s First Marriage centers around an age-gap romance — but do stars Emily Osment and Montana Jordan feel the years between them?
“Not really, to be honest,” Osment, 34, exclusively told Us Weekly at CBS Fest on Wednesday, April 15. “There’s a few TV shows that he doesn’t know about but other than that, it’s kind of it.”
Osment pointed out that her onscreen husband is mature — and it helps that he is already a dad at 23. While looking ahead at the second half of season 2, Osment teased where Georgie and Mandy’s relationship could end up.
“They really love each other. There’s no doubt about that,” she noted. “And I think it’s pretty clear that they have really great chemistry, and you want them to work. We’re all hoping that the first marriage is the same to people as the second and third [marriage].”
Viewers originally met Georgie and Mandy on The Big Bang Theory prequel series Young Sheldon, which aired from 2017 to 2024. As The Big Bang Theory viewers know, it has been mentioned that Georgie has been married several times. This has subsequently concerned fans rooting for Georgie and Mandy, but Osment has urged viewers not to give up hope.
“Just personally, I hope it takes them a really long time to get there,” Osment exclusively told Us in December 2025 about her hope for the hit CBS show. “Hence the title, everybody knows that that’s coming at some point — and it keeps people watching a little longer.”

Osment prefers a lengthy build-up, adding, “Personally, for me, I’d like to see it have some legs before they break up.”
Despite also being “worried” about the fictional couple’s future, Osment chose to focus on the positive, adding, “I am saying this [based on] nothing at all. We get the scripts about 12 hours before we read it at the table. So we have no idea what’s coming down the pipeline ever.”
Osment acknowledged at the time that Georgie and Mandy’s age gap could play a role in their marriage falling apart. “We can maybe assume it’s because of the age difference. It could be that and a whole bundle of other stuff,” she noted.
The actress credited the sitcom for telling grounded stories about the ups and downs couples face in a marriage.
“It could be anything, but I have this inkling that it may have something to do with him soon becoming the tire king of Texas,” she added. “We know from The Big Bang Theory that he’s the most successful tire God, basically. When people become really successful in their job, sometimes it can affect their home life.”
Georgie & Mandy’s First Marriage airs on CBS Thursdays at 8 p.m. ET and episodes are currently streaming on Paramount+.
Entertainment
‘Dexter’ Meets ‘Bosch’ in the 8-Part Mystery Thriller Dominating Prime Video
Prime Video has no shortage of glossy thriller shows, but Scarpetta has arrived with a hook that’s a little more forensic and a little less generic than usual. Adapting Patricia Cornwell’s long-running novels was already a smart move on paper, especially with a lead as durable as Kay Scarpetta. What’s helped the show pop is that it feels like the kind of series viewers can settle into fast: crime scenes, procedural detail, strong personalities, and just enough family mess around the edges. That formula seems to be working, because Scarpetta is currently sitting at No. 3 on Prime Video’s worldwide TV chart.
Scarpetta stars Nicole Kidman as Dr. Kay Scarpetta, alongside Jamie Lee Curtis, Bobby Cannavale, Simon Baker, Rosy McEwen, Jacob Lumet Cannavale, Hunter Parrish, and Ariana DeBose. The show follows a brilliant forensic pathologist using advanced investigative tools to unravel murders, with settings spanning Florida, Virginia, and Charleston. That’s a very solid spine for a crime thriller, and the names involved give it obvious weight.
Is ‘Scarpetta’ Worth a Watch?
Collider’s review stated that Scarpetta is a compelling but occasionally uneven crime procedural that succeeds largely because of its outstanding performances and ambitious storytelling structure. Aidan Kelley was of the opinion that, although the show took some odd turns out of place in a straightforward detective drama, its strong cast and engaging mystery make it a worthwhile addition to Prime Video’s growing lineup of prestige crime adaptations.
“Scarpetta is an interesting beast. Its performances are captivating, and the chemistry between all the actors is electric. That said, while its murder-mystery storyline is competently spooled out, its bizarre detours into unfamiliar territory lead to mixed results. Given the amount of time it’s taken for any streamer to successfully adapt Cornwell’s books, it’s going to be very interesting to see how discourse among hardcore fans differs from that of Prime Video subscribers looking for their next crime series fix. It’s a tough case, but Scarpetta is still worth exploring to see what secrets might lie beneath its surface.”
Scarpetta is now streaming on Prime Video.
- Release Date
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March 11, 2026
- Network
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Prime Video
- Showrunner
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Elizabeth Sarnoff
- Directors
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David Gordon Green, Charlotte Brändström
Entertainment
James Lafferty and Wife Alexandra Park Welcome 1st Baby
One Tree Hill star James Lafferty and his wife Alexandra Park have welcomed their first baby together.
Taking to Instagram on Friday, April 17, Lafferty, 40, and Park, 36, announced the arrival via a joint post.
“Love has new meaning. River Jay Lafferty – 12/4/2025,” they captioned the post, which featured a black-and-white image of the newborn’s hands grasping his parents’ hands.
Lafferty first met the Australian actress in 2015 when he was directing an episode of The Royals, which she starred in as Princess Eleanor from 2015 to 2018.
Us confirmed in May 2022 that Lafferty and Park said “I do” in Oahu, Hawaii, surrounded by family and friends, including OTH alum Stephen Colletti and Park’s former Royals costars Tom Austen and Merritt Patterson.
After meeting on set, the couple later continued their working relationship by creating and starring in their own series, Everyone Is Doing Great. In the comedy, they play married couple Jeremy and Andrea Davis.
“James and I met working together. That’s one of the things we love about our relationship together is that we are both so passionate about what we do and we actually met on The Royals where James was directing me back in season two so yeah it’s really not that strange [to play fictional love interests],” Park told Who magazine in August 2021.
Lafferty shared a similar sentiment in June 2023, exclusively telling Us Weekly that while “it’s been tough and challenging” to juggle work and their marriage, working side-by-side has also had its benefits.
“The first year of our marriage has been crazy because we’ve been working on season two of EDG,” Lafferty told Us. “It’s been a wild ride.”
He added, “This is sort of where we thrive. This is how we get closer when we both do what we love together.”
In February 2024, Park gushed over her husband to E! News and admitted she felt fortunate to have him in her life.
“We’ve been together for such a long time—we’re on our ninth year of being together now — so James took his time proposing,” Park joked to the outlet, adding of her marriage, “I don’t know if it surprised me, but it’s better. I feel like it was just the right thing for us to lock it down — because we’re best friends.”
Park continued, “I mean, every day is a surprise with James. We’re just really lucky to have each other.”
Entertainment
Rebecca Ferguson’s $60M Sci-Fi Thriller Is Officially a Sleeper Hit
A lot of movie stars have multiple projects lined up this year, but few are as busy as Rebecca Ferguson. She kicked off 2026 starring alongside Chris Pratt in the Amazon MGM-backed sci-fi thriller Mercy. The film received a largely negative critical response and also failed to make much of an impact at the box office. She has already followed that up with a role in The Immortal Man, the Peaky Blinders sequel film co-starring Cillian Murphy and Barry Keoghan. The movie is set to serve as a bridge between the original Peaky Blinders series and its upcoming follow-up, which is currently in production. Ferguson is also appearing in international theaters opposite Andrew Garfield in The Magic Faraway Tree, marking her first critically acclaimed hit of the year. The film is now scheduled to arrive in the United States later this year on August 21.
For Ferguson, though, the story of Mercy didn’t end with the film being a disappointment at the box office. Mercy premiered on VOD platforms like Prime Video back in February, and the film rocketed to the top of VOD charts to help make back some of its $60 million budget. Mercy then arrived on Prime Video’s streaming library late last night, and although it’s been a few weeks since its official premiere, it’s still one of the most popular movies on the platform at the time of writing. The film earned an abysmal 25% from critics on the aggregate site Rotten Tomatoes, but it was something of a fan-favorite, scoring a solid 82% on the Popcornmeter. It contains elements from both Minority Report (starring Tom Cruise) and Shooter (starring Mark Wahlberg).
What Happens in ‘Mercy’?
Mercy picks up with the death of Nicole Raven (played by Annabelle Wallis), a woman who is married to detective Christopher Raven (played by Chris Pratt). When Chris is accused of her murder, he finds himself in the Mercy court at the whim of an AI judge played by Rebecca Ferguson, and he has only 90 minutes to prove he’s innocent and escape the chair holding him captive. With the help of the AI judge, Chris Raven uses the latest in cutting-edge technology to clear his name and solve the mystery about who killed his wife, while also bringing the killer to justice.
Check out Mercy on Prime Video and stay tuned to Collider for more streaming updates and coverage of Ferguson’s future projects.
- Release Date
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January 19, 2026
- Runtime
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100 minutes
- Director
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Timur Bekmambetov
- Writers
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Marco van Belle
- Producers
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Charles Roven, Majd Nassif, Robert Amidon, Timur Bekmambetov
Entertainment
The 50 best movies on HBO Max for dedicated cinephiles
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Film school is now in session.
Entertainment
AMC’s 4-Part Thriller With No Bad Episodes Is Finally Weekend Binge Material
There’s nothing better than finding a good show to binge over your weekend, but it can be a complete bummer if you end up watching something disappointing. Luckily, there’s an AMC thriller, with four seasons, that is a total masterpiece. With all 28 episodes out now, you can easily get caught up on this incredible series before it comes back with a brand-new season next year.
What Is ‘Dark Winds’ About?
Dark Winds is based on a series of novels by Tony Hillerman called Leaphorn & Chee, and was brought to the screen by Graham Roland (with incredible executive producers like George R.R. Martin and the late Robert Redford). With the first season premiering in 2022, the Western series is centered around Joe Leaphorn (Zahn McClarnon), a Navajo Tribal Police officer who works on a reservation in the 1970s.
Joe is a taciturn, stoic man who is dedicated to keeping the people who inhabit the reservation safe. He is also committed to preserving the traditions of his tribe, which becomes increasingly difficult as time wears on. He ends up also becoming a mentor to two younger officers named Jim Chee (Kiowa Gordon) and Bernadette Maneulito (Jessica Matten). But Joe is carrying his own baggage after the loss of his teenage son; he’s haunted by grief, and this makes it even more challenging to solve the mysteries that arise each season.
‘Dark Winds’ Has Released Four Seasons of Perfect Episodes
Dark Winds would be fun enough to watch if it were merely a psychological thriller, providing viewers with suspense and some cases to solve. But the series offers so much more by weaving in supernatural elements rooted in Navajo spiritual traditions. Joe isn’t just trying to take down different villains every season; he’s also forced to battle mystical forces (like a horrific monster in Season 3). By utilizing these intriguing and unique antagonists, Dark Winds rises above other standard dramas. Every single episode is gripping to watch while we see Joe grapple with his own demons — whether it’s his grief over losing his son and his troubled marriage or the consequences of his own actions as a sometimes morally grey character.
Much of Dark Winds’ success has to do with the stellar acting of its leading man, who ensures that Joe is the ideal protagonist in that you root for him even when he’s making some questionable choices. McClarnon effortlessly blends a tough exterior with a good heart, and his often subtle performance is awe-inspiring (especially when he’s doing something mundane like riding a horse or tracking a bad guy’s footprints). However, the supporting cast of Dark Winds is every bit as impressive. A true standout is Deanna Allison, whose performance ensures that Joe’s loyal, yet aggrieved wife, Emma, is a fully-fledged character with her own wants and needs. Dark Winds also showcases some fantastic guest stars, including Noah Emmerich, Jeri Ryan, Jenna Elfman, Titus Welliver, and Franka Potente (who plays Season 4’s terrifying villain). Each actor helps weave a captivating narrative that instantly draws you into the time period and the setting, and it’s truly a crime that no one has landed an Emmy nomination for their work in the show yet.
If you needed any other reasons to watch Dark Winds, perhaps a 100% Rotten Tomatoes score would entice you even more? This score is just additional evidence that there are no bad episodes to be found in the entire masterful series. The fourth season just wrapped up a few weeks ago, which means you can complete the entirety of the show released to date. Season 5 won’t be released until sometime in 2027, which gives you plenty of time to catch up. Queue up a binge of Dark Winds this weekend, and there’s no way you’ll be disappointed.
- Release Date
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June 12, 2022
- Network
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AMC
- Directors
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Michael Nankin
- Writers
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John Wirth, Steven Judd, Max Hurwitz, Rhiana Yazzie, Thomas Brady, DezBaa’
Entertainment
Netflix’s Hit Anime Comes to Life in Near-Perfect Trailer for Live-Action Movie
Only a few days remain until Sakamoto Days makes an epic comeback, not as a new anime season for Netflix, but as a live-action feature film. Starring in this feature is Japanese idol, Ren Meguro, as he’s transformed to play the Legendary Hitman, Taro Sakamoto. The live-action adaptation was first announced in 2025, and its distributor, TOHO, made more moves to ensure people are excited for this new project.
Sakamoto Days is based on an ongoing Japanese manga of the same name by Yuto Suzuki, which follows Taro Sakamoto, a retired hitman who marries his wife, Aoi. Now working alongside his new family at their convenience store, he returns to the world of hitmen after a ¥1 billion bounty was put on Sakamoto’s head. It’s up to him and his allies to find out who’s behind it, while also following the Sakamoto family rule of no killing or risk divorce.
With only two weeks until its theatrical debut, a brand-new trailer was released, showcasing the main characters in their live-action counterparts. Alongside Meguro, also starring in this Japanese film include Japanese actress Aya Ueto as Aoi Sakamoto, Miyu Yoshimoto as Hana Sakamoto, Fumiya Takahashi as Shin Asakura, Mayuu Yokota as Lu Shaotang, Junki Tozuka (Oshi No Ko) as Heisuke Mashimo, Takumi Kitamura (Japanese remake of The Good Wife) as Nagumo, Akihisa Shiono (Mob Psycho 100 Live-action) as Kashima, Keisuke Watanabe (Kamen Rider) as Natsuki Seba, Meru Nukumi (My Hero Academia: You’re Next) as Osaragi, and Yusei Yagi as Shihsiba. Directing the project is Yuichi Fukuda, who previously worked on the live-action Gintama adaptation, and as of writing, the U.S. release has yet to be confirmed.
Is ‘Sakamoto Days’ Worth Watching?
In 2025, Netflix released its anime adaptation of Sakamoto Days, starring Matthew Mercer as Taro Sakamoto, and also features Dallas Liu (Avatar The Last Airbender Live-action), Rosalie Chiang (Turning Red), Rosie Okumura, Grace Lu (Ne Zha 2), Xolo Mariduena (Cobra Kai), Aleks Le (Solo Leveling), Keith Silverstein (Miraculous: Tales of Ladybug & Cat Noir), Xanthe Huynh (Pokémon Horizons: The Series), and Vinnie Hacker. The anime adaptation has one season with 22 episodes, and since its release, it has a high audience score of 83% on Rotten Tomatoes.
Collider’s Erick Massoto reviewed Netflix’s Sakamoto Days anime in 2025, giving it a score of 8/10. According to him, he praised the adaptation for being engaging and action-packed, to the point that it can showcase how dangerous Sakamoto is. He also claims that it’s just as good as Jujutsu Kaisen, Demon Slayer, My Hero Academia, and Chainsaw Man. However, he criticized the fatphobic jokes, claiming that they “don’t add anything to the story.”
The live-action movie of Sakamoto Days opens in Japanese theaters on April 29, 2026. The Western release date for the movie has not yet been announced. In the meantime, you can stream the anime adaptation on Netflix. Follow Collider for more updates.
- Release Date
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2025 – 2025-00-00
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Matthew Mercer
Taro Sakamoto
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Entertainment
Jennifer Aniston Adds This Collagen Peptides Powder to Coffee
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Jennifer Aniston never seems to age, and the secret is hiding in her a.m. cup of joe. Aniston adds a scoop of this Vital Proteins collagen to her morning coffee, as do thousands of five-star fans. It’s the easiest way to get Aniston’s ageless glow — especially since it’s only $30 at CVS.
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Thousands of reviewers give this collagen supplement five stars. One happy shopper wrote, “This is magical fairy dust. I have two cups of coffee each morning, with a scoop of these collagen peptides. My hair, skin, and joints have never been better . . . Wish I had started this regimen twenty years ago!”
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Entertainment
You Missed the Real Meaning Behind Netflix’s ‘Beef’ Season 2 Ending
[Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers for Beef Season 2]
Summary
Netflix’s hit series Beef, from creator Lee Sung Jin, returned to the streamer for Season 2, taking viewers to an all-new country club location. With all eight episodes now available to binge, Collider’s Steve Weintraub spoke with director Jake Schreier about his thoughts on the finale, Season 2’s themes and message, and the show’s final shots.
This season, Beef is back with an all-new ensemble cast. At a luxurious country club, a young, newly engaged Gen-Z couple, Ashley (Cailee Spaeny) and Austin (Charles Melton), accidentally witness a concerning fight between their Millennial boss, Joshua (Oscar Isaac), and his wife, Lindsay (Carey Mulligan). The young couple becomes ensnared in their boss’s unraveling marriage and coercion, as the four of them vie for the approval of their billionaire owner, Chairwoman Park (Youn Yuh-jung). This season also stars Mikaela Hoover (Superman), William Fichtner (Talamasca: The Secret Order), Seoyeon Jang (Butterfly), and Song Kang-ho (Parasite).
As for future projects, Schreier also shares details on Marvel’s upcoming untitled X-Men movie, which he’s serving as director of after successfully helming last year’s Thunderbolts*. The filmmaker will once again reunite with Beef collaborators Lee and Joanna Calo, and discuss the “less-trodden” path their team is aiming for with the movie. Check out the full conversation in the video above or the transcript below.
‘Beef’ Season 2 Is Built Around Cycles, Repetition, and Samsara
Schreier says “there is no great victory” in the Season 2 finale.
Coming into Beef Season 2, I’ve seen the whole show, and this is a jokey thing, but is the message of Season 2 don’t drink anything unless you’ve opened it yourself?
SCHREIER: [Laughs] That would certainly be wise, I think. Yeah.
The other thing: Is the message of Season 2 that the rich are always going to win?
SCHREIER: I think what Sunny’s going for in the ending and that I thought was so interesting was I don’t know that we see it quite as a win, that if you really think about that very last shot, if we’re talking about spoilers and the samsara, that was something that he and Grace Yun, our wonderful production designer, talked about so much in the season. It’s this idea that we’re all sort of trapped in this cycle, and the Chairwoman Park is trapped in it, as well, and that there’s a tinge of sadness to that ending.
So, it isn’t necessarily a victory, even if, in normal terms, who lives, who dies, you might look at it as the upper hand, but when you kind of step back from it and look at it on the level of this wheel and this idea of being trapped, there is no great victory in that, and that some sort of acceptance of that cycle is important for all of our characters.
In Episode 1, there is a shot of Oscar [Isaac] and Carey [Mulligan] walking out of the club, and there’s a symmetrical shot in Episode 8 of Charles [Melton] and Cailee [Spaeny] walking out, sort of the same thing. Talk a little bit about that composition of how you’re setting it up in Episode 1, and you’re ending it in Episode 8.
SCHREIER: From the beginning, Sunny was really interested in cycles, and this idea of the past repeating itself. There are lots of really interesting, great hidden writing gems where Cailee starts to appropriate language that we’ve heard Oscar [Isaac] say or that we’ve heard Carey [Mulligan] say from before. But I think knowing a sense of where it was going to go, we actually didn’t film those on the same day, but we knew in designing the shots for the opening sequence of [Episode] 1 that there was going to be this kind of echo and repetition of that happening in [Episode] 8, with the slight exception that when they get in the car in Episode 1, that moment is sort of balanced towards Carey, because it’s about her frustration and anger that’s going to explode over the course of the cold open.
In [Episode] 8, we’re leaving it on the two of them, so it’s a more balanced shot of the two of them in the car. But that’s something that Sunny and I spend a ton of time talking about, is the minute shot structure of how to enforce those kinds of ideas of whose scene it is and how are we showing the repetition of this, and how are we visually dramatizing those ideas of the cycles that they’re going through? Obviously, the opening shot that starts on ants and then reveals them, that’s a mirror of itself, as well.
I wanted to bring that up. In the script, is it exactly that we are watching a close-up of ants crawling? How does that get figured out?
SCHREIER: We filmed a version of it on the day, and then we ended up on another day doing our macro close-ups of those ants. Again, obviously, throughout the script, there is this idea of bugs in a lot of different places, and this idea, obviously, if the show is about that kind of battle between the individual and the collective, and forming a partnership with someone and how much you hold on to yourself within it, starting it with an image of bugs that have a hive mind, I think, was really fascinating to him. So, it was fun to kind of dramatize that and then watch that get smushed as we move into our long opening take.
Jake Schreier Reveals the Secrets to ‘Beef’s Success
“These are all such incredible craftspeople and artists in their own right.”
One of the things about this show is that it’s just something where every department, from cinematography to actors, is just firing on all cylinders. What is it like in the month or two leading up to filming? Because everything is so good, and if it were easy to do this, everyone would do it, but it’s impossible. So, what is the secret sauce going on behind the scenes that is able to make this happen?
SCHREIER: I think it’s sort of what you said, and I think it was one of the great lessons of Season 1 of Beef and something that we tried to take onto Thunderbolts*, which is that if you are lucky enough to work with collaborators that are that strong, and you’re on a set with people where everyone is pushing each other to be better and better, and there’s just such an amazing group of people that make this show, then even if it is a month before and you’re running around it — I mean, I was in post on Thunderbolts*, so it’s like stepping out of the mix to go to set — when you have collaborators that good, that’s what elevates it. If everyone is really bringing their best and they’re the best at what they do, and we just have so many department heads, if you go through it, like James Laxton and Grace Yun, who I’ve talked about, or Finneas [O’Connell’ coming in the season. These are all such incredible craftspeople and artists in their own right that when you pair that with Sunny, who cares so deeply and is writing something so personal to him, but that can also work on a broader level, if we’ve been successful, then that’s what does it.
I’m so curious, what are your thoughts on the way the season ended in terms of what all happened?
SCHREIER: I think it’s fascinating. It was something that we talked about from the start. Sunny had this loose idea of where he wanted things to go, and then as he gets into the details of writing it, more and more of those details get revealed. The very last shot we didn’t actually add until later, because it felt like we needed something even bigger to encapsulate what he was going for.
But I think that that concept, again, that there are these ups and downs and these cycles in life, and you can see the patterns repeated in all of these couples. And again, this idea of the samsara and that the only way to escape it is to accept it, and going for this idea of acceptance, which might not be the most traditional way. And the season, like you said, you might think that, “Oh, the rich won,” and again, I don’t think that he sees it that way or that we see it that way.
One of the things for me about Beef is Sunny and I have been friends for years, and friends before we made this show. To get to see your friend make work that is so personal, but is also obviously on this large platform, and go for these ideas that don’t feel as obvious or as expected, and get to help them try to bring that to life like that feels like a really special opportunity.
By the way, I’m totally joking about the rich thing. I just want to be clear I’m messing around.
‘Beef’ Season 2 Hits Different at Every Age
“I hope those conversations are really fun.”
Season 1 sparked a lot of conversation about anger, identity, and modern life. What conversations do you hope Season 2 sparks?
SCHREIER: I think what’s going to be really fascinating about this season is to see the way in which different generations watch it. A couple weeks ago I was sick and I did a full Mad Men rewatch, and it plays so differently now that I’m older than the first time I watched it when it came out. We’ve seen even a little bit of how everyone who watches the show maybe gravitates towards a different character that they kind of choose to view the narrative through, and I think that could be a really interesting conversation.
Then also, obviously, this season is about relationships, and nothing could be more relatable to people who watch. Everyone’s been through a version or many versions of those. So, I think seeing yourself or seeing aspects of your life reflected in all of the different parts, and finding times where you might look down on a certain character and then come around to looking at the narrative through their eyes, I hope those conversations are really fun.
I’ve had this conversation with so many people. When you watch Casablanca when you’re 20, it means nothing. You watch Casablanca when you’re 30, completely different movie.
SCHREIER: Yeah. Yeah.
I’m just about out of time, but you know I’m fascinated by the editing process. How was editing Season 1 compared to Season 2? I didn’t speak to you for Season 1. Did either season go through big changes in the edit, or is the script so tight that it’s really just little bits here and there?
SCHREIER: The scripts are tight. There’s clarifying a few moments here or there, or maybe a pickup here or there, but predominantly you’re watching, more or less, what Sunny and our wonderful writers’ room wrote.
The particulars of the way it’s edited, there’s a kind of almost house style that we developed. I had this idea about unbalanced coverage where, in a dialogue scene, it’s never just evenly weighted, the shot and reverse shot. It’ll be closer to one character and further from another, and then sometimes even transfer within scenes. In Season 1, that was a little easier to do just because any scene that Amy or Danny was in was their scene, versus anyone else that was in it, it would become balanced when the two of them are together.
Here, we have four perspective characters, and sometimes even sex. So, just really trying to be cognizant on set and really huddle with Sunny and talk about whose seen this was, and should it transfer at any point, and then going in with the editors and really holding on to that structure, and enforcing that, and getting a sense of, like, where is that working and where do we need to make it stronger, and how is that playing if we’ve made some of those decisions in production of how we want to weight it in post as far as who’s perspective we’re viewing each of these moments through? Those conversations got a lot more complex in Season 2 just because of that larger cast of perspective characters.
Marvel Wants ‘X-Men’ to Feel “New and Different”
Jake Schreier and the team are turning to the comics to take a “less-trodden” path.
COLLIDER: I heard rumors that you are also directing things for Marvel. I think you might have done a movie for them, and you might have something coming up.
JAKE SCHREIER: I might be making something for Marvel, yes. A movie called X-Men, I think.
Exactly. I thought Thunderbolts* was awesome, and you worked so well in what I call the Marvel machine. I’m just curious, what did you learn from making Thunderbolts* and working in that environment that you’re absolutely taking with you to X-Men?
SCHREIER: I guess mainly that it’s not a machine. What we think of as “the machine” is a group of people who are really lovely people who care deeply about what they make. We talked a lot about, in Thunderbolts* press, how Kevin was always like, “Do something different with this. Make it different. What can we bring to it?” There’s no house thing that you have to do. And I think that having the familiarity with them and getting to go back in and think about what to do next, it’s just exciting to think about how that could be applied on an even bigger scale.
One of the things I’m so curious about is that I believe you’re coming out in 2028, and you’re going to be coming out after Secret Wars. How are you planning on keeping the secrets, or the casting, or whatever it may be, under wraps when you’re going to be filming before Secret Wars is out? Have you guys already thought about, like, how do we keep the mystery, or is it like, well, we just have to accept that things are going to get out, and it is what it is?
SCHREIER: It’ll all be filmed in a black box, and we’re all just going to live in it and not emerge until we’re done with the movie. No, I mean, certainly the studio has a lot of experience with these things and how to try to hold on to what’s really most important. I can say that we’ve talked about it and we’ve thought about it, but I probably shouldn’t say any more than that.
I totally get it. For fans, where are you in the process?
SCHREIER: We’re still developing. One of the exciting things that’s tying into Beef is that Sunny, or Lee Sung Jin, and Joanna Calo both worked on this season — obviously, this is Sunny’s show — and Joanna worked on this season, as well, and we worked together on Season 1 of Beef and also on Thunderbolts*, have come in and are working on a draft right now, which is really, really exciting to be able to put that group of people together again.
I also think just having the time to sit back, I’ve just been digging into so many of the old comics and the entire [Chris] Claremont run, and just going through stuff and really trying to think about, like, “What can we do well that feels new and feels different, and that hasn’t been done well before,” obviously, because there’s such an incredible cinematic tradition of these comics, but what can we do and how can we put our own stamp on what that is?
This is obviously not going to be a one-and-done situation, so how much when you guys are working on the script, are you thinking about a track of where this is all going to go? Because it is going to eventually go somewhere.
SCHREIER: Obviously, first things first, we have to make one great movie, but we always have an eye as we’re talking about it to what are the different places that this can go? What are the places that it’s been in the comics? What hasn’t been explored as much, and how can that be incorporated? And what are some of the different avenues that we could take that feel like a less-trodden path that we could go down? But those ideas are always out there as we have the discussions.
Good News ‘X-Men’ Fans: The Movie Reboot’s Writer Is a Huge Gambit Fan [Exclusive]
He’s about to make a name for himself.
One of the things that I’m so curious about is getting a more accurate Wolverine in the movie, which means a short king. How much have you guys discussed that, and is it something that you think will happen?
SCHREIER: [Laughs] I think when it comes to any specifics, I’m gonna plead the fifth on that, if that’s okay.
What is Sunny bringing to the table? Because he’s such a fucking amazing writer, and I would imagine that he’s adding a lot, if you could touch on that.
SCHREIER: One of the things that I love so much about Sunny’s writing in Beef, and that he and Joanna are both so great about — she co-created The Bear, one of the most interesting shows on television right now — is that ability to take these very small interpersonal dynamics and explode them onto this much larger canvas.
In Season 1 of Beef, and people will see in Season 2, it always starts from the personal, and when you go back, and you read all of X-Men, and you see how much of it was also, obviously, the ideology is a huge part of what drives the narrative, but also the interpersonal. There’s a soap opera quality to it, when you go back and read those original comics, that I think having writers who understand both of those things and how to drive that ideology from more personal rifts, if we can get all of those things right, then in a way, that’s the thing that will feel most honest to what X-Men can be.
Beef Season 2 is available to stream on Netflix now.
- Release Date
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April 6, 2023
- Network
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Netflix
- Showrunner
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Lee Sung Jin
- Directors
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Hikari, Jake Schreier, Kitao Sakurai, Lee Sung Jin
- Writers
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Alice Ju
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Spring Dresses, Comfy Sandals and More
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It may not be Memorial Day yet, but the fashion markdowns sure feel like it. Retailers like Amazon, Old Navy, Nordstrom and Macy’s are overflowing with major fashion deals for no reason — other than to help Us stock our spring and summer wardrobes. I’m talking sleek Adidas sneakers for 48% off, silky satin pajamas for just $12 and so much more.
Chic sandals, trendy jeans and luxe-looking bags are just a few highlights, but you’ll also find plenty of dresses, blouses and comfy sneakers on sale. The only so-called ‘catch’ is that these undercover deals are selling out fast. I narrowed down the best 20 deals that are *actually* worth your dollars, so snag ’em before they’re gone!
Best Weekend Sales: April 17-19, 2026
Old Navy

My Favorite: Instead of sweats, opt for this cool-mom T-shirt dress that’s just as comfy, but much more stylish. 100% cotton fabric makes it breathable enough for every to-do on your list. Oh, and it’s only $12!
Amazon

My Favorite: Everyone’s wearing red this spring, and these sporty Adidas sneakers nail the aesthetic. Cloudfoam cushioning supports walking, running and touring Europe, per reviewers.
Nordstrom

My Favorite: My mom just got these wide-leg NYDJ jeans, and at 30% off, I’m grabbing a pair for myself. They’re comfy around the tummy and thighs, flowy around the ankles and tailored where it matters most.
Macy’s

My Favorite: It’s wedding guest dress season and this flattering wrap dress is the perfect uniform. It works for all venues, including church, beach and garden. Plus, you might wear it to the office the following Monday.
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