Entertainment
Yaya Mayweather Reacts To Jayda Cheaves & Dess Dior Fight
Yaya Mayweather is sharing her thoughts after viral footage surfaced online showing Jayda Cheaves and Dess Dior involved in an altercation in a nightclub on Saturday night. The incident went down after the ladies attended Mariah The Scientist’s concert In Atlanta on April 11, where Dess also performed.
RELATED: Mrs. Trendsetter? Social Media Goes WILD After Jayda Cheaves & Ari Fletcher Popped Out In The Same Latex Look (PHOTOS)
Yaya Mayweather Enters the Chat After Viral Video Shows Jayda Cheaves & Dess Dior In Altercation
A viral video has taken over social media showing Jayda Cheaves and Dess Dior getting into a heated altercation. Reactions are pouring in as fans patiently wait for both of the ladies to set the record straight on what went down. In the middle of it all, Yaya Mayweather came through with her thoughts on the situation. She dropped a post on X (formerly Twitter) giving Dess props for how she handled things and even joked that she held her own just like her dad Floyd Mayweather does in the ring. “Dess was in the club straight walking s**t down… ok dess mayweather “ Yaya wrote.
Jayda Wayda Drops THIS Video Amid Speculation
As of right now, neither Jayda or Dess has addressed the situation. However, Jayda had fans speculating whether she cleared the air after she shared a video on her Instagram Stories on Sunday, April 12. The clip shows her and Dess vibing to Dess’ new single, ‘Different Pages,’ in the back of a car. Jayda sits on Dess’ lap and sings every word, but it’s unclear whether the footage was filmed before or after the altercation.
Social Media Pops OFF With Reactions
Even though it’s unclear whether Jayda’s video with Dess came before or after the altercation, folks online still flooded The Shade Room’s comment section with reactions. Some said they love that Jayda stays unbothered no matter what, while others gave Dess props for always holding her bestie down.
Instagram user @terrryreloaded wrote, “Back to regular programming 👏🔥🔥”
Instagram user @immaaashhhole wrote, “I’m just glad she has Dess…everyone needs a friend that rides for them.”
While Instagram user @blbbritney88 wrote, “Every bestie can’t fight just need 1 hitta 🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾🥰🤏🏾. Love this.”
Then Instagram user @bombshell_416 wrote, “I just wanna know how Jayda ended up in a headlock.”
Another Instagram user @iamagneznye wrote, “Jayda is that girl. Protect your energy babygirl, some girls out there just envy for no reason.”
Instagram user @manefestnlashee1 wrote, “Love how unbothered she is.”
Then another Instagram user @b_who_smooth wrote, “They said Dess was lining them up she the barber.”
Finally, Instagram user @lavernthequeenb wrote, “Trust and believe it was some jealous, hating females smh.”
RELATED: Who’s That Sis? Dess Dior Has Fans Playing FBI After Peep Mystery Man In New Flick (PHOTO)
What Do You Think Roomies?
Entertainment
Billy Bob Thornton Was Near-Perfect in This Retro Neo-Noir Gem From the Coen Brothers
Joel and Ethan Coen are responsible for so many all-time great classics that it’s easy to take them for granted. While most cinephiles are familiar with the brutal neo-Western No Country For Old Men, the darkly comedic mystery Fargo, the cult classic The Big Lebowski, and the soulful music drama Inside Llewyn Davis, some of their best films have fallen under the radar, including The Man Who Wasn’t There.
While not a direct remake, The Man Who Wasn’t There is an homage to the film noir movement of the 1940s, and shares many tonal and stylistic similarities with classics like Double Indemnity, Mildred Pierce, and many thrillers directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Although the aesthetics alone make it worthy of a recommendation, The Man Who Wasn’t There ranks among the Coens’ best thanks to the amazing performance by Billy Bob Thornton.
What Is ‘The Man Who Wasn’t There’ About?
Set a few years after the conclusion of World War II, The Man Who Wasn’t There stars Thornton as the lowly barber Ed Crane, who works in a shop that is owned by his older brother, Frank (Michael Badalucco). After suspecting that his wife Doris (Frances McDormand) is secretly having an affair with his boss, Big Dave (James Gandolfini), Ed decides to stage a blackmail scheme. What he does not anticipate is that Big Dave will end up embezzling funds from a department store in order to pay off the blackmail, and ends up beating to death the businessman Creighton Tolliver (Joe Polito) after he reveals Ed’s involvement. Ed has no option but to kill Big Dave in self-defense, in what becomes the first in a series of crimes he commits to divert attention away from his insidious scheme.
There’s a clever double meaning to the title of The Man Who Wasn’t There as it relates to Ed; while it suggests that he is able to perform a nefarious scheme without anyone noticing, it also suggests that he was so anonymous in the way that he conducted his life that virtually no one paid attention to what he was actually doing. Extra-marital affairs are common plot devices within noir films, but The Man Who Wasn’t There subverts expectations of the genre by turning the “wronged” party into the protagonist of the story. While there isn’t much suggestion that there’s been any real affection between Ed and Dorris for quite some time, it’s implied that his anger towards Big Dave is one that involves ego. Ed has grown so irritated by how Big Dave acts callously without ever facing a consequence that he takes it upon himself to take advantage of the situation. What begins as a misguided attempt at justice ends up revealing a dark side of Ed that he becomes more acquainted with as the story continues to get more disturbing.
Billy Bob Thornton Is at His Most Ruthless in ‘The Man Who Wasn’t There’
Thornton is able to craft an intriguing anti-hero in The Man Who Wasn’t There, as Ed is undoubtedly a bad guy who is still compelling to watch. The Coens are keen to show that in this era of affluent business and a booming economy, many selfish people are trying to take advantage of their wealth and privilege. It’s easy to sympathize with Ed early on, as he is brilliant at using his enemies’ weaknesses against them to come up with a con. However, Thornton can make Ed into a steadily more terrifying character when it becomes clear that his desire for power cannot simply be cut off.
Thornton is a perfect fit for the Coens’ style of filmmaking, and it’s a shame that he never worked with them again. Thornton was able to embody the blend of social satire, dark humor, and thinly veiled morality that are essential components of the Coens’ filmmaking habits. Thornton likely has high standards of any script he attaches himself to, as he is an Academy Award-winning screenwriter in his own right; thankfully, the Coens were up to the challenge and ended up providing him with one of their greatest characters.
The Man Who Wasn’t There
- Release Date
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November 16, 2001
- Runtime
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116 minutes
- Director
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Joel Coen
- Writers
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Joel Coen, Ethan Coen
Entertainment
Netflix’s New Shark Thriller Is Officially Taking Over the World
Netflix has dropped a lot of thrillers that get a quick burst of attention and then vanish into the algorithm void a few days later. Thrash doesn’t look like it’s heading that way. The new shark survival movie arrived with a pulpy, high-concept hook that basically sells itself, and viewers around the world seem to have gone for it immediately. A disaster movie with sharks was always going to be catnip for a certain kind of streaming audience. Now the numbers are backing that up in a big way.
Thrash is now the No. 1 movie on Netflix worldwide, according to FlixPatrol’s chart for April 11, 2026, where it sits well ahead of the rest of the film lineup. The title is currently leading Netflix’s global movie chart with 926 points, putting it comfortably ahead of second-place Striking Distance.
That momentum is also playing out country by country. FlixPatrol’s latest chart shows Thrash at No. 1 in multiple territories, which helps explain why the film already feels like one of Netflix’s first real global movie breakouts of the month. Directed by Tommy Wirkola, Thrash is set in a coastal town hit by a catastrophic Category 5 hurricane, where stranded residents suddenly find themselves dealing with rapidly rising floodwaters and hungry sharks. The film stars Phoebe Dynevor, Whitney Peak, and Djimon Hounsou.
Is ‘Thrash’ Any Good?
Critics, though, have been a lot less enthusiastic than viewers clicking play. On Rotten Tomatoes, Thrash currently holds a 37% Tomatometer score from 27 reviews, along with a 38% audience score. The Guardian gave the film a one-star review, which is a bit yikes, let’s be honest:
“Back in 2018, David Ellison found Alex Garland’s stylish and scary sci-fi thriller Annihilation “too intellectual” so passed it to Netflix for the majority of international territories. In early Covid, Disney sold the unusually excellent Fear Street trilogy to Netflix. Just last year, Netflix saw its biggest hit to date with KPop: Demon Hunters, a film that had originally been intended for a Sony release. But Thrash is not a fellow exception to the rule; if anything, it acts as the very definition of what the rule usually is: a messily made, choppily edited and entirely misfiring cavalcade of bad decisions and dodgy accents. I just hope Netflix got it on the cheap…”
Thrash is streaming on Netflix now.
- Release Date
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April 10, 2026
- Runtime
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83 Minutes
- Director
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Tommy Wirkola
Cast
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Phoebe Dynevor
Lisa Fields
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-
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Entertainment
Justin Bieber Is About ‘Vibing’ Amid Coachella Mixed Reviews
Justin Bieber is not letting outside noise faze him after receiving mixed reviews for his 2026 Coachella set.
“This is Justin in 2026. He doesn’t have anyone pushing him to do these huge pop spectacles like a 3D concert movie anymore. It’s all about vibing and enjoying where he’s at now,” a source exclusively tells Us Weekly. “There’s a lot less pressure on him, which allows him to put on the show that he wants to.”
Bieber’s highly-anticipated Coachella performance on Saturday, April 11, primarily featured tracks from his Swag and Swag II album, but he also showed YouTube clips from his original music videos on his laptop to reminisce.
While the minimalist set received some criticism from fans, the insider tells Us that the now-viral clips from Bieber’s YouTube performances “were only a small part of a much larger set.”
“He didn’t sit behind a computer the whole time,” the source explains. “Anyone who watched the full show saw that.”
The insider explains that Bieber’s YouTube segment was an “homage” to how the musician “got his start.”
“It was meant to show his journey from posting videos on YouTube to performing on one of the world’s biggest stages, also on YouTube,” the source shares. “Hailey [Bieber] thought it was adorable and very Justin. It was exactly what he planned and rehearsed.”
Us Weekly reached out to Bieber’s team for comment.
While performing, Justin, 32, made sure to give a shout-out to wife Hailey, 29, and the couple’s son, Jack. (The pair welcomed their first child in 2024.)
“Hailey, babe, hallelujah,” Justin sang while performing “Everything Hallelujah,” per social media footage. “Baby Jack, hallelujah.”
Hailey was seen blowing a kiss back to him and waving at Justin from the audience. Justin is scheduled to return to the main stage on Saturday, April 18, during the second weekend of Coachella.
Ahead of the singer’s duel performances, a separate source told Us that Bieber’s crew is “filming both weekends for a special project.” The news came after an unconfirmed Deuxmoi blind item reported that Justin was part of a documentary-style film with Netflix.
“Justin doesn’t feel he has something to prove, but at the same time, he wants to flex that he can put on a memorable show without a huge team like he once had,” the insider said of his Coachella set, referring to his 2023 split from longtime manager Scooter Braun. “It’s all his vision, brought to life by just a few people.”
Entertainment
When does “The Punisher: One Last Kill” come out? Inside Frank Castle's next blood-soaked rampage
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Jon Bernthal is back as the gun-touting vigilante in the gritty Disney+ special.
Entertainment
This Near-Perfect 5-Part Sci-Fi Favorite Once Opened to 5.9M Viewers on Cable
In 2011, for a short time, cable television produced a new science fiction show that attracted 5.9 million viewers on its first day. Falling Skies, which starts after the end of the world, was created by Robert Rodat and executive-produced by Steven Spielberg.
Those 5.9 million viewers didn’t happen by chance, but the show is rarely mentioned when the subject of defining sci-fi in the 2010s is concerned. The show faded from the spotlight, and it appears more than a little overdue for a second look.
What Happens in ‘Falling Skies’?
Falling Skies doesn’t provide us with the exciting invasion scenes that most other TV shows offer. The Earth has already been invaded, the worst has already happened, and most of the human race has perished or scattered apart from each other, struggling to survive. The format of that particular show sees us follow Tom Mason (Noah Wyle), who was once a history professor and now leads the civilian resistance group called 2nd Mass. He lacks the usual advantages of strength or firepower, but he wields the power of knowledge, which is limited by having to learn how to play the game of war again outside the old rules of warfare.
As this group continues to move around in their search for food and weapons, they always play cat and mouse with the aliens that are taking over the place. The show does a good job of showing the challenges of everyday survival during these bad days, including arguments over strategy, short supplies, and the quiet weight of people they’ve lost. It builds tension without overstating it. The alien threat adds another layer that hits harder than expected. Children are captured and fitted with biomechanical harnesses, turning them into extensions of the enemy.
Why ‘Falling Skies’ Deserved More Attention During Its Original Run
The first stretch leans on familiar ideas, and you can feel it searching for its voice; then it starts to settle. By the middle seasons, the writing tightens, and the characters begin to feel more defined. What helps is how the story opens up. When it comes to the invading aliens, a larger entity lies behind their presence on Earth — resource extraction, control, and a broader conflict that humans have been drawn into without understanding it. New factions appear, alliances shift, and the stakes grow without pulling attention away from the central group.
The genesis of the show depends on the continual balance between their being there and the ongoing success of maintaining their own being in a world that no longer functions as it once did. Wyle anchors that approach as his performance never tips into theatrics; he plays Tom as someone who’s exhausted but keeps moving forward anyway, which makes the leadership feel earned rather than assumed.
A lot of long-running genre series struggle to close things out. Falling Skies doesn’t stall when it reaches the end. The final season brings the larger conflict into focus, including the force behind the invasion itself. The story narrows in a way that works, pushing toward a direct confrontation rather than stretching the narrative beyond what it needs to. The resolution leans on sacrifice, and it doesn’t try to soften that. Characters pay for the choices they’ve made, and the outcome reflects the tone the show has carried from the start — hard-won, uneven, but still forward-moving. There’s a quieter moment at the end that lands just as well, when Tom is offered a leadership role in rebuilding what’s left of the world, and he turns it down. After everything, stepping away feels like the only honest choice.
Why ‘Falling Skies’ Is Worth Watching Now
That 5.9 million viewer premiere stands out more now than it did at the time. Back then, it made Falling Skies one of cable’s biggest launches of the year. The series benefited from weekly releases, which gave it time to grow and gave viewers space to stay engaged. Five seasons felt like a complete run, not an overextension like many shows these days.
These days, now that the show has been on Netflix, it is much easier to catch up with it if you haven’t seen it before. The pacing is consistent, you understand what happens, and once the show hits its stride, it moves with purpose so you don’t feel like you’re going around in circles. If you are watching for the sci-fi elements, those are all present — aliens, large-scale conflict, evolving mythos. Conversely, if you are watching because of the characters, they are all there, too. The show told a complete story from beginning to end and said goodbye when it reached its goal. Because of that, the show is far more impressive today than it was when it first aired on TV.
Entertainment
6 Movie Trilogies Where Only The Middle Chapter Is a Masterpiece
When the first movie is the great one, you can at least say the series began at its peak. When the last movie is the great one, you can argue the whole thing was building toward payoff. But when only the middle chapter becomes the masterpiece, it usually means the trilogy hit a level of confidence, emotional precision, and narrative intensity that the other two films never fully reached before or after. That middle film becomes the one time the machine is running at exact temperature.
And that does not always mean the other two are bad. Sometimes the first film is strong. Sometimes the finale is respectable, ambitious, or even moving in places. But the middle one is where character, stakes, conflict, and craft suddenly stop feeling like pieces of a franchise and start feeling inevitable. The middle-films I’ve listed below pass that test with excellent marks.
6
‘X2: X-Men United’ (2003)
I have affection for the first X-Men, and I think The Last Stand has fragments of a much better movie trapped inside it, but X2: X-Men United is the one time that original trilogy truly feels complete. The reason is simple: it stops acting like the mutants are just a superhero team and starts treating them like a political, emotional, and biological crisis from every angle at once. The school attack alone tells you the movie has leveled up. Wolverine (Hugh Jackman) is not just the cool outsider anymore. He is suddenly in a position where the kids need him, and the mansion feels less like a comic-book base than a fragile refuge being violated.
The other reason why X2: X-Men United is extremely special is how well it spreads dramatic pressure across the whole cast. William Stryker (Brian Cox) being power-hungry, Magneto (Ian McKellen) gets to be dangerous, charismatic, and perversely right about how far humans will go, Mystique (Rebecca Romijn) becoming more than attitude and blue makeup, all of it is spot on. Then Jean Grey (Famke Janssen), Scott Summers (James Marsden), Storm (Halle Berry), Nightcrawler (Alan Cumming), Rogue (Anna Paquin), Pyro (Aaron Stanford), and Iceman (Shawn Ashmore) all feel like they belong to the same morally loaded story instead of separate subplots jostling for space. And then the film’s act with the uneasy alliance between Professor Xavier (Patrick Stewart)’s team and Magneto’s side is where X2: X-Men United really earns masterpiece status.
5
‘Dawn of the Planet of the Apes’ (2014)
I like Rise. I admire War. But Dawn of the Planet of the Apes is the masterpiece because it is the one that fully understands tragedy as a social process. It is not just a sequel about apes and humans clashing. It is a movie about trust being built slowly and then destroyed by fear, pride, grief, and opportunism. That is much richer material, and the movie handles it beautifully. What makes Dawn of the Planet of the Apes so devastating is Caesar (Andy Serkis). By this point, he is no longer simply the emotionally intelligent center of a franchise reboot but a leader carrying history in his body.
He remembers captivity. He remembers revolt. He has built a world for his people in the forest, a world with family, rules, and dignity. So when the humans arrive needing access to the dam, the whole movie immediately gains pressure because coexistence is possible, but only barely. That barely is where the film lives, and it is why every exchange matters. Malcolm (Jason Clarke) reaches for peace in good faith. Ellie (Keri Russell) sees the apes as beings, not obstacles. Dreyfus (Gary Oldman) wants survival badly enough that fear keeps turning into hardline logic. Koba (Toby Kebbell), most importantly, carries trauma like acid. And Koba is why Dawn of the Planet of the Apes becomes a masterpiece. He is the embodiment of what happens when memory of abuse never stops organizing your worldview.
4
‘Before Sunset’ (2004)
This one may be the quietest entry here, but emotionally it might be the most lethal. Before Sunrise is beautiful. Before Midnight is fearless and bruising. But Before Sunset is the masterpiece because it is the one that turns romantic possibility into emotional reckoning with almost unbearable precision. Nine years have passed, and Richard Linklater understands the most important thing about that gap: it is not just time. It is accumulated life. Failed relationships, compromises, self-invention, regret, the stories people tell themselves about why they didn’t choose differently, all of that is in the room before Jesse (Ethan Hawke) and Céline (Julie Delpy) even properly reconnect.
That is why Before Sunset is realistic. It runs on conversation, but the conversation is not casual. It is excavation. Every smile has history under it. Every joke is covering pain or testing intimacy. Jesse arrives with a novel that has obviously kept this one night alive inside him for almost a decade. Céline arrives with anger, intellect, charm, and that very particular kind of adult self-protection where someone can sound breezy while actually trying not to reopen a wound. Hawke and Delpy are so good here. The film lets attraction and disappointment coexist in every scene. It is not “do they still like each other?” Of course they do. The real question is whether recognition came too late to matter. At each stage they get less able to lie cleanly. The Paris sunlight almost makes the movie feel easy at first, which is cruel, because by the time Céline talks about the environmental work she throws herself into and Jesse starts revealing how dead his marriage feels, you understand what this movie is actually doing: measuring the damage of one missed chance.
3
‘The Empire Strikes Back’ (1980)
This is one of the clearest examples of the middle chapter outgrowing the trilogy around it. I love Star Wars. I think Return of the Jedi has real emotional payoff. But The Empire Strikes Back is the masterpiece because it takes everything the first film made mythic and then subjects it to difficulty, failure, and emotional complication without losing one ounce of adventure power. The brilliance starts immediately with Hoth. The rebellion is not triumphant and mobile anymore. It is freezing, cornered, improvising under pressure.
Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) gets pulled further into the Force, but the movie is careful not to make that growth clean or easy. Yoda (Frank Oz)’s training is not there to hand him cool powers. It is there to reveal impatience, fear, and incompleteness in him. Han Solo (Harrison Ford) and Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher), meanwhile, are getting one of the best romance-through-friction arcs ever put into a blockbuster. And then there is Darth Vader (David Prowse). This is the movie where he stops being a great villain design and becomes something much worse and better: a personal catastrophe. The film ends on pain, uncertainty, and separation. That is why The Empire Strikes Back remains untouchable.
2
‘The Dark Knight’ (2008)
The reason The Dark Knight towers over the trilogy is that it is the one chapter where the franchise stops being primarily about Batman and becomes about what Batman does to the moral chemistry of Gotham. Batman Begins is strong because it builds Bruce, fear, and the city. The Dark Knight Rises has ambition, but it buckles under the weight of its own ending. The Dark Knight is the one that feels like a total statement. Nothing in it is merely setup or cleanup. Everything is active pressure.
Batman (Christian Bale)’s existence has produced a new class of criminal response. Harvey Dent (Aaron Eckhart) is introduced not as a replacement hero in a simplistic sense, but as the legitimate public face Gotham desperately needs so Batman can imagine becoming unnecessary. Rachel Dawes (Maggie Gyllenhaal) sits in the middle of Bruce and Harvey not just as romance, but as a measure of which version of Gotham still feels possible. Then the Joker (Heath Ledger) comes in and does not simply threaten lives. He attacks the terms by which the city understands order, heroism, and moral choice. That is why the major sequences all matter beyond spectacle. The bank robbery, fundraiser, interrogation scene, and then Batman taking the blame at the end is the final proof that this chapter understood sacrifice at the level of myth and politics at once.
1
‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’ (1966)
This is #1 because it does something very few middle chapters ever do: it becomes so monumental that it practically rewrites the scale of the trilogy around it. A Fistful of Dollars is great. For a Few Dollars More is excellent. But The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is the masterpiece because Sergio Leone stops making just westerns and starts making a world. Bigger, dirtier, more ironic, more tragic, more expansive, more musically mythic. It feels like the trilogy suddenly realizing how enormous it can be. The thing people undersell is how well The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is written. Blondie (Clint Eastwood), Tuco (Eli Wallach), and Angel Eyes (Lee Van Cleef) are not just types.
Their motives are incredibly clean, and the movie keeps tightening the lines between them until the whole treasure hunt becomes a study in greed, dependency, humiliation, and tactical patience. Tuco is a huge part of why the film clears the others. Wallach gives him so much hunger, resentment, cunning, and wounded pride that the movie stops being a cool-guy western whenever he is on screen. He makes it human and ugly in the right way. Blondie is brilliant too — someone always slightly withholding moral clarity, which keeps the film from becoming simple hero mythology. And Angel Eyes is one of the great western villains. Then the Civil War material enters and The Good, the Bad and the Ugly becomes even richer. Not to mention that it had a perfect ending too.
Entertainment
Drew Sidora Breaks Silence After Order to Vacate Home
The Real Housewives of Atlanta’s Drew Sidora has publicly addressed a court order that instructed her to vacate the home she shares with estranged husband Ralph Pittman.
According to court documents obtained by TMZ on Friday, April 10, Sidora, 40, was ordered to vacate the former couple’s marital residence in Georgia “by May 31.” The outlet also reported that Sidora and Pittman, 43, “will share joint legal custody” of their two children: son Machai, 10, and daughter Anija, 8. (Sidora is also mom to son Josiah, 15, from a previous relationship.)
Sidora addressed the legal situation via an X statement on Sunday, April 12. “Good morning. Some details regarding my divorce have recently become public, although the process is not yet finalized. During this time, Ralph and I are committed to co-parenting and doing what’s best for our children,” she wrote. “While certain things are beyond my control, my focus remains on showing up every day as the best mother I can be.”
Her statement continued, “Living in the public eye comes with challenges, but I’m choosing to move forward with grace, growth, and intention. My children are my priority, and I’m committed to leading with love, peace, and positivity. There is no ill intent toward anyone, just a continued focus on healing, evolving, and becoming the best version of myself.”
Us Weekly has reached out to a representative for Sidora for comment.
TMZ also noted that a judge said “due to the current financial circumstance of the parties,” Sidora will “continue splitting the expenses” until she “leaves the home.”
Sidora, who joined RHOA in 2020’s season 13, told Us Weekly in November 2025 that despite Pittman filing for divorce from her after eight years of marriage in February 2023, he remained living in the basement. (Sidora filed her own divorce petition after Pittman’s was filed, and the pair have been going back and forth in court for months amid accusations spanning alleged infidelity and unpaid loans.)
“Him downstairs, still there, and we’re still going through the process,” Sidora told Us at BravoCon 2025. “I was actually supposed to be in my final trial today, so this has been a very difficult, challenging day, but the judge allowed me to be here because it was so important for me to show up and be here. So I’m grateful.”
A representative for Sidora told TMZ on Friday, “This matter is still being actively litigated, and is in the middle of the final trial. The Second Temporary Order is, in fact, temporary, and does not reflect the final outcome of the case.”
Entertainment
Only 5 Animated Movies in the 2020s Can Be Considered True Masterpieces
For years, animation was considered a cinematic genre aimed at entertaining children, while adults mostly endured it. That notion can’t be further from the truth, though. Through the work of visionaries like Hayao Miyazaki, Guillermo del Toro, and the late Satoshi Kon, animation is seen as a proper medium nowadays, perfect for exploring daring and imaginative storylines with endless possibilities. Animation is the place where true dreams are realized, allowing for far more creativity than a live-action picture.
We’re halfway through the 2020s, but the decade has already produced a few animated efforts that have defied all expectations and proven themselves absolute masterworks of the medium. Whether they’re surreal fantasy tales, reinventions of the classic fairy tale, or minimalistic stories full of heart, these animated movies of the 2020s are true masterpieces. They inspire audiences, provoking all manner of emotions and, most importantly, staying in our hearts and minds long after the credits roll, in the unique and beautiful way that only genuine works of art can.
‘Puss in Boots: The Last Wish’ (2022)
Puss in Boots: The Last Wish follows the legendary feline swordsman Puss (Antonio Banderas) as he realizes he is down to his last life after wasting the previous eight. After a near-death encounter with a dangerous wolf (Wagner Moura), Puss settles for a boring life as a domestic cat. Things change when he learns about the mythical last wish, which has the power to restore his nine lives. Joined by his former lover, Kitty Softpaws (Salma Hayek), Puss embarks on the adventure, but he’s not the only one looking for the last wish.
Who would’ve thought that a sequel to a mostly forgotten 2011 animated movie would turn out to be one of the greatest animated triumphs of the last decade? Indeed, Puss in Boots: The Last Wish far surpasses its predecessor in every possible way. The storyline is complex, the animation is truly stunning, and the emotional payoff is among the most emotionally powerful and cathartic in any animated feature. The film’s handling of heavy themes, most notably anxiety and death, is commendable, presenting them in a way that younger audiences can understand without dumbing them down. Puss in Boots: The Last Wish is perfect proof that animation can be colorful, funny, and whimsical while still delivering poignant and layered narratives about some of life’s tougher issues.
‘The Boy and the Heron’ (2023)
Speaking of heavier narratives in animated form, it’s time to discuss Hayao Miyazaki‘s latest effort. The Boy and the Heron follows Mahito (Luca Padovan), a young boy dealing with his mom’s passing and his father’s new marriage to his aunt. While at his new home, Mahito meets a mysterious grey heron (Robert Pattinson), who convinces him to enter a new and mystical world full of danger and confusion. There, Mahito will have the adventure of a lifetime and will come to terms with some of the most complicated emotions battling inside of him.
A fantasy masterpiece of the 2020s, The Boy and the Heron is one of Miyazaki’s most personal efforts, containing several autobiographical elements, thus serving as an intimate portrayal of one of animation’s most defining figures. It’s all in favor of an introspective and highly symbolic story about the nature of creation and the sacrifices it demands. The visual style complements this elusive but engaging narrative, with some of the most fluid and striking animation in Studio Ghibli’s already impressive library. Many might find The Boy and the Heron‘s allegorical and almost oneiric approach unyielding and perhaps a tad challenging. However, all those who are willing to engage with its admittedly distant nature will find a powerful tale that engages on an emotional and psychological level.
‘Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse’ (2023)
In 2018, Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse reinvented the rules of animation with its distinct and highly influential visual language and gentle exploration of the nature of heroism and the expectations of legacy. Five years later, its sequel not only reached the same levels but arguably surpassed them. In Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. Miles Morales (Shameik Moore) meets a team of Spider-People, the Spider-Society, led by Spider-Man 2099 (Oscar Isaac). The young hero soon finds himself at odds with them over a difference of opinions about how to best deal with a new multiversal threat, The Spot (Jason Schwartzman).
Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse does everything the original did, including just as much wildly inventive action enhanced by some of the most beautiful and jaw-dropping visuals in modern cinema. Where it arguably surpasses it is in its treatment of the traditional superhero tale: whereas Into the Spider-Verse perfects it, Across the Spider-Verse subverses it by challenging its ideas about what it truly means to be a hero. The film is full of something sorely missing from many other superhero movies: something to say about the action-driven characters at the center of its story. Here, superheroes are not defined by their suit or affiliations, and the story is about more than just action sequences and setup. Yes, it does end on a cliffhanger, but Across the Spider-Verse never sacrifices storytelling for spectacle.
‘Robot Dreams’ (2023)
2023 might just be one of the best years for cinema, because not one or two but three animated masterpieces came out during those now-iconic twelve months. The last one in this list is the Spanish tragicomedy Robot Dreams, about the lovely and powerful connection born between a lonely Dog and his Robot companion. The two spend an unforgettable summer together, but when circumstances separate them, these two unlikely companions will need to find a way back to each other.
I won’t lie: Robot Dreams is one of the most heartbreaking animated movies you will ever experience. The film pulls no punches in its depiction of sorrow and how life’s unpredictability can lead to unspeakable emotional tragedy. Through Robot and Dog’s relationship, the film explores ideas of connection, loss, the nature of love, and the importance of letting go of the past. Here, life is something you endure, but in between the pain and misery, there are moments of beauty and joy that make it all worth it. Robot Dreams doesn’t reinvent the formula, but it presents it with such emotional intelligence that it makes it seem novel, not to mention genuinely heart-wrenching. The final moments are as great a representation of catharsis as has ever been depicted on the silver screen. You’ll laugh through the tears, and you’ll surely never forget this delightfully sad gem.
‘Flow’ (2024)
No movie was a bigger surprise in 2024 than Flow, the Latvian animated feature that defied all expectations to become a runaway critical and commercial success. It features no dialogue and is set in a seemingly apocalyptic world, focusing on a black cat who joins forces with other animals — including a capybara, a dog, a lemur, and a whale— to survive as the water level rises dramatically.
Dialogue-less movies can be challenging for modern audiences. Luckily, Flow offers more than enough visual marvel to not only engage but genuinely compel. It’s truly astounding just how riveting this tale of survival is, as we follow the cat and his friends trying to stay afloat, literally. It’s not about making sense out of the situation — these are, after all, animals acting on instinct and not at all concerned with the “why” of their predicament. Thus, Flow becomes an exercise in specificity, allowing us to connect to it on a deeper, more visceral level. More impressively, it was made using Blender, a free and open-source software, proving that animation is truly limited only by the creator’s imagination. The result is one of the most beautiful and unforgettable animated movies of the last decade, a genuine step forward for the venerable medium.
Entertainment
The 3-Part Series That Launched Alan Ritchson’s Career Is About to Vanish From Streaming
Before Alan Ritchson was leading action franchises and getting fan-cast in basically every tough-guy role under the sun, he was Thad Castle. And honestly, for a lot of people, that’s still one of his most iconic performances. Blue Mountain State was chaotic, ridiculous, and completely committed to its own brand of college-football insanity. It never cared about being tasteful, and that was exactly why it found such a loyal audience. Now, Netflix subscribers are about to lose not just the series, but its follow-up movie too.
Blue Mountain State is currently listed to leave Netflix on May 2, while Blue Mountain State: The Rise of Thadland is set to leave a day earlier on May 1. That means fans doing a full Thad Castle rewatch are officially on the clock.
What Is ‘Blue Mountain State’ About?
Created by Eric Falconer and Chris Romano, the original series follows the players of fictional football powerhouse Blue Mountain State University as they juggle games, parties, and the kind of terrible decision-making that made the show a cult favorite. Darin Brooks stars as quarterback Alex Moran, Ritchson plays team captain Thad Castle, Chris Romano plays Sammy Cacciatore, and Ed Marinaro stars as Coach Marty Daniels.
Following the show’s conclusion, a feature-length follow-up Blue Mountain State: The Rise of Thadland hit in 2016, with Ritchson returning to lead the mayhem. Then, in 2024, news broke that a sequel series was in active development. Though no network has yet been confirmed, Prime Video (home of Ritchson’s breakout hit Reacher) and Netflix (where BMS picked up its cult following) were both floated as contenders. The revival is expected to see Ritchson back as Thad, alongside Romano and Brooks.
Blue Mountain State: The Rise of Thadland picks up after the series and brings Alex, Thad, and Sammy back together for one more gloriously stupid adventure. In the film, Alex tries to save the Goat House by convincing newly drafted NFL star Thad to buy it, which naturally leads to an outrageous party spiraling into total chaos.
Blue Mountain State and The Rise of Thadland both leave Netflix next month. You can also watch Ritchson’s breakout hit War Machine on the streaming platform.
- Release Date
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2010 – 2011-00-00
- Writers
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Eric Falconer, Chris Romano
Entertainment
‘Breaking Bad’ Icon’s Unforgettable 2-Part Thriller Leaves Netflix Soon
It takes a lot for a show starring Bryan Cranston to not immediately get framed through the lens of Breaking Bad, and Your Honor definitely had that hanging over it from the jump. The setup was always catnip for that comparison too: a good man makes one terrible decision, then keeps making worse ones in the name of protecting family. But whatever shadow it started in, the series found a real audience of its own, especially once Netflix gave it a second life. That run is now coming to an end.
Your Honor is listed to leave Netflix on May 31, with both seasons departing at the end of the month. The show first arrived on Netflix in the U.S. on May 31, 2024, after originally airing on Showtime, where it ran for two seasons from 2020 to 2023.
Adapted from the Israeli series Kvodo, Your Honor centers on respected New Orleans judge Michael Desiato, whose life unravels after his son is involved in a fatal hit-and-run involving the child of a mob boss. Cranston stars as Michael, with Hope Davis as Gina Baxter, Michael Stuhlbarg as Jimmy Baxter, Hunter Doohan as Adam Desiato, Carmen Ejogo as Lee Delamere, and Isiah Whitlock Jr. as Charlie Figaro.
Is ‘Your Honor’ Worth Watching?
Collider’s review stated that Your Honor Season 2 does not hit as hard as the first season, but it still proves there was more story left to tell. After the brutal ending of Season 1, this new chapter shifts away from pure panic and into the fallout of everything Michael Desiato did. That change gives the show a different energy. It is slower, darker, and more focused on grief and consequences than nonstop tension.
“Your Honor effectively shows the fallout and aftermath of violence. We’ve been so conditioned to revel in stories about powerful gangsters, glamorizing them and the lives they lead. Whether it’s the Baxters in their ivory tower or the Desire gang on the lower ninth, these characters can not hide behind the face of money and power. Michael Desiato is a living example of the destruction that organized crime can cause — and how it’s almost impossible to fully stop. The show sometimes falls behind all these themes and conversations that it tries to execute, but when it does catch up, it makes for an unsettling but sobering depiction of what happens when it feels like all trust and hope are gone. It’s grim, slow, and not as exciting as the first season, but Your Honor Season 2 paints an authentic image of grief, corruption, and the fight for power.”
Your Honor leaves Netflix next month on May 31.
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