Related: Kelly Rutherford’s Midi Dress Gives NYC Rich Mom Vibes — Steal the Look
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West Wilson Exits Summer House After Controversial Romance With Amanda Batula!
West Wilson’s time in the Hamptons has reportedly come to an end.
The 31-year-old reality star will not return for Season 11 of Summer House, following a controversial season that centered largely around his romance with Amanda Batula and the fallout it created within the cast.
The news comes less than a week after the dramatic Season 10 reunion concluded, where Wilson found himself under intense scrutiny from ex-girlfriend Ciara Miller over his relationship with Amanda, who was once one of Ciara’s closest friends.
While Bravo has yet to announce the official Season 11 cast, production is expected to begin in the coming weeks, making casting decisions imminent. Amanda and West officially confirmed their romance in March, revealing that their longtime friendship had unexpectedly evolved into something more.
“What’s developed recently was the last thing either of us expected,” the pair said in a joint statement at the time. “Our connection grew out of a genuine, long-standing friendship, which made it especially important for us to approach this with care.” Behind the scenes, however, sources claim Wilson’s future on the show had already become uncertain.
“It was a mutual decision between the network and West,” a source told Us Weekly. “He was already feeling like his time on the show was coming to an end.” The insider added that after the reunion aired, “It became even clearer that there wasn’t a long-term fit anymore.”
According to the source, Wilson has accepted the outcome and is focused on other opportunities.
“He is at peace with the decision and is focusing on his podcast and other business ventures.””There’s a tear in the friend group,” the source alleged. “The cast doesn’t want to film with him.” As for Amanda and West’s future together, sources say the couple remains committed despite ongoing criticism and lingering tension within the cast.
“It’s not all butterflies and rainbows,” one insider said, noting that the reunion placed significant pressure on the relationship. Still, the source added, “Both of them feel they are in too deep for them to break up at this point.”
During the reunion, Ciara did not hold back when discussing the couple.
“Maybe they’ll be together,” the Traitors alum said. “Because I honestly think the best woman for West is someone who’s not going to check him on anything, and that’s totally Amanda. She’s very mute, she’s gonna be that weak figure that he needs and he can always be the star in the relationship.”
“So,” she added, “I actually think maybe it could work.”
Ciara also admitted she never expected to find herself upset over Amanda’s relationship with her former boyfriend.
“I couldn’t fathom that I would be sitting here pissed that you’re f—ing my ex,” she quipped. “He wants to embarrass me. He wants to get his last little words in. And I hope it works, because he’s with you to spite me.”
As the criticism mounted, West Wilson revealed he had taken beta blockers before filming the reunion in an effort to manage his anxiety.
“I’m trying to stay composed as much as possible,” he told host Andy Cohen. Ciara quickly fired back, saying, “Or you’re just a sociopath.” After confirming he had taken prescription medication, Wilson explained, “I don’t know if that’s why I’m not sobbing in this moment. This matters to me. I apologize if I don’t read emotional enough.”
The future of Amanda Batula and Ciara Miller filming together also remains uncertain, as it is still unclear whether the former friends will be able to move past the fallout and continue sharing the screen next season.
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Avigail is an Entertainment blogger at All About The Tea, who specializes in The Real Housewives of Atlanta and The Real Housewives of Potomac. Avigail has a background in marketing. She’s a Brooklynite living in the Bahamas, with a passion for travel, writing, reality TV watching, pop culture and spoken word.
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Elegant, yet wearable pieces are a given in Kelly Rutherford’s closet. The actress’ latest look included a shockingly cute pair of light blue H-strap sandals. Though her specific style has a designer price tag, we found a nearly identical pair that won’t break the bank if you want to channel her chic style this summer.
As shared on Instagram, Rutherford posed for a mirror selfie wearing light blue Hermès slides. Her relaxed shoe style featured wide cutout straps and flat soles, proving to be a chic yet practical shoe choice for warm summer days. Similarly, the Lookyno light blue slip-on sandals on Amazon feature an open, geometric silhouette and a square, flat base. Best of all, they only cost $30!
Get the Lookyno Flat Sandals for $30 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate as of the publishing date but are subject to change.
Rutherford wore her pastel-hued slip-ons with a beige linen Helmstedt blouse and a matching midi skirt, each covered in a multicolored floral pattern. The actress’ chic shoe style instantly picked up the similar light blue tones of her lightweight set, creating a streamlined appearance. Her look was complete with a warm tan Hermès Kelly handbag, dark brown sunglasses and a thick silver cuff bracelet.
Like Rutherford, we can’t help but add a pair of open cutout slides to our summer shoe rotation. The sandals’ smooth texture creates an elevated appearance, while a slip-on shape with flat soles allows for comfortable, easy wear.
Similarly to Rutherford, pairing your own light blue slip-ons with pieces in a blue shade—especially on the lighter side of the color spectrum—will create an effortlessly put-together outfit, even if you simply slide them on before stepping out the door. A printed blouse or T-shirt with light blue jeans creates a leg-lengthening effect, though they look just as sharp with darker denim as well. The shoe style can also easily complement a lightweight linen skirt, pants, or a flowing white dress to create a breezy summer outfit, perfect for daytime errands, cocktail hour, or sunny lunches outside.
Rutherford’s sandal style is popular among Amazon shoppers, too. One customer shared that the $30 sandals are “so cute and go with everything,” noting how “comfortable” they feel. Another fan said the “true to size” style makes it “a fantastic and comfortable sandal.”
Whether you’re slipping this cutout sandal style on with an elegant summer dress or more casual denim, they’ll instantly elevate any outfit this season. The easy-to-wear slides look far more expensive than their $30 price tag. Add them to your cart when planning your next summer looks!
Get the Lookyno Flat Sandals for $30 at Amazon! Please note, prices are accurate as of the publishing date but are subject to change.
Looking for something else? Explore more summer-ready sandals here and don’t forget to check out all of Amazon’s Daily Deals for more great finds!
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The comedic actress returned to her alma mater, Dartmouth College, to address the graduating class of 2026.
Months of friendship drama, public accusations, and emotional social media posts left fans wondering whether the relationship between Mikayla Matthews and Taylor Frankie Paul could ever recover.
After weeks of headlines surrounding their falling out, Matthews is finally addressing where things stand today.
While the wounds from the feud remain fresh, she says the situation has reached a more peaceful place.

After their highly publicized clash online, Mikayla Matthews says she and her fellow “Secret Lives of Mormon Wives” star have reached a better place.
Speaking to Page Six’s “Virtual Reali-Tea” while promoting her partnership with Snackish, Matthews revealed that she no longer feels the need to continue the public back-and-forth.
“We’re good. I feel like I’ve said, not all that I’ve wanted to say, but all that was needed to say,” she explained.
Although she stood by her previous statements, Matthews indicated that her priority is now protecting her own well-being rather than revisiting old arguments.
“This is what I need to do to protect myself and my relationships and my mental health,” she said.
She also acknowledged that public attention inevitably brings criticism and debate.
“There’s still always going to be opinions and comments, that’s just kind of the name of the game. Control what you can control. That’s where I’m kind of at right now.”
The comments marked the clearest indication yet that Matthews is attempting to move beyond the conflict that dominated social media discussions among fans of the reality series.
The dispute first erupted when Mikayla Matthews shared an Instagram Story discussing the importance of maintaining healthy boundaries.
At the time, she explained that she wanted to remain “as removed as possible” from Taylor Frankie Paul’s legal issues involving her former partner, Dakota Mortensen.
Matthews also argued that it was not her responsibility to support or excuse behavior she viewed as harmful.
According to her, it was not her “job to enable poor or dangerous behavior from either party.”
She further stated that she had supported Paul through difficult periods, including moments when the reality star had hit “rock bottom,” despite dealing with her own personal challenges and health concerns.
The comments quickly drew attention and set the stage for a public disagreement between two women who had once appeared to share a close friendship.

Paul did not remain silent for long. Without directly naming Mikayla Matthews, she posted a lengthy response that many interpreted as being aimed at her co-star.
“I STILL have ‘friends’ kicking me while I’m already down and calling it ‘setting a boundary’ and then BLAMES ME for being upset and responding. That’s called shaming and attack while I had a moment to breathe and she knew that,” Paul wrote.
Her frustration became even more apparent as she continued.
“What a snake friend just did to me in the public eye after everything she just witnessed…the lack of empathy and silence was loud enough,” she said.
Paul also challenged Matthews’ claim that she was remaining neutral during the ongoing legal battle involving Mortensen.
“Your trauma doesn’t give you a pass to kick me while down and cover it with ‘a boundary’ months later after the fact… she is right to state her “boundary” sure …but go ahead tell them the truth,” Paul added.
The exchange quickly became one of the most talked-about reality television feuds online.
As speculation intensified, Matthews responded again in the comments section of an Instagram fan account discussing the drama.
“Could probably write a book on everything I’ve had to say on this. Nothing I said denied that she’s experienced pain, trauma, or difficult things, there’s literally no question about that,” she wrote.
Matthews argued that empathy and accountability could exist at the same time.
She continued, “Two things can be true. Someone can be hurting and still hurt people around them in the process. My statement was never about wanting [Taylor] to fail, suffer, or be canceled.”
She further explained her reasoning, writing, “It was about no longer wanting to publicly participate in or normalize a cycle that was affecting everyone around it, especially where children and repeated violence were involved.”
The reality star also maintained her concerns regarding Paul’s past domestic violence incidents and said she could not support what she viewed as destructive behavior patterns.
Several days later, Matthews acknowledged that parts of the online dispute had escalated further than she intended.
She admitted she had “definitely got out of hand commenting,” but maintained that her overall message remained unchanged.
“I can’t stress enough that this is not about ‘sides’ or ‘teams.’ I genuinely want to see everyone healed and happy, including myself,” she wrote.
Matthews also made it clear that she would continue defending herself against behavior she found unacceptable.
“At the same time, I’m not going to quietly accept loud disrespect, manipulation or fear tactics used to intimidate any woman who set boundaries or chooses not to support destructive behavior. And I definitely won’t tolerate people downplaying the trauma I’ve endured and continue to work through to this day,” she said.
She later described social media as “so dangerous” and revealed she would be “blocking anyone who is not serving [her] end goal.”
The feud unfolded against the backdrop of Paul’s ongoing legal and custody disputes involving Mortensen. In March, Paul temporarily lost custody of her young son amid mutual allegations of abuse between the former couple. Their court battle remains ongoing.
Musicals get judged unfairly. And that’s mainly because my personal experience sometimes perceives the songs like interruptions. But one close look at the finest musicals out there and you understand that the finest ones use music as the place where characters finally say the thing they were too scared, too proud, too broken, or too young to say plainly.
The ten films below deserve a bigger spotlight because each one understands that musical numbers can carry loneliness, desire, grief, rebellion, absurdity, identity, and pure cinematic joy. Some are strange. Some are messy. Some are tiny compared to the obvious classics. All ten have that rare feeling where the music seems to unlock the movie’s soul. Go figure.
God Help the Girl follows Eve (Emily Browning), a fragile and imaginative young woman in Glasgow, as she leaves treatment for mental health struggles and starts making music with James (Olly Alexander) and Cassie (Hannah Murray). The plot is small on purpose. A band forms, feelings shift, friends wander through cafés, parks, bedrooms, and practice spaces, and every song feels like someone trying to build a version of themselves they can survive inside.
That is the charm people underrate. The movie has the softness of an old indie-pop record, but Eve’s pain keeps the sweetness from floating away. Browning makes her feel dreamy without turning her into a cute sadness object. James has his own awkward sincerity, while Cassie gives the group a brighter, sharper pulse. The songs sound light, yet they keep brushing against recovery, loneliness, romance, and the strange relief of finding people who understand your rhythm before your life is fixed.
A Polish mermaid horror musical set in a nightclub should sound too strange to be this emotionally sharp. The Lure follows two siren sisters, Golden (Michalina Olszańska) and Silver (Marta Mazurek), who are pulled into the human world of 1980s Warsaw nightlife, where they sing, seduce, perform, and try to understand desire inside a place that wants to sell their bodies as spectacle. One sister leans toward hunger and instinct. The other starts chasing love with a human man who has no idea what that love will cost her.
The movie is wild, bloody, glittery, and weirdly heartbreaking in the same breath. The music has that cold synth-pop nightclub pulse, and the performances make the sisters feel magical without smoothing over how dangerous they are. Their tails are gorgeous and grotesque. Their voices are hypnotic. Their bond is the real emotional anchor, especially as romance starts threatening the thing that made them powerful together. The Lure deserves masterpiece status because it turns a fairy tale into body horror, pop fantasy, sister tragedy, and coming-of-age nightmare all at once.
Anna and the Apocalypse follows Anna (Ella Hunt), a teenager in the small Scottish town of Little Haven, desperate to leave home and travel before adulthood locks her into everyone else’s expectations. Then Christmas season gets swallowed by a zombie outbreak, and her school, friends, crushes, teachers, and family problems all become part of a survival story with songs. Zombie musicals should collapse from the concept alone, so the shock here is how much heart this one has.
The fun is obvious at first: candy-colored holiday chaos, undead attacks, school corridors, weapons made from whatever is nearby, and songs that treat teen frustration like it deserves a full chorus. Then the movie starts cutting deeper. Anna’s need to escape her dad, John’s (Malcolm Cumming) quiet love for her, Steph’s (Sarah Swire) isolation, and the group’s messy loyalty make the horror hurt more than expected. “Hollywood Ending” gives the whole thing a bright teen-movie lift before the world gets uglier. The movie earns affection because it lets the singing be funny, sincere, and painful without apologizing for any of it.
Next up, this whole film feels like a wealthy, neurotic family daydreaming its way through romance, and honestly, that is the best way to meet it. Woody Allen’s ensemble musical Everyone Says I Love You follows tangled relationships across New York, Paris, and Venice, with family members, lovers, exes, and romantic disasters slipping into classic American standards. The singing is often imperfect, which gives the movie a loose, personal quality most polished musicals would have cleaned away.
That looseness becomes the point. These people are not bursting into song because they are grand performers. They sing because love has made them foolish, hopeful, jealous, sentimental, or ridiculous. The film has a breezy charm in the way it drifts through crushes, breakups, political mismatches, and impossible romantic fantasies. Goldie Hawn floating by the Seine is the image everyone remembers, and for good reason. It feels like a private wish made visible. The movie is underrated because its lightness hides real craft. It understands romance as performance, embarrassment, and fantasy we keep choosing even after experience should have made us wiser.
Pennies from Heaven stars Arthur Parker (Steve Martin), a sheet-music salesman during the Depression who dreams in old songs because reality gives him very little worth singing about. This is the kind of musical that smiles with its mouth and bleeds underneath. His marriage is cold, his business life is humiliating, and his affair with schoolteacher Eileen (Bernadette Peters) pulls both of them into a fantasy of glamour that their actual world refuses to support.
The lip-synced musical numbers are brilliant. They make happiness feel borrowed. Characters open their mouths and old recordings pour out, as if they can only access beauty through songs that existed before their pain. The “Pennies from Heaven” and “Let’s Misbehave” sequences glow with artificial joy, but the streets outside stay cruel, poor, and unforgiving. Peters gives Eileen a sadness that keeps deepening as her dream turns into compromise. The movie is too bitter to become a comfort musical, which may explain why it still feels under-loved. It uses fantasy to show how badly people need fantasy when life has cornered them.
You can feel the sweat in this one before the band even becomes good. The Commitments follows Jimmy Rabbitte (Robert Arkins), a working-class Dubliner who pulls together a group of local musicians under the wildly ambitious belief that soul music belongs to them too. They are young, broke, mouthy, restless, and convinced for at least five minutes at a time that they might become legendary. That delusion is part of the magic.
The performances have a rough, electric joy that makes the movie endlessly rewatchable. Deco Cuffe (Andrew Strong)’s voice is ridiculous in the best way, even when his ego makes him impossible to stand. The backing singers bring heat, humor, and actual personality instead of becoming decoration. Joey “The Lips” Fagan (Johnny Murphy) gives the whole project a strange mythic confidence, like every tiny gig is connected to a larger musical universe. The rehearsals, arguments, cramped stages, and explosive versions of “Try a Little Tenderness” and “Mustang Sally” are so godo and make the movie feel alive from the floor up. It is a masterpiece about a band that burns bright partly because it was never built to last.
Sing Street follows Conor (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo), a Dublin schoolboy in the 1980s dealing with his parents’ collapsing marriage, money problems, and a grim new school run by cruel authority. Then he sees Raphina (Lucy Boynton), claims he is in a band to impress her, and suddenly has to invent one with other boys who also need somewhere to put their hunger for escape. Few movies understand how music lets teenagers become brave before they actually feel brave.
The joy is in watching influence turn into identity. Duran Duran, The Cure, Spandau Ballet, and music-video fantasy all pass through Conor until the songs start sounding like his own life fighting back. “Drive It Like You Stole It” is pure teenage imagination taking over a miserable school hall. “Up” captures that first rush of thinking someone sees the version of you that nobody at home understands. Brendan (Jack Reynor), Conor’s older brother, gives the film its bruised wisdom because he knows what it costs to stay stuck. The movie feels small, then suddenly enormous, because a song can become the first door out.
Some movie romances shout. This one barely raises its voice, and that is why it hurts so beautifully. Once follows a Dublin busker, Guy (Glen Hansard), and a Czech immigrant, Girl (Markéta Irglová), who meet through music, then begin recording songs together while carrying unfinished lives in different directions. He is still wounded by an old love. She has responsibilities, a child, and a marriage that complicates every feeling the music starts bringing to the surface.
The songs feel discovered rather than staged. “Falling Slowly” has become the obvious signature, but the whole movie has that fragile, lived-in quality where a melody can say what a conversation would ruin. Hansard and Irglová give the relationship a tenderness that never needs cheap romantic certainty. The music shop scene, the late-night piano, the studio sessions, the headphones, the small looks after each song, all of it builds a connection that feels real enough to leave unfinished. That is why Once keeps finding people. It understands that some relationships change your life without becoming your life.
This musical does not ask for attention. Hedwig and the Angry Inch follows Hedwig (John Cameron Mitchell), an East German rock singer touring seafood restaurants and small venues while telling the story of her botched gender-affirming surgery, her escape from Berlin, and the lover who stole her songs and became famous. The stage becomes her confession booth, battlefield, and survival mechanism at the same time. It kicks the door open in heels, eyeliner, rage, glitter, and heartbreak.
The music is furious, funny, wounded, and alive in a way most screen musicals never dare to be. “Tear Me Down,” for instance, turns identity into a wall being smashed. “Wig in a Box” turns self-creation into an anthem for anyone who has ever had to invent armor before leaving the room. “Origin of Love” gives Hedwig’s longing a mythic shape, while Tommy Gnosis (Michael Pitt) keeps representing the validation she wants and the theft she cannot forgive. The film is messy in the way a real open wound is messy. Its masterpiece status comes from how completely the songs, performance, pain, jokes, and gendered self-mythology fuse into one unforgettable voice.
At #1, we have this pure joy that is harder to make than people admit, and this movie makes it look like the whole city woke up singing in color. The Young Girls of Rochefort follows Delphine (Catherine Deneuve) and Solange (Françoise Dorléac), twin sisters in Rochefort who dream of love, art, music, and a larger life beyond their seaside town. Around them, sailors, shopkeepers, old lovers, visiting performers, and strangers keep crossing paths as if romance has turned the streets into choreography.
The miracle is how much melancholy lives inside all that brightness. Deneuve and Dorléac give the sisters lightness, but the film never treats longing as shallow. People miss each other by seconds. Old love hovers near new possibility. Michel Legrand’s music turns every walk, glance, and turn through the square into emotional movement. Gene Kelly brings Hollywood grace into Demy’s French dream world without making it feel imported. The colors are famous, the dancing is gorgeous, and the songs are addictive, but the reason it sits at No. 1 is deeper than style. It captures the feeling that life may be full of near-misses, yet beauty keeps asking people to step back into the street.
April 11, 1968
126 Minutes
Jacques Demy
Jacques Demy
Catherine Deneuve
Delphine Garnier
Françoise Dorléac
Solange Garnier
Remember when Bunnie XO had the internet calling her and Jelly Roll “couple goals”? Just a few months ago, the podcast host made it clear that what fans see online doesn’t reflect the full reality of their relationship. While Bunnie XO and Jelly Roll have often been praised for their love story and loyalty to each other, she previously shut down the fairytale narrative. This week, reports that Jelly Roll has filed for divorce have circulated.
During a sit-down with Kelly Clarkson, which aired in February 2026, Bunnie XO has been firm about rejecting the “couple goals” label fans love to place on her and Jelly Roll. “I know they mean it with good intention. But at the same time… we’ve been through the freaking trenches together,” she said, emphasizing that their relationship has endured far more than what’s visible online. And while the pair have openly discussed therapy, rebuilding trust, and doing the work to stay together, recent reports that Jelly Roll has filed for divorce have once again brought their complicated love story back into the spotlight.
Furthermore, Bunnie opened up about how quickly things moved between her and Jelly Roll, revealing they eloped in Las Vegas just a month after meeting. She explained that their vastly different upbringings played a major role in the early challenges of their marriage, admitting things were rocky from the start as they adjusted to life together. “We were both just so hardheaded and stubborn,” she said, reflecting on how their personalities clashed in the beginning.
Bunnie also revealed that their relationship hit a major breaking point when Jelly Roll — real name Jason DeFord — had a nearly year-long affair about three years into their marriage. She recalled how devastating it was to find out, sharing that they briefly separated before eventually working through their issues. Instead of immediately walking away, Bunnie said she chose to reflect inward and gave him another chance, explaining that she believed in growth and second chances despite the hurt.
As The Shade Room previously reported, Jelly Roll officially filed for divorce from Bunnie XO on May 18, bringing an end to their 10-year marriage. Court documents that surfaced on Tuesday, June 16, revealed that the singer listed their date of separation as May 9 and cited “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for the split. The filing quickly reignited public interest in the couple’s relationship, especially as past interviews and personal revelations about their marriage began circulating again online.
What Do You Think Roomies?
Widow’s Bay came out of nowhere to scare viewers into a hilarious good time. The Apple TV series takes the classic Stephen King trope of a tight-knit community in a small town plagued by horrors and gives it a refreshing spin. Matthew Rhys stars as Mayor Tom Loftis, a relative outsider who comes to understand that the macabre legends of Widow’s Bay are closer to reality than he is comfortable with.
The hidden gem of the series, however, is Kate O’Flynn, who plays Tom’s employee, Patricia. The underappreciated municipal worker finds purpose when Tom gets in over his head. In a series that has its niche in horror-comedy, O’Flynn still stands apart in a cast full of idiosyncratic characters. Patricia is at the center of one of the best episodes when her sunset cocktail party goes awry. Widow’s Bay has officially concluded for the season, but that doesn’t mean that O’Flynn’s performances are out of reach. Viewers can delve into her filmography even further in an underseen comedy from England.
For those intrigued by Kate O’Flynn’s special brand of humor, the Channel 4 sitcom, Everyone Else Burns, is the natural follow-up. The title alone conveys exactly what sort of tone the satirical series takes about a Manchester family devoted to a puritanical form of Christianity. O’Flynn plays the Lewis family’s matriarch, Fiona, whose deadpan delivery and comedic timing are a trademark of the actor.
Her comedy comes about between a rock and a hard place, which Fiona usually finds herself in. Married to a staunch devotee who entirely believes that the rapture is coming, Fiona follows in David’s footsteps at first. She is also devout, but is not as ridiculous as her husband. David (Simon Bird) is the Michael Scott of this sitcom, a leader who probably shouldn’t be one. His offensive bowl haircut and blind belief that he is God’s instrument are part of the humor.
Fiona isn’t as serious and likes modern conveniences such as television, but still believes that the apocalypse is imminent. This is a careful tightrope walk, which makes her the best character in the series. She progresses as a person throughout the series, eventually acknowledging the hypocrisy and misogyny of organized religion. David isn’t particularly likable as he represents this hypocrisy. He isn’t a good person either, but he believes that his religion makes him a saint. He fully buys into the idea that he should be promoted to a church elder, even though he is obviously ill-suited to the position.
His wife, in contrast, is the hilarious salve to this issue. Fiona is reasonable, but still hammers home the central concept of the show. Everyone Else Burns is almost the antithesis of Widow’s Bay, but it still harnesses similar humor. While the straight sitcom leans towards the purity of religion, the Apple TV series is more satanic. Patricia would be disavowed by this family, especially after committing a demonic ritual, which almost kills everyone on the island. Kate O’Flynn is the secret weapon of both shows, no matter what side of the demonic line she’s on.
2023 – 2024-00-00
Channel 4, The CW
Dillon Mapletoft, Oliver Taylor
The internet has clocked into detective mode AGAIN, Roomies! Fans have started connecting the dots and think Jhené Aiko and Larry June low-key soft launched a lil’ something. Y’all already know social media loves a good investigation, and after spotting ONE particular clue, plenty of folks have themselves convinced that a baewatch might be brewing.
The internet is in full FBI mode after speculating that Jhené Aiko and Larry June might be more than friends. The dating rumors kicked off after Jhené shared an Instagram Story post showing off her layered necklaces featuring her son Noah’s name, whom she shares with Big Sean, and her daughter Namiko’s name, whom she shares with O’Ryan Grandberry. Fans quickly noticed that Larry slid into the replies with an orange and sparkle emoji.
But social media detectives didn’t stop there. Larry later posted and deleted a photo of his gold watch next to another person’s iced-out wrist. Fans immediately zoomed in and claimed the tattoo near the watch matches the one on Jhené’s arm, fueling the dating rumors even more. Swipe below to peep the photos.
After The Shade Room shared the posts from Jhené and Larry, the Roommates wasted no time taking over the comment section. Plenty of fans stamped their approval on the rumored link-up, with many saying they’re here for it!
Instagram user @sewthatschels wrote, “That’s a hot link up right there! 😍🔥”
Instagram user @slayedbydalvi wrote, “This makes so much sense love that for them🧡”
While Instagram user @chef.abella wrote, “They really the same person in different fonts ❤️”
Then Instagram user @1_dolly_325 wrote, “I love how the girlies is moving on quick 👏🏾. No more crying for wasted time!”
Another Instagram user @jennifermjoseph wrote, “WE APPROVE. Very much aligned.”
Instagram user @getyourlifeee wrote, “They compliment one another really well 😍”
Then another Instagram user @riahashanti2x wrote, “Waittt when did her and big Sean break up? 😂😂😂😂😂”
While another Instagram user @gorgeousyae wrote, “Jhene KeepAMan Aiko 🤌🏾”
Lastly, Instagram user @jamestheeillest wrote, “I ain’t mad at this at all 👏🏾👏🏾”
Fans have kept a close eye on Jhené Aiko for a minute, especially when it comes to where things stand between her and Big Sean. Long before the photos of her and Larry June started making rounds, folks online had already started wondering if Jhené and Sean quietly called it quits since they haven’t been spotted together in quite some time. Neither Jhené or Big Sean has addressed the rumors and speculation, but Jhené has continued sharing little glimpses of their son on social media. Jhené and Sean welcomed Noah in November 2022.
Then in 2024, fans put their relationship under an even bigger microscope after Big Sean popped out during her ‘The Magic Hour’ tour stop in Los Angeles. While performing, Sean rapped the opening verse of his hit song ‘Beware’ directly to Jhené. She playfully brushed him off with a few dismissive gestures, but when he reached the lyrics, “Got a ring,” she turned to him and said, “What ring?” The moment quickly went viral and had the internet side-eyeing their relationship.
In 2024, Big Sean also spoke on the speculation about a proposal and marriage with Jhené during an interview with Charlamagne Tha God. he said that, like any couple, they dealt with ups and downs and were focused on figuring out how to move through it all. He also shared that marriage represents the highest form of a relationship. He didn’t exactly say he wasn’t down to put a ring on Jhené, but his response still had fans questioning whether or not he planned to.
“To me marriage symbolizes the best relationship. To me, I feel like having a relationship is first and foremost. People are like ‘oh you have to to get married,’ but to me that’s like a fear-based way of thinking too because then people be getting divorced,” Sean said.
What Do You Think Roomies?
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The pioneering medical drama helped launch the career of screen legend Denzel Washington.
Some actors have a star-making performance, but Jim Carrey had a star-making year in 1994. At that time, Carrey was already making noise thanks to In Living Color, but The Mask helped turn him into a full-blown movie star. For those of us who watched him step into that Edge City bank for the first time over 30 years ago, you could tell he had it. So, it seems, could director Chuck Russell.
Speaking with Collider for the 30th anniversary of Eraser for the latest edition of our retrospective series, Collider Rewind, Russell reflected on watching Carrey perform before casting him in The Mask. The filmmaker said seeing him live made it clear that Carrey’s physical comedy worked far beyond what he could do on television. “Yeah. So I’m at The Comedy Store, and I realized what he’d been doing in In Living Color, [which] I’d also been watching, was that he could do live,” Russell told Collider. “I talked to him about it while we were filming The Mask, and he said, ‘If I can imagine it, Chuck, I can physically do it. It’s wild.’ He is a Charlie Chaplin. I knew, ‘This guy’s a comedy genius,’ literally. I bet the farm on Jim Carrey being a great movie star, and New Line finally agreed.”
Russell also revealed that Carrey was not the only major Hollywood discovery of the film. Cameron Diaz, who made her screen debut in The Mask, had never acted before, making the whole project a much bigger risk than it may look in hindsight, but boy, did it pay off. “The other person that I really saw ahead of time was Cameron Diaz, who had never acted before at all,” said Russell. “So, the studio took quite a risk with me, and my encouragement on, first of all, letting that be a comedy instead of a horror film, which was originally how they conceived it, and letting me make it a vehicle for Jim and Cameron. It was kind of risk-reward. We made a movie that was unlike anything that had been seen prior.”
Originally, as Russell explained, the plan for the film was something more akin to a horror, which makes a lot of sense given the premise: Stanley Ipkiss puts on the mask and starts robbing banks and leaving bodies in his wake, then the next morning, he has no idea what crimes he’s committed. But there was a very tricky tightrope to walk to make that into a comedy, and Russell pulled it off magnificently. “I wanted to make a literally joyful movie,” Russell explained. “I’d lost my father not long before I got to make The Mask, and I just said, ‘I’m going to have a good time, and I’m going to make sure the audiences have a good time. Let’s get this movie made with Jim Carrey.’”
The Mask was a massive success, especially considering how risky it looked on paper at the time, with two leads who were by no means household names, and visual effects galore. It was made for around $23 million and grossed about $351 million worldwide, which is an enormous return. Domestically, it made about $119 million, and internationally, it added around $232 million.
It was also a huge career-maker for Carrey and Diaz. Carrey had already broken out that same year with Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, but The Mask helped prove he could carry a big, effects-driven studio movie. When you watch Ace Ventura, there’s a raw and low-budget feel to it. The Mask felt glossy and like a proper Hollywood picture, while Diaz’s entrance into the Edge City bank is still one of the most memorable on-screen debuts in movie history. Critically, it landed well, too. The effects, Carrey’s performance, and the live-action cartoon feel were all praised, and the film earned an Oscar nomination for Best Visual Effects.
Stay tuned for more from our interview with Russell for the latest edition of Collider Rewind.
July 29, 1994
101 minutes
Chuck Russell
Mike Werb, Michael Fallon, Mark Verheiden
Deborah Moore, Mike Richardson
Stanley Ipkiss / The Mask
Peter Riegert
Mitch Kellaway
No amount of magic is enough for Potterheads. Be it the generation that grew up with books and movies, or the ones who were introduced to the franchise later. Over the years, many moments and characters have become staples for the fandom. Later this year, a new generation will be introduced to Harry, Ron, and Hermione and their magical Wizarding World as HBO rolls out the new Harry Potter series.
The series, showrun by Francesca Gardiner and directed by Mark Mylod, promises nostalgia and is adamant to flesh out elements of the books that didn’t get screen time during the original movies, be it characters like the poltergeist Peeves or Harry’s life with the Dursleys before he got his letter, as teased in the trailer. To remind fans of the nostalgia and the wonderful world filled with magic and mayhem before the new series arrives, Funko has launched a new line assembling the Dark Lord’s faithful servants.
Fans will soon find Pops of Fenrir Greyback, Bellatrix Lestrange, Lucius Malfoy, and a Death Eater. For fans who’d love to start right away with their collection, figurines of Harry Potter with Hedwig, Aberforth Dumbledore with Mirror Shard, and Severus Snape with Patronus are available right now. The figurines make a perfect addition to any fan’s collection.
Enough to get us excited, but not enough to keep guessing. The series has gathered a brilliant cast, including Dominic McLaughlin as the titular character, with Alastair Stout as Ron Weasley, and Arabella Stanton as Hermione Granger. Further filling the staffroom are John Lithgow as headmaster Albus Dumbledore, Janet McTeer stepping into the shoes of Minerva McGonagall, and Paapa Essiedu as iconic double agent Severus Snape, along with Nick Frost as loveable gameskeeper Rubeus Hagrid.
In the longer TV series format, the makers are filling in some blanks with behind-the-scenes images showcasing Dumbledore meeting his friend Nicolas Flamel and his wife; some images also show Harry’s parents, James and Lily. With small elements such as these, even longtime fans will get something fresh in the reboot. Furthermore, some ignored characters like Peeves, who’ll be played by Peter Serafinowicz. With season 1 already under their belt, the second season is currently filming.
The new Funko line will be out soon. The new Harry Potter series will debut on 25 December. Stay tuned to Collider for more such updates.
2026 – 2026
Francisca Gardiner
Mark Mylod
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