Entertainment
Ranking The 25 Best Space Movies Of All-Time
By Joshua Tyler
| Published

When most people think science fiction, they first think of outer space. But space movies are hard to make, and most SF filmmakers instead opt for something easier and more budget-friendly, like time travel or robots.
When a creator takes a risk and gets space sci-fi right, they become a legend. It’s why names like Kubrick, Lucas, Cameron, and Scott will live on long after the men who made them famous are gone.
I’ve spent my entire life watching, reading, and writing about space science fiction. That lifetime of love and obsession is paying off, for all of you, right now in one perfect, as unbiased as possible, ranking of space movies.
For the purposes of this list, I’m defining space movies as any movie that is not primarily set on Earth. So, for example, even though Avatar is largely set on one alien planet and very little of it takes place in outer space, it’s eligible for this list. Will Avatar make the cut? Stick around and find out.
Full power to engines, these are the best space movies of all time.
25. 2010: The Year We Make Contact (1984)

2001: A Space Odyssey is one of the most groundbreaking movies of all time. How do you follow that up? If you’re MGM, you wait 16 years and then release a sequel that’s the exact opposite.
That sequel is 2010: The Year We Make Contact, and while the script was written by Arthur C. Clark, the sci-fi master behind the books, Stanley Kubrick, the auteur who made 2001, wanted nothing to do with it. So 2010 leans hard into over-explaining its plot as a way to compensate for the vague approach of 2001. That hampers what is otherwise a fascinating story of exploration and mystery against the backdrop of worsening political tensions between the USA and USSR.
The cast is one of the best ever assembled, with Roy Schneider and John Lithgow hitchhiking with a crew of Russians led by Helen Mirren. The production design leans into the gritty 80s space aesthetic, and while it’s not as impressive as 2001’s look, it establishes its own distinct style while also revisiting Hal 9000 and the abandoned Discovery.
24. Pitch Black (2000)

Director David Twohy’s little indie movie about a transport ship crashed on an alien planet is probably best remembered now as the thing that launched the career of Vin Diesel. With all due respect to the Fast and Furious movies, Pitch Black is so much better than anything Diesel has done since.
Diesel’s character anchors it, but a one-of-a-kind premise involving hordes of killer aliens that emerge when it’s dark. And oh by the way, the planet is headed for a total eclipse. Pitch Black is a wild ride and a ton of fun, effective both as horror and sci-fi all at once. And that’s something few other movies can pull off.
23. Star Trek: First Contact (1996)

There’s no denying that Star Trek: First Contact is heavily inspired by the movie Alien, but if it’s a ripoff, it’s a really good one. Many have tried to copy what Ridley did with his space-horror movie, but none have done it better than First Contact.
Captain Picard and the Enterprise must chase his old foes The Borg back in time to prevent them from changing Earth’s history. Along the way, they meet the inventor of Warp drive, a drunken weirdo living in the woods of Montana, and engage in a life-or-death struggle as the Borg terrorize and murder everyone aboard their ship.
22. Event Horizon (1997)

Event Horizon recently topped our list of the most extremely graphic space movies, and it earned that spot. In addition to being super gory and crazy scary, it’s also just a really good space movie.
It begins when the crew of a search-and-rescue vessel finds a missing ship adrift in space. Her name is the Event Horizon, and her mission was to test humanity’s first faster-than-light drive.

The interior of the ship is the stuff of nightmares. What they find inside the Event Horizon will make them question everything. And in the end, it all goes straight to hell… literally.
21. The Martian (2015)

The Martian, based on an acclaimed novel by Andy Weir, strands astronaut Mark Watney on Mars after a storm forces his crew to bail out without him.
NASA thinks he’s dead, but he wakes up and immediately starts solving problems using math, swearing, and improvised plumbing. He grows potatoes in Martian dirt, hacks a way to talk to Earth, and turns survival into an engineering marathon.
Meanwhile, NASA scrambles to mount a rescue that won’t get anyone else killed. The movie becomes a tribute to stubbornness and human ingenuity: one man refusing to let Mars make him a casualty.
20. The Fifth Element (1997)

In The Fifth Element, Parisian writer/director Luc Besson took us into the future and beyond, following the story of a girl wrapped in white straps and destiny.
Like some brilliant Blade Runner meets Galaxy Quest mashup, the movie starts with Bruce Willis as a futuristic flying taxi driver embroiled in some mystery surrounding a priest and a half-naked girl. Before long, he’s launched into space alongside squeaky-voiced Chris Tucker, fighting alien bounty hunters and protecting the girl, Leeloo (Milla Jovovich), as she’s drawn inexorably to her destiny.
The special effects are glitzy and eye-popping, and the movie was a career-maker for Jovovich and Tucker. And Luc Besson, if he knows anything, it’s how to shoot action.
19. The Last Starfighter (1984)

In the 80s, it seemed like video games were only a step or two away from reality, giving birth to movies like Tron and, in this case, The Last Starfighter. A video game-addicted teen beats his local coin-op, only to discover the machine is actually a recruitment program for an alien defense force. Whisked up into the stars and teamed up with an alien pilot named Grig (Dan O’Herlihy), he’s the galaxy’s last hope to save us all from a malevolent invading force.
The film’s special effects are dated, but the plot is universal, hero stuff, and that’s the kind of thing space operas do better than almost anything else. It’s all the little details that make this one so special: Beta Alex, the earthly robot replacement for our hero, the strange background of Grig’s family, and most of all, Robert Preston as the enigmatic Centauri.

Ok, The Last Starfighter is not perfect. That whole Death Blossom thing is kind of a copout. But even that seems pretty cool in the moment.
18. Thor: Ragnarok (2017)

I know what you’re thinking: Isn’t this a superhero movie? Sure, technically, Thor: Ragnarok is one of Marvel’s superhero movies. All the Thor solo movies contain some element of taking place in a fantasy version of outer space, though, and this one is not only the best Thor movie, it’s the spaciest.
Where the other Thor movies are largely confined to one planet besides Earth, Thor: Ragnarok is a Galaxy-hopping tale. It sees both Thor and Hulk leaping through space on a wild and incredibly funny adventure.
17. Passengers (2016)

In Passengers, Chris Pratt plays a mechanic who wakes up 90 years too early on the spaceship Avalon. He’s alone.
After a year, he stumbles across the sleeping pod of Aurora Lane, played by Jennifer Lawrence. He contemplates suicide, and he resists the temptation to wake her for months, until one day he snaps, and he wakes her up. So now Aurora’s stuck on a gigantic, empty ship with no one to spend time with, except the guy who ruined her life, only she has no idea what he’s done.
The ship on which it happens is a triumph of set design, and the story is risky, complex, and thought-provoking in the best traditions of great sci-fi. Passengers deserves more credit.
16. Starship Troopers (1997)

In theory, Starship Troopers is based on the brilliant Robert A. Heinlein book of the same name, but in practice, you’ll enjoy Paul Verhoeven’s film a lot more if you ignore the fact that Heinlein’s novel exists. Veerhoven’s vision of this world is completely different from Heinlein’s, and even if it’s not quite as good, it’s still really, really good.

Starship Troopers follows a group of soldiers in a far-off future where humanity is at war with a vicious group of alien insectoids. Violent and completely messed up at every turn, Veerhoven was trying to make a complex social commentary. Along the way, he ended up with a viciously R-rated, completely crazed, and a little ridiculous, in a good way, space-faring war movie.
15. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)

It’d be easy to dismiss the Guardians films as just another entry in the Marvel universe, but since they don’t take place on Earth, they’re more of a galaxy-spanning adventure. The movie follows Peter Quill, a human boy taken into space by aliens and raised there. He’s grown up to become a space-faring Indiana Jones-style character, and this first Guardians movie follows his adventures to save the galaxy and build a family with his crew.
The banter between the film’s characters carries the story, and the movie’s stunning visual effects turn its fantasy version of outer space into a feast for the eyes. Guardians of the Galaxy, even more than its also good sequel, is the most absolute fun you’ll have with any movie on this list.
14. Dune (2020)

There have been many attempts to turn Frank Herbert’s classic Dune novels into a movie. It wasn’t until 2021 that filmmaker Denis Villeneuve got it right.
His movies capture the essence of Frank Herbert’s novels and distill them into a stunning, creative, visual feast unlike anything else seen on screen. He does it with virtually no dialogue. A necessity when adapting a book in which much of the narrative is propelled by characters’ thoughts.
There’s a sequel, which is really part two of the same story, and so I’m lumping both of them together as one entry.
13. Stargate (1994)

Stargate is now best known as a multi-media science fiction franchise, but the movie that started it all was always great, original science fiction.
Humans uncover an ancient piece of alien tech buried in Egypt that, when activated, opens a gateway to another world. Kurt Russell leads a team of explorers through that Stargate and discovers an alien planet where humans are kept as slave laborers in service of an alien masquerading as an ancient Egyptian God.

Worst of all, now that they’re through the stargate, they have no way of getting back, unless they can crack the code to gate travel and defeat an alien god in a flying pyramid.
12. Aliens (1986)

Directed by James Cameron, Aliens takes the terrifying premise of Alien and amps it up into a full-on space marine action movie. The ensemble cast, led by Sigourney Weaver, Michael Biehn, and Bill Paxton, is brilliant, and the Xenomorphs are both more plentiful and much bigger.
It’s this movie that cemented Ripley as a total badass, and that proved the concept of Alien could be an entire universe, not just a one-off horror film.
11. Star Trek III: The Search For Spock (1984)

Unfairly maligned in its time for being the middle in one of the all-time great movie trilogies, The Search for Spock has aged like fine Romulan Ale. It gets better with every viewing.
The first half is a perfect heist movie, with Kirk and the crew plotting to steal their own ship. Starfleet’s finest officer goes against them to save his friend, and our space friends are all on board. Watch Shatner’s reaction to the death of Kirk’s son if you’re looking for proof of his acting talent.

The death of the Enterprise is incredible and wrenching; it fits perfectly into the movie’s theme of life, death, and rebirth. McCoy sums it up best as the crew stands there on the surface of a dying planet, watching the hulk of the Enterprise blaze a trail of fire across the sky.
There, McCoy tells Kirk it was, “What you had to do, what you always do. Turned death into a fighting chance to live.”
10. 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)

In 2001: A Space Odyssey, Stanley Kubrick invented the modern space sci-fi genre. Based on Arthur C. Clarke’s work, it starts with apes learning murder from a black monolith and ends with an astronaut drifting into a psychedelic extradimensional waiting room designed by something that absolutely isn’t human.
The plot is minimal, relying on imagery, geometry, silence, and the uncomfortable suggestion that humanity only advances when something smarter shoves us forward.
Its special effects haven’t aged at all, but the movie’s pacing has, which means it may not be as enjoyable to watch for modern audiences as it once was. If this were a list of the most important space movies, I’d have it higher, but being the best must be about more than that, so 2001 sits comfortably right here.
9. WALL-E (2008)

WALL-E isn’t Pixar’s best movie, but with all due respect to Titan A.E., it’s the only animated movie outside of anime to get space opera right. It starts in a garbage heap, the humblest of beginnings, and ends up in a massive journey to bring mankind back home from the stars.
It’s incredible that a story this big centers entirely around a tiny robot who can’t even talk. WALL-E doesn’t need words to connect with the audience, and the story of a little robot who refuses to give up is a universal way to connect with anyone.
I’ve never found WALL-E’s vision of the future in which all people ride around in floaty chairs getting fat as terrifying as it’s supposed to be. It seems relaxing. Maybe WALL-E should have left humanity out there, hanging around in space. Making them get up may not have been the right move. The ship’s captain sure doesn’t seem to be having much fun.
8. Dark City (1998)

Putting Dark City on this list at all is an automatic spoiler, but if you haven’t seen it, click away and go watch now. Dark City has to be on here.
Dark City is the ultimate in sci-fi noir. It’s a mystery, sort of, and the story of a man without a memory looking for clues to explain what’s happened to him.

It takes place in a city where it’s always night, and strange beings with psychokinetic powers stalk the streets between slinky music sets performed by peak Jennifer Connelly. It’s not until the end that our main character, John Murdock, learns he’s actually in outer space, and once he discovers the truth sets to work on re-creating a world he only thinks he remembers.
7. Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)

As an allegory for the Cold War, The Undiscovered Country felt edgy and topical, being released shortly after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1991. Today, it’s only a great story well told, with elements of relevance woven in as beloved characters grapple with their own personal prejudice in the face of a new world.
Star Trek VI follows Captain Kirk and the crew of the Enterprise on their last mission before retirement, tasked with leading hated rivals to a peace conference. There’s a murder, a mystery to solve it, and a race against the clock to engage an enemy starship with a secret weapon before it can destroy the last, best hope for peace.
6. Apollo 13 (1995)

If you believe in the moon landing, then Apollo 13 is meticulously based on the true story of what happened to the Apollo 13 astronauts as they tried to orbit the moon. If you think the landing was faked, then Apollo 13 is a great piece of fiction. Either way, it belongs high on this list of movies set off planet.
Directed by Ron Howard and starring Tom Hanks, Kevin Bacon, and Bill Paxton, the film recounts the harrowing story of NASA’s third planned lunar landing, as it turned into a desperate survival mission after an oxygen tank explosion crippled the spacecraft.

Every malfunction, every improvised solution, from repurposing CO₂ scrubbers to calculating burn times manually, builds in tension. Apollo 13 proves that you don’t need aliens or lasers, just math, duct tape, and calm under pressure to make space terrifyingly compelling
5. Serenity (2005)

It’s amazing that this movie managed to get made at all and that it’s also really good, which makes Serenity an achievement of an entirely different level. Based on the canceled television series Firefly, the movie works by creating an entire world to play around in and populating it with fantastically well-drawn and performed characters.
Writer/director Joss Whedon’s sharp, witty banter quickly develops a sort of group personality for them, and best of all, he does it in the midst of the action. There’s no mood-killing stop-down for a moment of character development. Han kissed Leia for the first time in the middle of trying not to get blown up, not while taking a break to ride a cow, and that’s the sort of perfect character development you’ll see in Serenity. We get to know these people intimately while on the run, as it should be in anything resembling a good adventure movie.
Serenity’s so good, consistently, through and through, that picking out any one great moment seems impossible. Is it Chiwetel Ejiofor as one of the best villains on screen since Khan, that’s worth remembering most? Are you in love with Mal Reynolds (who isn’t)? Wash’s heart-wrenching death scene? It’s all perfect. Re-watch Serenity right now. I aim to misbehave.
4. Interstellar (2014)

Writer/director Christopher Nolan’s Interstellar is not a perfect movie, but it’s so ambitious you can forgive its minor missteps. The movie takes place in a near future where Earth has been blighted, and man needs to escape the planet. Efforts to construct a ship that could take us somewhere else are underway, but first, we need a place to go. Interstellar follows the crew sent to find our new home.
What they find along the way is both more and less than they expected. Wrapped around the event horizon of a black hole, it’ll test the very limits of human endurance and nature.
Capped by epic performances, incredible cinematography, and one of the best scores of all time, Interstellar is a work of art. There’s nothing else quite like it, and I hope you saw it on the big screen. Because, like all grand space stories, that’s where it thrives most.
3. Alien (1979)

I’d always preferred James Cameron’s sequel Aliens to Ridley Scott’s original movie… until I finally saw Alien in an actual movie theater, during the movie’s re-release a few years ago. Wow. The inky depths of space don’t feel as big or as terrifying stuck at home on your couch.
Most of the film takes place aboard a starship, with a group of humans struggling to survive while being stalked by an alien creature of malevolence beyond their comprehension. More than the sheer scare factor of it, Scott creates an entire universe in his film, one which ended up being so much fun to run around in that we’re still making movies set it in now. None of those subsequent movies captures the deep, dark of space the way Scott’s did.
What’s more terrifying than being stuck in space with a creature bent on your destruction? A creature bent on your destruction through creative pro-creation:
2. Star Wars: Original Trilogy (1977 – 1983)

Look up the definition of what a space opera is, and you’ll see the original Star Wars trilogy. All three original movies, of course, belong on this list. Everyone has their own way of ranking them. Personally, I’d single out Return of the Jedi as my favorite, Ewoks and all. Most people seem to lean towards Empire. It doesn’t matter.
Star Wars has to be here because it’s Star Wars. Modern space operas wouldn’t exist without it. That doesn’t, however, mean it has to be number one.
1. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)

Not just the greatest space movie ever produced, but also the greatest submarine movie ever made, Wrath of Khan substitutes the dark of space for the watery deep in telling the tale of two ship commanders locked in a battle to the death.
In Khan Noonien Singh, actor Ricardo Montalbán creates one of the greatest villains ever to appear on the screen. His presence echoes throughout every movie that’s followed. Even now, you’ll hear filmmakers talk about wanting to make the villain of their new movie equal to Montalbán’s. But Khan has no equal.

With or without him, Wrath of Khan would deserve its place at the top of this list, with gripping performances from everyone in the cast and one of the most wrenching, unforgettable deaths in movie history. The words “I have been, and always shall be, your friend” still echo in my head, and that moment at the end of the film when Kirk starts to fall apart at Spock’s funeral as he pronounces him “human” is utterly heartbreaking.

For decades now, Star Trek has defined what it is to be a space franchise, leaving its mark on our culture in a way unmatched by almost anything else.
Hey, why’d you leave off my favorite space movie?
If you’ve stuck with this list til the end, congratulations, you win a tribble.

If I could change anything about this list, I’d put Galaxy Quest on it. But the copyright gods demonetize our videos whenever we show Galaxy Quest footage, so I left it off.
If I were adding one more entry, it’d probably be Total Recall. Or maybe Forbidden Planet.
Entertainment
Fans Think She Reacted To Remy Ma Freestyle
Whew, Roomies! The internet thinks Claressa Shields clapped back at Remy Ma’s ‘W.Y.F.L.’ Shields dropped a message on social media about avoiding “stirring the pot,” and now folks online are trying to read between the lines.
RELATED: Remy Ma Seemingly Claps Back At Papoose’s Ghostwriting Claims In New Song (VIDEO)
The Internet Thinks Claressa Shields Clapped Back At Remy Ma
Remy Ma recently came through with a freestyle, ‘W.Y.F.L.,’ and fans think she threw a few shots at Papoose and Claressa Shields throughout several bars. Now, folks online are wondering if the Gwoat has fired back. On Saturday, April 11, Shields reposted a message on her Instagram Story that read “I stop myself at least twice a day from posting some s**t that might stir the pot.” She didn’t mention anyone in the post, but social media is side-eyeing the message and thinking it could be meant for Remy.
Claressa’s Post Sparks MAJOR Chatter Online
After The Shade Room dropped Claressa’s repost, the comment section went OFF. Some folks said Remy actually stirred the pot first, while others joked that if she plans to take shots, she should go ahead and hit the “@” button.
Instagram user @m.garavani wrote, “After Remy dropped that, I would’ve just let Pap respond 😂😂”
Instagram user @anaturalvirgo wrote, “😂😂😂😂😂 Rem stirred the pot and put the lid back on.”
While Instagram user @esha2pretty_ wrote, “She really believes the wife is the enemy smh 🤦🏽♀️ 😂”
Then Instagram user @_moodyasf._ wrote, “Make sure u use that @ button when u do 😂”
Another Instagram user @diamondchampagne_ wrote, “Remy gone stir you.”
Instagram user @prettyproblemceo wrote, “I mean you been stirring the pot 😂 why stop now 🤷🏽♀️”
While another Instagram user @williemcfly wrote, “I would act like it don’t exist. In this world we live in there will be 10 other things trending within the next week lol Rem diss was 🔥 🔥but doesn’t it also show that even while having another nigga or two she still bothered by Claressa relationship with Pap 🤔?”
Then, another Instagram user @tamarilyn__ wrote, “I’m with her on this one cuz baby I know I do too 😂😂🤷🏾♀️”
Finally, Instagram user @krysstylezhair wrote, “Just make sure you @ whoever it’s for 😂😂”
Here’s What Remy Said On Her W.Y.F.L’ Freestyle
Remy seemingly heated things up when she dropped her ‘W.Y.F.L.’ freestyle on Friday, April 10. Fans were shook thinking she called out Papoose and Claressa in a few bars. In one part of her lyrics, folks speculated that she took shots at Pap, shutting down claims that he was a ghostwriter behind some of her records.
“The nerve of n****s claiming that they wrote those hits when they whole career they ain’t never ghost wrote s**t,” she continued. “Not for me or anybody else, you always act like you helped a n***a, go help yourself.”
Then, as the track continues, fans assumed she was coming at Claressa after saying, “How you talking out your neck when I know how ya n***a neck work.” Additionally, she added more fuel to assumptions with, “How I never get atted, but I always get mentioned […] See I might get subbed, but I never get touched.”
RELATED: Her Man, Her Man! Claressa Shields Sends STEAMY Message To Papoose After He Weighs in On Her New Flicks
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
“DWTS”' Hayley Erbert says her heart is 'breaking into a million pieces' after having first baby with Derek Hough
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“Motherhood is even more complex and contradicting than I could have ever imagined,” said Erbert, who welcomed her child two years after a life-threatening health scare.
Entertainment
Which ‘Temptation Island’ Star Was Wary About The Show?
Since “Temptation Island” season 2 just dropped on Netflix, Mikey and Sydney have quickly become the breakout couple of the season. The 24-year-olds grabbed the spotlight immediately, with Mikey’s restless, almost childlike energy clashing with Sydney’s poised search for a soulmate. It’s a friction that makes sense, given Mikey needed some serious arm-twisting to sign up for the experience. During a recent interview, Sydney pulled back the curtain on how they actually landed on the show.
This ‘Temptation Island’ Star Needed Convincing To Join The Show

Speaking with Cosmo, Sydney revealed that a casting producer reached out to her and Mikey about joining season 2 of the series. She explained that she was eager to sign on the dotted line after hearing about how the experience could positively impact their relationship.
Mikey, meanwhile, wasn’t as enthusiastic about the potential opportunity.
“We got on a call with [the casting producer], and he’s telling us how the show with run, and everything that happened last season, and how one couple got engaged,” Sydney said. “And from that conversation, Mikey was like, ‘Okay, you know what? We’ll do it.’”
Sydney Believed Filming ‘Temptation Island’ Would Be Easy For Her And Mikey

Continuing, Sydney said she planned on leaving the experience with Mikey by her side. In fact, she said she believed the show was going to be “a cake walk.”
Somewhere during the season, however, things took a serious turn. “I really wanted him to show me a different side of him, somebody that wasn’t just trying to make everybody happy and live in a bubble,” she said.
Sydney was candid about her issues with Mikey in the season premiere, stating that she felt they were sometimes incompatible because of his maturity level. Things only worsened when Mikey boasted about his “three amigos” in the villa during the first episode.
“The whole three amigos thing really made me feel triggered from our past,” Sydney said. “Just see him talking to them in a flirtatious way really triggered things inside me, and it showed me, ‘Oh, he hasn’t changed. So why am I still putting myself back in the same cycle?’ So I chose to move on with my experience and make it a personal one.”
Sydney wasn’t the only person triggered by Mikey on the latest season of “Temptation Island.” Social media users were also bothered by the music host’s antics, as several blasted him and accused him of not taking Sydney’s words seriously.
“Mikey, my boy! Should have appreciated your lady a little more,” someone wrote, while another said, “Now Miley is CORNY… my Jesus.”
A third user wrote, “I actually can’t even put into words how much I detest Mikey on Temptation Island. Over there kiki’ing with the girls while the rest of the men in the willa are working out.”
“Mikey has really f-cking pissed me off,” another user posted. “To find out he had a whole a** girlfriend and he was texting girls on the side when he was in Temptation Island.”
Someone else wrote, “He is irking my nerves and it’s only episdoe 1.”
Another ‘Temptation Island’ Couple Had To Deal With Their Issues Head-On

Sydney and Mikey weren’t the only couple who had a challenging time on “Temptation Island.”
According to a previous report from The Blast, Scarlett and Cole revealed that they signed on for the experience to help address their issues with trust and transparency.
However, once they were there, Scarlett said she realized she wasn’t worried about Cole being physical with other women; she just wanted him to dig deeper and fight for their relationship.
“Once we were there, I realized I wasn’t actually worried about Cole cheating,” she said. “I think it would’ve been pretty crazy for either of us to actually do something like that…so I was just hoping that both of us would really look more deeply into our relationship and grow.”
Scarlett Wanted Cole To Let Lose A Bit More On The Show

The show is designed to test the committed couples with a group of sexy tempters and temptresses. And while some of the cast members took advantage of the opportunity, Scarlett said Cole did not, which she found a bit disheartening.
“I know that he was probably scared of me seeing anything that would upset me,” she said. “It was a hard situation to navigate, and I think everyone just did their best, right?”
Entertainment
Nimari Burnett Says ‘No Turning Back’ On NBA Dream
Just days after securing Michigan’s first NCAA Men’s Basketball National Championship since 1989, guards Nimari Burnett and Charlie May took their victory celebration off the court and into the community. The championship duo made a surprise appearance at Raising Cane’s in Ann Arbor, where they spent the morning working a special “shift” alongside crew members while interacting with fans. Located just steps from campus, the restaurant quickly transformed into a full-blown maize-and-blue celebration, with students, families, and local supporters gathering to catch a glimpse of the newly crowned champions.
Michigan Champs Go Behind The Counter At Raising Cane’s

Rather than simply making an appearance, Burnett and May fully embraced the experience, stepping behind the counter to learn the ropes of the restaurant.
The pair signed autographs, snapped selfies, bagged Box Combos, and even got hands-on in the kitchen, all while celebrating alongside the fans who supported them throughout their championship run.
For both players, the moment felt especially meaningful. As longtime fans of Raising Cane’s, the opportunity to work a shift marked a full-circle moment, going from late-night customers to national champions serving their own community.
Burnett Jokes About Cane’s Shift Pressure After Title Win

While the environment was celebratory, Nimari Burnett admitted the experience brought a different kind of pressure.
“I’ll say I’m a little nervous to work this shift today. I think, the level of nervousness is, you know, playing at a national championship on one level and then cooking Raising Cane’s at another level,” Burnett said. “My favorite thing about Raising Cane’s is the sauce. I was talking about the sauce in the car on the way here and you can’t go wrong with it.”
Charlie May echoed the sentiment, sharing a personal connection to the brand that dates back to his childhood. “I’d have to agree about the the sauce,” May said. “When I was a kid, we lived in Louisiana in a really small town, and there was only a few fast food restaurants, and Raising Cane’s was one of them. So the sauce has been my favorite since I was probably, like six years old.”
Fans Pack Cane’s To Celebrate Michigan Championship

The event doubled as both a celebration of Michigan’s 69–63 championship victory over UConn and a way to bring the community together.
Fans packed the area around the restaurant, turning what could have been a simple appearance into a shared hometown moment.
Nimari Burnett Gets Emotional Reflecting On Title Win

Before stepping behind the counter at Raising Cane’s, Nimari Burnett took a moment to reflect on what winning a national championship truly meant to him.
“It was so many emotions because it was so gratifying,” Burnett said. “The emotions were kind of sad that this would be my last time playing with this group, but also, just super excited that we achieved this goal that not too many people in the room get to achieve. I was extremely proud of myself and my team, and of everything it took to get it. It was the most meaningful moment of my life, but also the best time I’ve had throughout the year.”
Nimari Burnett played a key role throughout the championship season, averaging 8.2 points, 2.8 rebounds, and 1.2 assists across 40 games while shooting 37.5% from beyond the arc. He also delivered 10 double-digit performances, including a standout 31-point game against Penn State on February 5.
Nimari Burnett Ready To Take Next Step Toward NBA

With his college career now reaching its peak, Nimari Burnett is turning his attention toward the next level. After previously testing the NBA pre-draft process to gather feedback from scouts and executives, he’s now preparing to fully commit to the journey, including upcoming workouts and training.
“I can take from that experience the feeling of believing in yourself and understanding how it goes,” Burnett told the media. “You obtain feedback. I figured out throughout my collegiate career my role and my identity as a basketball player, but as you go through that process, you really get a (feel) for it. I’m looking forward to fully going through it. There is no turning back.”
As Burnett looks ahead to the next chapter, his championship run has not only solidified his legacy at Michigan but also set the stage for what could be a promising future at the next level.
Entertainment
Something Very Bad Is Going To Happen’s Shocking Ending Explained
By Brian Myers
| Updated

Something Very Bad is Going to Happen jumped to the top of Netflix’s most-watched shows immediately after its March 26 release on the streaming service, quickly catching buzz from horror and thriller fans. And for good reason. From its opening frames, you can tell something pretty bleak is surrounding a young couple’s wedding. The eerie series of events that occur while they are en route to the groom-to-be Jamie’s (Adam DiMarco) family home and the strange cast of characters that his fiancée Rachel (Camilla Morrone) meets when they arrive make you wonder where the story is going, exactly.
For the first few episodes, it’s assumed that Jamie’s family has sinister motives with Rachel as their target. But after all of their bizarre behavior is rationally explained away, the storyline focuses on Rachel’s family and their dark past. A strange older man brings her up to speed on how her bloodline is tainted by a curse that kills anyone who marries someone other than their soulmate. Skip out on the wedding after a proposal has been accepted, and that very curse gets passed on to the bloodline of the significant other.
Something Very Bad Is Going To Happen’s Wedding

The series has lots of great twists and turns, and is more of an eerie mystery than outright horror. Until the last episode, that is. During the finale, a series of complicated events unfold simultaneously that are worthy of dissecting.
Rachel and Jamie are finally at the altar, and it’s about to be known whether or not she is marrying her soulmate. If so, the couple lives happily ever after. If not, Rachel will face the same fate as so many of her relatives before her and bleed to death in a hellacious hemorrhage.
Rachel says her vows first. The look in her eyes leaves little question about whether or not she’s making the right call. When she speaks, it’s from the heart.

Jamie follows this up with his clunky vows. But when he’s finished, he backtracks. “I wrote these a week ago,” he stammers, before launching into a diatribe about how their love doesn’t need to lead to an institution that he knows she doesn’t embrace. He walks away, determined to keep his relationship with the woman he loves, but not wanting to tie the knot.
While all of the wedding guests wait, Jamie and Rachel have a heated discussion. Jamie finally admits that he doesn’t believe that the curse is real, devastating Rachel while simultaneously summoning her ire. When it’s brought to his attention that the curse is indeed very real and his family members are starting to bleed from their eyes and noses, he scrambles to get Rachel back to the altar and complete the ceremony. Rachel, due to Nicky’s dismissiveness of the curse, no longer believes that he is her soulmate. But as she had already said her vows to him earlier, her fate has been sealed. In spite of her protestations, the witness signs his name, and the chaos begins.
Something Very Bad Does Happen

As the show’s title foretells, something very bad is indeed about to happen. The last half of the finale has so much blood that you’d think someone set off a plasma sprinkler on the set. Most fans, including me, believed that the curse (if passed to Jamie’s family) would impact anyone in his bloodline who had not yet married. But in the immediate aftermath of the certificate being signed by the witness, viewers become privy to the horrific reality that the curse on Jamie’s family is retroactive. Meaning that any living person in his bloodline who had married someone who wasn’t their soulmate would hemorrhage and die.
The moment the ceremony is completed, everyone’s fate is sealed. Rachel begins to hemorrhage and runs out to the atrium. She collapses in the snow, her tainted blood offsetting the pure white snow in beautiful form.

Though Nicky is not bleeding, you might assume that the curse wasn’t passed on to his family. But then, more members of his family begin to bleed. Slowly, at first, from their noses. But as time marches on and the panic begins to grow, more and more of Nicky’s relatives are bleeding profusely from every orifice.
They collapse on tables, on the dance floor, and in each other’s arms. The curse doesn’t just whittle at the family tree. It hacks at it quickly with a vengeful ax that only Death itself could masterfully wield.

The survivors are few. Those who had married into the bloodline were spared, of course, but they all seemed to have fled in a hurry by the end of the episode. In the final minutes, we see that young Jude is still among the living, as well as Nicky. Boris Cunningham, the hopelessly romantic patriarch, is seen in his bed clutching his newly dead wife. Where her brothers and father seemed to be spared from the curse, Portia (Shining Vale‘s Gus Birney) isn’t so lucky. She revealed to everyone earlier that she married a stranger on a whim in Las Vegas. This man clearly wasn’t her soulmate, leaving her fate marked for a premature death.
Jude’s wife, Nell (Under the Dome‘s Karla Crome), having married into the bloodline, is spared. But Jude seems to be unmarked by the curse. This revelation lends to the theory that, in spite of their marital strife and near divorce, the events surrounding Nicky and Rachel’s wedding have brought them closer together, making them the most unlikely of soulmates in the series.
Why Nicky Survives

But why was Nicky spared? After all, he is the one who refused his marriage vows at the beginning of the episode, leading to the twisted turn of events. Examining his words during his rejection of marriage as an institution, Nicky doesn’t back out of the ceremony because he isn’t in love with his bride-to-be.
Nicky walks away from the altar because he feels he needs to prove his deeply rooted love and respect for the woman that he wants to spend the rest of his life with. In his unplanned speech, he says he doesn’t believe in marriage and knows that Rachel only agreed to marry him because that’s what she knew he wanted. But after discovering that his mother had an affair, seeing his brother come close to yet another divorce, and recounting all of the craziness from the last week, he concludes that marriage isn’t necessary to prove love for a partner.
Nicky lives because he married a person he truly believed was his soulmate. Sadly, it was all for nothing and came too little too late. Rachel was doomed because the ceremony wasn’t completed in time, regardless of whether or not she believed she was marrying her destiny. But in an interesting final twist, we see that life (or Death) isn’t through with Rachel just yet.
Rachel’s Resurrection Explained

Death is never seen in the series. Audiences get a first-person view of who the specter is gazing upon and following, but never so much as get a glimpse of the Grim Reaper. This gaze is set upon the immortal witness, who has settled down at one of the tables. The witness smiles and greets Death with the words “I’m ready.” At this point, Rachel is resurrected. As she wanders through the carnage, she sees the witness face down at a table in the dining room. Next to his body are the words “your turn,” scrawled in blood.
Rachel seems to know what her role is now. She finds her mother’s bracelet on the witness’s wrist (he told her several episodes back that he always takes trinkets from the deceased), and begins to rummage through his belongings. She finds that he had also taken her father’s wedding suit, which she changes into. The witness had been kept alive for more than 200 years and appears to have amassed a substantial amount of money. Rachel cleans him out and begins her departure.

On her way out, she finds Nicky huddled on his bed. He’s clutching a stuffed animal and isn’t responsive when she asks him a question. Here, we see just how cold the new role has made her. Instead of consoling the man she was about to marry about the horrors he had just witnessed, she asked him about the whereabouts of her cigarette lighter. He remains silent, his eyes fixed on something in the distance. Rachel then boldly storms out, climbs into the previous witness’s pickup truck (which is adorned with the words “just married” on the tailgate), and drives down the road.
She finds herself unable to skip past the song playing on the truck’s CD player. Try as she might, the Waterboys track “We Will Not Be Lovers” is the only tune that she can play. Like her new role, she embraces the song. She finds herself singing along to it as she rolls down the window and tosses her wedding ring onto the roadside.
Something Very Bad Is Going To Happen Season 2

Will there be a continuation of the storyline in a new season? There’s no word on that yet.
Fans of the series are already buzzing about the possibilities of future episodes surrounding an adult Jude, about to tie the knot. After all, when Rachel was saying her quick goodbyes, she made it a point to pull the lad aside and give him some needed advice. Rachel told the child that he needs to believe what happened that day, no matter who tries to tell him otherwise. She also warned him that he needs to be very careful about who he marries in the future, should he choose to do so. “I’ll be there to witness it,” she says before exiting the home and entering the first phase of a life of immortality.
You can stream Something Very Bad is Going to Happen on Netflix.
Entertainment
13 Stylish and Comfy Clogs That You’ll Fall in Love With for Spring
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Every once in a while, a fashion trend graces my feed and it’s a real head scratcher. I often think, ‘Why would anyone wear that?’ But as the saying goes — don’t knock it till you try it. That’s certainly the case with clogs.
I had no idea just how comfortable the shoe style could be until I tried a few. Additionally, the clogs I tested can seamlessly elevate any outfit. Once you slip on one of the following 13 springtime clogs, you’ll know exactly what I mean. I discovered stylish picks from Dr. Scholl’s, Madewell, Rothy’s and more. Psst, some are even loved by celebs, too! Keep reading to discover the unexpected shoe trend you’ll inevitably fall in love with.
13 Writer-Approved Trendy Spring Clogs
1. Old Reliable: You know those comfy suede slip-ons every college student wears? Well, they’ve now become a fashion staple. People are rocking them in New York, Paris and Los Angeles!
2. A Little Height: Add some inches with these seriously comfortable block-heel clogs that are designed with an adjustable buckle for the most secure fit.
3. Extra Support: If you’re worried about your clogs slipping off your feet (valid!), this cushy style is designed with sturdy adjustable straps to keep them securely in place.
4. Tied With a Bow: It’s not often that you find clogs with shoelaces — the little design feature gives you freedom to tighten the upper for the perfect fit.
5. Strut Along: Channel your inner early 2000s diva with these studded wooden clogs that are finally stepping back into the limelight after a 20-year hiatus.
6. Not a Want, a Need: I consider these casual merino wool clogs from Rothy’s my house shoes. They’re better than slippers and they’re washable! Psst, they’re the exact pair Jennifer Lawrence wears.
7. Buckle Up: I’ve never slipped into a better pair of dancing clogs than these studded and buckled stunners that look extra groovy under disco lights.
8. Upgraded Silhouette: Clogs don’t have to be backless. This upgraded style makes the shoe type even more comfortable and wearable, thanks to its covered heel and ankle strap.
9. Crocs, But Better: Erase all your Crocs misconceptions — the brand totally revamped its look with these fashion-forward platform clogs.
10. The Coolest of All: What do you get when you combine lug-sole loafers with the clog trend? These sleek shoes. The gold chain is a nice touch, if you ask Us.
11. Cut It Out: I never considered clogs to be works of art until I laid my eyes on this towering clog-ankle boot hybrid.
12. Ready for Summer: As soon as the temperature breaks 70 degrees Fahrenheit, I’ll be pulling out these studded suede clog sandals.
13. Disco Fever: These cheeky white leather clogs are the type of shoes you’ll want to dance in until sunrise.
Entertainment
Why Megan Fox Is Losing Millions Of Dollars With Her IG Snaps
Megan Fox recently returned to Instagram and has been posting sizzling photos of herself, but industry experts are saying she’s losing so much money doing so for free.
A branding expert claims that from a PR point of view, the actress is maintaining her relevance as people still get to see her often, but from a business standpoint, she is “wasting” money.
Megan Fox has previously commented about her unwillingness to share her sexy snaps behind a paywall platform like OnlyFans because of her children.

Megan Fox has always been a diva, racking up almost 25 million followers on Instagram, where she shares very sizzling and suggestive snaps of herself.
She took a break from the popular media sharing platform following her split from former partner Machine Gun Kelly and the birth of their daughter, Saga Blade Fox-Baker.
However, she has since returned with a bang, sharing very sexy photos of herself and racking up millions of views in the process.
In a viral photo, the “Transformers” actress posed on the bed with a very short plaid skirt that showed off her black underwear.
A video she posted also garnered more than 50 million views within a short while, with several million “likes” and comments. Due to the massive attention she has been getting online, several adult industry sources have raised questions over how the movie star is losing a lot of money by posting those photos for free.
The Actress Has Been Encouraged To Post Her Sizzling Snaps On OnlyFans

Adult content creator Addyson James told the Daily Mail that Fox could be making millions of dollars with her global audience and large following, like other celebrities who have launched their OnlyFans accounts.
“I built my OnlyFans from the ground up, so I know firsthand how hard it is to grow a real following,” James said.
“But celebrities can step in and make more money almost instantly just off their name. Someone like Megan Fox could realistically make over $10million a month on OnlyFans just based on her global reach,” she continued.
James added that celebrities like Fox already have the eyeballs, thus putting their earning potential “at a completely different level,” adding that the game is not necessarily about who works harder but “who has the attention.”

Branding expert Brian Scott Gross also weighed in on the issue, telling the news outlet that Fox’s continuous use of Instagram is good for her brand as it keeps her relevant.
However, from a business standpoint, the famous actress is said to be “leaving money on the table.”
“When a global star like Megan Fox posts this kind of content for free, she isn’t just ‘wasting’ money; she’s essentially giving away the crown jewels of her digital real estate,” the expert stated.
The Actress’s Sultry Instagram Posts Were Branded A ‘Massive, Unpaid Marketing Campaign’

Drawing examples from successful OnlyFans celebrities like Bhad Bhabie and Iggy Azalea, the expert further noted that Fox is on another level and making 8 figures shouldn’t be a problem for her.
“Megan is on an even more iconic tier of celebrity, having starred in massive film franchises. The Instagram posts act as a massive, unpaid marketing campaign for a product she isn’t selling yet,” Gross explained.
“From a PR standpoint, she’s maintaining her relevance and keeping her ‘heat’ high, but from a business standpoint, she’s providing the milk for free,” the expert added.
Megan Fox Previously Vowed Not To Pose Nude

Posting sultry photos may be a thing for Fox, but posing nude and putting it up for sale seems to be a line the “Subservience” actress isn’t willing to cross.
In an interview with Fox News, the mother of four vowed not to pose nude or put up any graphic scenes because of her children.
“There are some good projects I’ve read that are with talented people, talented directors, but the things the women are required to do in the movie are things I can’t have my sons ever know or see,” she said at the time.
“I was offered a project that’s coming out on HBO that centers around the life of a prostitute, and it has very graphic sex scenes — things you would see in a pornographic film — and those are things that are degrading to the woman who’s playing the character,” she continued.
Fox added, “I don’t think my children should ever see me doing some of that stuff. I don’t think my boys could handle that.”
Entertainment
Sabrina Carpenter mistakes fan's 'call of celebration' for yodeling in awkward Coachella moment: 'This is weird'
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“That’s your culture, is yodeling?” she asked a very excited festival-goer mid-set during an exchange that has now gone viral.
Entertainment
DJ Anyma Cancels Coachella 2026 Set Over Wind Conditions
DJ Anyma’s set at the 2026 Coachella Music & Arts Festival was cancelled nearly 20 minutes after he was scheduled to perform.
“I’m sorry everyone,” Anyma, 37, wrote via Instagram early on Saturday, April 11. “We’ve done everything in our control to build the show I’ve worked an entire year on. Safety always comes first and we’re working on a solution now.”
Anyma (real name Matteo Milleri) was scheduled to perform just after midnight on Saturday.
“Due to strong wind conditions affecting Anyma’s stage build, he is unable to perform tonight,” a social media statement from the Coachella organizers read. “Coachella and Anyma have made this decision together with your safety as the priority.”
Anyma had planned to debut his latest audiovisual project, ÆDEN, during Coachella.
“It’s not just music, what you do; it’s music, visuals, and performance at the highest level,” he told Vogue in an interview published Friday, April 10. “Everything is crafted to perfection… and you need dedication, stubbornness, and really to focus to make this stuff like you do it.”
ÆDEN features the single “Bad Angel,” in which K-pop superstar Lisa stars in the music video.
“When you first showed me the visual of this character, I loved it,” Lisa, 29, told Anyma in their joint Vogue profile. “I didn’t even want to add any input on it because [it was] already perfect and on point. The concept and the song just felt so good.”
Whether he’s working on ÆDEN or other works, Anyma is hands-on with every aspect of the production.
“I spend 50 percent of my time on [the visual] and 50 percent on the music,” he told Inked magazine in 2025 of his take on electronic music. “It has passed through many iterations, starting with the Afterlife (event series) sound, which was more inspired by Berlin techno, and later evolving into more of a disco and dance phase. Now, it’s deeply rooted in electro and progressive sounds.”
According to Anyma, he constantly tries to adapt the techno genre.
“It’s hard to say exactly where it’s going to land, but that’s the beauty of these things. You start with a vision, and maybe someone takes it and brings it somewhere else,” he told Inked. “We’re seeing less emphasis on long breaks and more of a continuous, club-oriented vibe. It’s about evolving the sound while keeping it fresh and dynamic.”
For Coachella and his other festival gigs, Anyma keeps trying to up the ante.
“It’s very challenging because you don’t want to mess up the narrative you’re trying to say both sonically and visually,” the record producer said last year. “You don’t want to overstimulate people. It’s very rewarding when it comes together, but more difficult than people think.”
Entertainment
Star Trek Planned To Have Captain Archer Meet Sisko And Kirk During Tribble Troubles
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

As a nostalgic English professor, I often think about these wise words from John Greenleaf Whittier: “Of all sad words of tongue or pen, the saddest are these, ‘It might have been.’” No matter what current events are bringing you down (and boy, do you have a lot to choose from right now), nothing will be quite as tragic as the idea that things could have turned out better. That’s not just true of personal or global events, either. In this case, it’s also true of Star Trek: Enterprise.
At this year’s TrekTalks (the annual livestream telethon that raises money for the Hollywood Food Coalition), several Enterprise writers and producers were reunited, including Brannon Braga, Mike Sussman, Phyllis Strong, André Bormanis, and Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens. During the stream, they dished on some of the coolest Enterprise episode pitches that were rejected. Some of them (including a Borg Queen origin story and a crossover with both The Original Series and Deep Space Nine) would have been amazing, and making those episodes could have done what once seemed impossible: saved Star Trek’s most hated spinoff from getting canceled.
Hey, You, Get Off Of My Cloud

Star Trek: Enterprise was a show that, to put it mildly, couldn’t figure out what it wanted to be. Sometimes, it was a proto-Original Series frontier adventure, and other times, it was a post 9/11 nataionlistic parable. By Season 4, showrunner Manny Coto had transformed Enterprise into a must-see Star Trek show, but the damage was already done, and the show was canceled. That made it the first Trek show since The Animated Series to get fewer than seven seasons, and Enterprise was deemed a failure. However, the assembled writers and producers who reunited for Trek Talks revealed some rejected episode pitches that might have saved this underappreciated series.
For example, André Bormanis pitched a prequel to the Original Series episode “The Cloud Minders,” which featured an upper class of citizens literally living in the clouds while an underclass labored in the mines below. Bormani pitched an episode that would have shown the city in the sky being built while social unease and income inequality grew worse. Coto wanted to shoot this episode for Season 5, but Enterprise was canceled before that could happen.
From The Romulan War To World War III

Speaking of the Coto and his scrapped plans for Enterprise, he was really keen on finally portraying the Romulan War onscreen. Mike Sussman confirmed that the late showrunner wanted to finally show the audience the Earth/Romulus conflict that had only been referenced in passing back in the Original Series. Brannon Braga chimed in and alluded to Coto having this planned out for Season 5, confirming that the early cancellation of Enterprise took yet another awesome story away from us.
Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens confirmed they had pitched an episode where Colonel Green (previously seen in the TOS episode “The Savage Curtain”) would survive and torment the descendants of those who fought him, with the audience discovering that Reed’s grandfather supported Green. In case his name doesn’t ring a bell, Green is the war criminal generally credited with starting World War III. Bringing him into an Enterprise episode would have shed light on Star Trek’s most mysterious and generally unexplored time period, but this episode was rejected because it was too similar to storylines involving the Khan-like Augments, themselves a remnant of WW3-era Earth.
Borg Queen Origin Story

This same writing duo also pitched an episode where Alice Krige plays the head of Starfleet Medical and willingly chooses “to join the Collective.” For better or for worse, this would have provided an origin story for the Borg Queen, a character that many Star Trek fans feel has never made much sense.
This would have been a high-risk, high-reward story because it would either finally nestle this strange character into existing canon or ruin the Borg altogether. However, Reeves-Stevens have a great track record(they also wrote some of the best fiction and non-fiction books in Trek history), so if anyone could pull it off, it’s them.
Archer Meets Both Kirk And Sisko Amid The Trouble With Tribbles

The husband/wife writing duo’s final rejected Enterprise pitch was, far and away, the most ambitious. Had the show made it to Season 7, they wanted to feature one last Temporal Cold War episode in which Captain Archer and his crew would have to return to space station K-7 during the events of “The Trouble With Tribbles.”
There, they’d run into both Kirk’s crew from the original episode and Sisko’s crew from “Trials and Tribble-ations.” In retrospect, such an ambitious episode would have been far better than the Enterprise finale, which turned the show’s final story into Commander Riker’s bizarre holodeck simulation.
The Path Not Taken

That series finale was so bad that many Star Trek fans are grateful that Enterprise was canceled before it could get any worse. However, aside from the finale, Season 4 was a high point for this controversial show, and these rejected stories reveal the series’s still untapped potential.
Now, I can’t help but wonder if these episodes could have turned the metaphorical ship around, getting both fans and the network on board for more adventures with the franchise’s quirkiest crew. Had that happened, Enterprise would not have been canceled, and the future of Star Trek might not have landed in the hands of the creative world’s most fearsome villain: Alex Kurtzman.
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