Category: BUSINESS

  • When is ‘Invincible’ Season 4? Here’s what we know so far

    When is ‘Invincible’ Season 4? Here’s what we know so far

    As the third season of Prime Video’s show “Invincible” has come to an end, fans are already wondering if the show is set to make a comeback.

    Based on the comic book by Robert Kirkman, Cory Walker and Ryan Ottley, “Invincible” is the story of “18-year-old Mark Grayson, who’s just like every other guy his age − except his father is (or was) the most powerful superhero on the planet,” according to a description from Prime Video.

    The last episode of Season 3 is already being hailed as one of the goriest episodes in the history of the show. Featuring an intense, nearly 30-minute showdown between Mark and Conquest.

    Here’s what to know about the potential for a Season 4 of “Invincible.”

    Will there be an ‘Invincible’ Season 4?

    Yes! Amazon Prime Video’s “Invincible” is set to return for its fourth season.

    Show creator Robert Kirkman made the announcement back in July at San Diego Comic-Con that the adult cartoon had been picked up for a new season.

    How many seasons of ‘Invincible’ will there be?

    It doesn’t look like the show will stop at Season 4, as long as Kirkman gets his way. He told The Direct he estimated the series could run somewhere between seven to nine seasons, adding that he hopes the show will “get to go for 11 seasons or more.”

    When will ‘Invincible’ Season 4 come out?

    While a release date has not yet announced by Prime Video, Kirkman hopes to begin releasing new episodes on an annual basis, The Direct reported, which would potentially indicate a Season 4 premiere in 2026.

    “There’s a lot of opportunity to do a lot of specials. There’s a lot of characters that could really shine if they get that platform to have an episode focused on them, which we’re really excited about. We’d love to do that. We’re trying to do that,” Kirkman told The Direct.

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

    Contributing: Saman Shafiq – USA TODAY

    Fernando Cervantes Jr. is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach him at [email protected] and follow him on X @fern_cerv_.

  • How and where to watch new season

    How and where to watch new season

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    “American Idol” is back and all new.

    Season 23 of the reality singing competition show that helped catapult Kelly Clarkson into stardom kicked off Sunday with some changes to the judges’ panel.

    “Idol” Season 4 winner Carrie Underwood replaced “Teenage Dream” singer Katy Perry as a judge after seven seasons, joining longtime host Ryan Seacrest and judges Luke Bryan and Lionel Richie.

    “A full circle moment indeed! Are you ready to join us on this journey to find the next #AmericanIdol?” Underwood wrote in a Sunday Instagram post.

    Some well-loved stars, including Underwood, Jennifer Hudson and Adam Lambert, got their start on the show, which first premiered in 2002.

    Here’s how to tune in to Season 23 of “American Idol.”

    ‘American Idol’ judges, host

    Veteran judges Lionel Richie and Luke Bryan are joined by Carrie Underwood this season.

    The “Before He Cheats” singer is taking over for Katy Perry, who revealed that she was leaving the show to focus on music. Underwood’s return to the show comes two decades after she took home the title in its fourth season.

    Ryan Seacrest, who has hosted 20 seasons of “American Idol,” will once again serve as emcee.

    Grammy-nominated singer Jelly Roll will serve as a first-ever artist in residence. He will work closely with contestants, giving them firsthand advice on how to “navigate the journey,” as Variety first reported.

    How to watch Season 23 of ‘American Idol’

    “American Idol” airs Sunday nights on ABC with episodes available to stream on Hulu the next day.

    Viewers may also catch the show live on the ABC app or website along with live-streaming sites that allow viewers to watch in real time.

    Watch “American Idol” and more: Get Hulu

    ‘American Idol’ Season 23 teaser

    Who won last season of ‘American Idol’?

    Abi Carter, a 21-year-old musician from Indio, California, won the title of “American Idol” in Season 22.

    Will Moseley, a 23-year-old musician from Hazelhurst, Georgia, and Jack Blocker, a 25-year-old graphic designer from Dallas, Texas, were the runners-up.

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

  • Jonathan Majors on allegations and trial, Meagan Good and new movie

    Jonathan Majors on allegations and trial, Meagan Good and new movie

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    Jonathan Majors has a message for Hollywood: You haven’t seen the last of me yet.

    In his first comprehensive interview since a 2023 trial landed him with a guilty verdict for some of the charges he faced in assaulting ex-girlfriend Grace Jabbari, the actor told The Hollywood Reporter that he takes (some) accountability and revealed he suffered his own abuse as a child.

    “At some point there has to be accountability for writing your own story,” he told the outlet in a cover story published Friday. “Am I going to fall into that narrative of falling apart, of self-destruction? Have a struggle, blame the world. Have a struggle, hate yourself. Have a struggle, deny everything. None of those narratives is beneficial.”

    In his wide-ranging conversation with the outlet, Majors also revealed that he had been a victim of childhood sexual abuse, which he began working through in therapy after the trial, sharing the news with his mother and reengaging with his pastor. Working through his past has shed some light on the present, he said.

    “There are no excuses, but by getting help, you begin to understand things about yourself,” he told THR.

    Following a meteoric Hollywood rise that spanned independent films, the Michael B. Jordan-backed “Creed” franchise and a coveted Marvel movie treatment, Majors swiftly fell from grace after the alleged altercation with Jabbari became public.

    Jonathan Majors making Hollywood comeback after assault trial

    The trial surrounded an alleged fight in an SUV driving through New York in which Jabbari accused Majors of striking her in the head with his open hand, twisting her arm behind her back and squeezing her middle finger until it fractured. Majors denied the claims and accused Jabbari of being the aggressor.

    The actor was charged with three counts of third-degree assault, one count of second-degree harassment and one count of aggravated harassment. He pleaded not guilty to all charges and went to trial in late 2023. The jury ultimately delivered a mixed verdict, acquitting him on three of the five charges and finding him guilty of one misdemeanor assault charge and one harassment violation. A judge later sentenced him to probation along with a yearlong domestic violence intervention program.

    Majors’ latest film, “Magazine Dreams,” will finally hit theaters March 21 after it debuted at the Sundance Film Festival two years ago.

    His conversation with THR did not deal directly with the facts of the trial but was peppered with statements from other Hollywood A-listers supporting his good character.

    “You don’t get to say sorry these days,” said Whoopi Goldberg, Majors’ former co-star who has also acted alongside his current fiancée Meagan Good. “He was arrested. He went to court. He did what he was supposed to do. I’m not sure what else there is.”

    Maura Hooper, one of Majors’ ex-girlfriends, whose testimony of her own abusive experiences with the actor figured into the trial, offered a differing perspective.

    “I don’t really care that his movie is coming out,” Hooper told the outlet. “What do you get at the end of a 52-week domestic violence course? Do the victims get a debrief? How could I know if he’s changed? I don’t see redemption happening here.”

    Jonathan Majors received support from Michael B. Jordan, Matthew McCounghey

    Support from several of Hollywood’s leading men is part of the foundation of Majors’ shaky comeback.

    Jordan, who starred with Majors in “Creed III,” said in an email to THR: “I would love to make ‘Creed IV’ together — among other projects.” His statement follows another recent round of support from a GQ interview published last month. In it, Jordan called Majors “my boy” and said he was “proud of his resilience and his strength through it all.”

    “I’ve known and know him as someone who is continuously striving to improve as a human, a man and an actor. I believe in him,” Matthew McCounghey, who acted alongside Majors in 2018’s “White Boy Rick,” also shared in an email to THR.

    Good, who began dating Majors months after his arrest, said she never considered abandoning him during the trial. The “Harlem” actress was a courtroom staple during the ordeal, oft-pictured next to the actor as a pillar of support.

    “People tend to move out of the way out of concern for their careers or their reputations,” she told the outlet. “To me, that’s not real love. If you know someone and if you believe in someone, it’s not conditional.”

    Jonathan Majors focused on building life with fiancée Meagan Good

    As for Majors’ next chapter, he’s focused on building a life with Good and taking care of his daughter, Ella, who he has from a previous relationship.

    “Growing up poor, I had that muscle memory,” he told the outlet of making money to support himself and Ella. “I was used to getting out there, finding a way. But it’s actually harder to find a way when you are trapped in notoriety. You can’t get out there and just work.”

    He told the magazine he’s reading a few scripts and planning on expanding his wellness business alongside Good.

    “Do I hope to make more movies? Absolutely. That is my intention. But that’s not my call. I don’t have a studio. And I’ve given up control.”

    Contributing: USA TODAY Entertainment staff

  • Another Jamie Lee Curtis swap

    Another Jamie Lee Curtis swap

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    Disney dropped the first trailer of Lindsay Lohan and Jamie Lee Curtis in “Freakier Friday” (on Friday, of course).

    And the peek at the new comedy is “Freaky Friday” on steroids, with four body switches! That’s twice as many as the 2003 original.

    Curtis, 66, and Lohan, 38, reprise their mother-daughter roles as Tess and Anna Coleman, who endured a comical body switch in “Freaky Friday” (when Curtis was 44 and Lohan was a 16-year-old superstar).

    Now, it’s so much more “Freakier” with kids. Just to make sure you follow:

    Lohan’s Anna switches bodies with her daughter Harper (Julia Butters, 15, the actress who broke out in “Once Upon a Time in America”).

    Curtis’ Tess switches places with Anna’s soon-to-be stepdaughter Lilly Davies (played by Sophia Hammons, 18, an American actress working an accent).

    The realization of the switch leads Lilly, stuck inside her grandmother-in-law’s body, to proclaim, “My face looks like a Birkin bag that’s been left out in the sun to rot.”

    All sorts of comic mayhem ensues. Lessons will be learned, and Lohan will strap on an electric guitar again before it’s all over (she sang “Ultimate” in the original).

    Who’s the stud on the motorcycle? Chad Michael Murray makes a ‘sexy grand entrance’

    Chad Michael Murray, who played Anna’s boyfriend, Jake, makes a head-turning entrance in the trailer, pulling up on a motorcycle and flicking his hair out of his black helmet. But Anna has a new husband, played by Manny Jacinto (“Top Gun: Maverick”).

    Other returning cast members from the original film include Mark Harmon (who played Tess Coleman’s fiance Ryan), Christina Vidal Mitchell (Maddie), Haley Hudson (Peg), Rosalind Chao (Pei-Pei), Lucille Soong (Pei-Pei’s Mom) and Stephen Tobolowsky (Mr. Bates).

    Watch ‘Freakier Friday’ trailer

    When does ‘Freaky Friday 2’ come out?

    The new movie opens in theaters Aug. 7, which is just past the 22nd anniversary of the original.

  • Who is Manchester United’s new stadium for?

    Who is Manchester United’s new stadium for?

    Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

    The writer is the FT’s architecture and design critic

    It’s an oddity that the Premier League is the most successful football league in the world but the best club football stadiums are all, pretty much, outside the UK. Barcelona’s Camp Nou, Milan’s San Siro or the vast Maracanã in Rio are all up there. Britain’s stadiums seem to lack that kind of ambition.  

    Will Sir Norman Foster’s plan for a £2bn, 100,000 capacity stadium for Manchester United beside their existing Old Trafford ground challenge that anomaly? Britain’s most successful architect is, after all, a Mancunian — his father worked at a factory almost next door in Trafford Park. And Foster was responsible for London’s widely acclaimed Wembley Stadium. 

    But there is something of the circus tent in this design that looks a little unsettling; something impermanent and flimsy. The three masts that support the roof are meant to evoke the trident of the Red Devil, the club’s logo, but the gossamer tensile fabric covering with its pinkish glow looks a little like an overstretched strawberry condom. But then this is the most efficient way of covering a large site, an architecture pioneered by German engineer Frei Otto in 1972 at his wonderful Munich Olympic Stadium. In a gesture towards Manchester’s persistent drizzle, the intent is to create a space Foster describes as “twice the size of Trafalgar Square” (he also redesigned Trafalgar Square).

    Historically, the English football ground was an intensely urban form, a building intimately embedded in the industrial and residential infrastructure of its working-class fans. Much of the life of match day was drawn from the city around it — the streets, pubs and caffs that filled up with fans for a few hours each Saturday. Foster’s design attempts to swallow the whole experience under one roof, creating an environment that looks a little retro-sci-fi, like something from a planet with no atmosphere. 

    There are benefits to scale though. Apparently, those triple masts (the “Eiffel Tower of the North”) will be visible not only from the Peak District but from Liverpool, 31 miles away, not to mention the City of Manchester Stadium, the Etihad, a lot closer.  

    That the new stadium is being designed next to the old Old Trafford means no match revenue will be lost in switching stadiums (the old ground will be demolished) and, critically, the genius loci will be maintained, something so pivotal in football. 

    The biggest question perhaps is, who is it for? Minority shareholder Sir Jim Ratcliffe might be a billionaire but the club is £1bn in debt and there is little information about how the new stadium will be funded. Alongside the almost sacred importance of location in British football is a long-standing uneasiness about the monetisation of the game. Unlike in Spain or Germany, where some clubs are run on a not-for-profit basis and with fans voting on big decisions, the Premier League is run on an oligarch model. Loyalty is taken for granted and fans are screwed from ticket prices to shirts and drinks. Football has become more about ownership than a sense of belonging.

    Manchester witnessed the birth of the industrial revolution and modern football. Both were based on the exploitation of the working classes. This massive soccer mall in which the stadium is the locus of a landscape of consumption makes that relationship a little clearer. It is a great metropolis that was built around mills and factories. The renderings show a stadium surrounded by dense development, an illustration of football as the city’s key global industry. 

    Friedrich Engels, who worked in his father’s Manchester mills in the 1840s, related a story about walking through the city with a “bourgeois”. Engels “spoke to him of the bad, unwholesome method of building, the frightful conditions of the working people’s quarters . . . The man listened quietly and said, ‘And yet there is a great deal of money made here”.

  • Diddy pleads not guilty, sports gray hair

    Diddy pleads not guilty, sports gray hair

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    NEW YORK — Sean “Diddy” Combs shocked courtroom attendees with a grizzled new look at a pretrial conference Friday.

    Combs’ legal team and prosecutors disputed various aspects of the disgraced rapper’s trial – including jury selection, submitted evidence and the trial’s court timeline – during the Friday conference in front of U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian at Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse in Manhattan.

    Combs is charged with racketeering, sex trafficking and transportation to engage in prostitution following his arrest in September. He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

    The graying music mogul appeared in mostly good spirits throughout the 35-minute conference – grinning and waving to a small group of family and friends seated toward the back of the gallery ‒ although at other times, he could be seen shaking his head and whispering in his attorney’s ear.

    Combs was arraigned in court on a new indictment, which added accusations that the hip-hop mogul forced employees to work long hours and threatened to punish those who did not assist in his alleged two-decade sex trafficking scheme.

    His upcoming trial is scheduled to begin May 5. The indictment follows numerous lawsuits and allegations of rape, sexual assault, physical abuse and similar claims over the course of three decades.

    Earlier this month, prosecutors submitted a second superseding indictment, updating the amended indictment from January that added three unnamed women who were allegedly victims of his so-called sex trafficking enterprise, which claims Combs subjected employees to forced labor under inhumane circumstances.

    After the judge dismissed the court, Combs looked back at his family, blew a kiss, put his hands to his chest and smiled before he was escorted out.

    Daughter Chance Combs, son Christian “King” Combs and mother Janice Combs, who have been staunch in their support for the hip-hop mogul, were seated in the gallery and pictured arriving at and leaving the Manhattan courtroom. — Patrick Ryan and KiMi Robinson

    As court adjourned for the day, Subramanian set the next pretrial conference for April 25. — Patrick Ryan

    Mitzi Steiner, an assistant U.S. attorney, said the prosecution would file a letter — for attorneys’ eyes only — that would reveal the names of some of the witnesses and victims who are willing to testify against Combs.

    “We want to protect the identities of these witnesses and victims,” Steiner told the judge. Some of them are “incredibly frightened” to have their identities revealed to the defense, she said, but the prosecution would produce a list of their names. The judge and both sides agreed to this. — Patrick Ryan

    Combs’ attorney Marc Agnifilo said the defense recently came in possession of “a great deal of medical records,” some related to prescription medications. The defense team added that they’ll need an expert to “explain what they mean,” although Agnifilo did not detail the nature of the medical records. — Patrick Ryan

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    Sean “Diddy” Combs has apologized on Instagram

    Sean “Diddy” Combs has apologized after video emerged appearing to show him assaulting then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura in 2016.

    In the matter of the bombshell CNN video released last year that showed Combs physically assaulting his ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura at a Los Angeles hotel, Subramanian left the opposing parties to find middle ground as to whether it can be presented to jurors.

    Agnifilo reiterated the claims his team brought forward in a letter to Subramanian filed Thursday. He called the video “deceptive” and “a misleading piece of evidence” as, they claim, it has “been changed.”

    Agnifilo claimed that the footage was re-sequenced and sped up, and that it was run through an editing software, according to analysis from an expert who reviewed the video.

    Steiner, the assistant U.S. attorney, said the CNN footage is “a key piece of evidence that (the defense is) trying to keep out” of trial.

    Subramanian suggested that if the footage was indeed edited that perhaps it can be slowed back down, re-sequenced or otherwise changed back to its original state. If the defense still disagrees with the contents of the video or how it is presented, then Agnifilo can file a motion to have the material dismissed. — Patrick Ryan and KiMi Robinson

    Subramanian determined that potential jurors could begin filling out questionnaires on April 28 before jury selection begins on May 5. Both sides aim to review roughly 300 jurors per day until a jury is assembled.

    Opening statements are scheduled to begin May 12. Attorneys for both sides agreed with this scheduling decision.  — Patrick Ryan

    This second superseding indictment was filed by prosecutors on March 6.

    The 15-page document details the charges against the hip-hop mogul and is, for the most part, the same as the one filed on Sept. 12 and made public Sept. 17. The second superseding indictment, an update from the first amended indictment filed in January, showed how the government has continued to build its case against Combs over the past several months, as they are now adding the claim that he’d subjected employees to forced labor under inhumane circumstances. — KiMi Robinson

    While interacting with the judge, Combs chose to stand and spoke briefly.

    He said he was “fine” and answered that he was pleading “not guilty” to the new indictment, which prosecutors brought forward last week. — Patrick Ryan

    When Combs walked into the courtroom Friday afternoon, he waved and blew a kiss to his family in the gallery. Sporting white hair and a matching beard and donning a tan jumpsuit, he had a smile on his face. Reporters in the courtroom could be heard commenting on his appearance, saying, “Oh my god” and “He looks terrible.” — Patrick Ryan

    CNN defends video of Diddy assaulting Cassie after rapper’s team claims it was altered 

    Earlier this week, lawyers came forward with allegations about a nearly decade-old video showing the music mogul physically assaulting ex-girlfriend Cassie Ventura, which plays a role in his criminal trial. 

    Ventura’s Nov. 16, 2023, sex trafficking and sexual assault lawsuit, which the former couple settled for an undisclosed amount a day later, spurred an avalanche of civil lawsuits and allegations against the scandalized music mogul. –KiMi Robinson 

    Diddy’s lawyer quits amid federal case 

    In a motion filed in New York Federal Court late last month, one of Combs’ lawyers, Anthony Ricco, notified the judge of his intent to withdraw, adding it had followed discussions with Combs’ lead counsel, Marc Agnifilo. 

    “Although I have provided Sean Combs with the high level of legal representation expected by the court, under no circumstances can I continue to effectively serve as counsel for Sean Combs,” Ricco wrote. He declined to offer the specific details that led to the decision, citing attorney/client privilege in the filing. – Anna Kaufman 

  • Release dates, time, schedule, where to watch

    Release dates, time, schedule, where to watch

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    Episode five of the Emmy-award-winning series “The White Lotus” is set to drop this weekend.

    The dark comedy anthology directed by Mike White follows the plights of the rich and powerful as they navigate perilous psychological and interpersonal relations while vacationing at the prestigious White Lotus resort chain. The current season was filmed in Thailand, while past seasons were set in Hawaii and Italy.

    With only a handful of episodes to go, there is plenty of time for drama to unfold. Here’s what to know about catching the rest of “The White Lotus” Season 3.

    When do new episodes of ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3 come out?

    Season 3 of “The White Lotus” premiered at 9 p.m. EST/PST on Sunday, Feb. 16. New episodes will air on Sundays at 9 p.m. ET/PT on HBO and stream on Max.

    The next episode, “Full-Moon Party,” airs Sunday, March 16.

    ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3 full episode schedule

    • Feb. 16: Episode 1, “Same Spirits, New Forms”
    • Feb. 23: Episode 2, “Special Treatments”
    • March 2: Episode 3, “The Meaning of Dreams”
    • March 9: Episode 4, “Hide or Seek”
    • March 16: Episode 5, “Full-Moon Party”
    • March 23: Episode 6, “Denials”
    • March 30: Episode 7, “Killer Instincts”
    • April 6: Episode 8, “Amor Fati”

    How to watch ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3

    The eight-episode season will air on HBO and stream on Max weekly at 9 p.m. ET/PT.

    Max subscription plans begin at $9.99 a month with ads while ad-free subscriptions cost $16.99 a month.

    The highest tier, which is $20.99 a month, includes the ability to stream on four devices and offers 4K Ultra HD video quality and 100 downloads. HBO also offers bundles with Hulu and Disney+.

    Watch The White Lotus S3 with Sling + Max

    ‘The White Lotus’ Season 3 cast

    Cast members for Season 3 of “The White Lotus” include:

    • Leslie Bibb as Kate
    • Carrie Coon as Laurie
    • Michelle Monaghan as Jaclyn
    • Walton Goggins as Rick Hatchett
    • Aimee Lou Wood as Chelsea
    • Jason Isaacs as Timothy Ratliff
    • Parker Posey as Victoria Ratliff
    • Sarah Catherine Hook as Piper Ratliff
    • Sam Nivola as Lochlan Ratliff
    • Patrick Schwarzenegger as Saxon Ratliff
    • Lalisa Manobal as Mook
    • Lek Patravadi as Sritala
    • Natasha Rothwell as Belinda
    • Tayme Thapthimthong as Gaitok

    We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn’t influence our coverage.

  • Who did Jane Austen read?Books

    Who did Jane Austen read?Books

    Who did Jane Austen read?Books

  • Who did Jane Austen read? | The ExcerptBooks

    Who did Jane Austen read? | The ExcerptBooks

    Who did Jane Austen read? | The ExcerptBooks

  • ‘Novocaine,’ stream ‘Long Bright River

    ‘Novocaine,’ stream ‘Long Bright River

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    Love movies? Live for TV? USA TODAY’s Watch Party newsletter has all the best recommendations, delivered right to your inbox. Sign up now and be one of the cool kids.

    There are so many superhero movies and other flicks where the good guys seem too good at they do, it’s nice to root for a dude who you really wonder if he’s going to make it out of assorted bad situations.

    In the grand tradition of John McClane and Indiana Jones, here comes Nathan Caine. Jack Quaid’s underdog protagonist feels no pain in the action comedy “Novocaine,” which marries cartoonish violence and an enjoyably hard-luck main character. Millie Bobby Brown and Chris Pratt also embrace heroic roles – ones that feel familiar to anyone who’s watched “Stranger Things” and the “Guardians of the Galaxy” movies – in the Netflix sci-fi adventure “The Electric State,” the latest from “Avengers” directors Joe and Anthony Russo. And Amanda Seyfried takes on an interesting part, as a Philadelphia beat cop, in the Peacock limited series “Long Bright River.”

    Now on to the good stuff:

    Witness Jack Quaid get shot, stabbed and fried in ‘Novocaine’

    If like me you’ve been a longtime fan of the streaming show “The Boys,” you know how likable a guy Jack Quaid is. He’s been in movies, too, but the son of Meg Ryan and Dennis Quaid really makes his mark as a big-screen action hero in his first star vehicle, “Novocaine.” He’s also the best part of the action comedy, which centers on a nerdy, homebody assistant bank manager – who has the interesting condition of not being able to feel pain – going after the robbers who take his crush (Amber Midthunder) hostage.

    I talked with Quaid about how he channeled Buster Keaton for the fight scenes and why, because the movie is so violent, Nate needed to be a “sweetie pie” when getting punched, kicked, stabbed, impaled, etc., rather than a hardcore hero. “He can’t be dark or brooding or angry, really,” Quaid says. “He has to be a cupcake of a human.”

    See Amanda Seyfried hit the streets in cop drama ‘Long Bright River’

    She broke out as a ditz in “Mean Girls,” scored an Oscar nomination for “Mank” and sang with Meryl Streep in a couple of “Mamma Mia!” movies. Now she’s in an interesting TV phase, following up an Emmy-winning turn as Elizabeth Holmes in “The Dropout” to hitting the mean streets of Philly for “Long Bright River.” The gritty police drama (streaming now on Peacock) has a “Mare of Easttown” vibe, with Seyfried as an oboe-playing beat cop investigating a series of murders involving sex workers and also searching for her missing addict sister.

    “Would I rather do comedy? Of course,” Seyfried tells our Patrick Ryan in an engaging convo. “The levity and challenge of that is really fun. But this strikes so close to home for so many people with the addiction storyline, including me.”

    Stream Millie Bobby Brown’s movie ‘The Electric State’ on Netflix, new ‘Rust’ documentary on Hulu

    Woody Harrelson voicing an animatronic Mr. Peanut? That is inspired casting right there. But there’s a lot of intriguing bits about Netflix’s retrofuturistic sci-fi adventure “The Electric State” (streaming now) that don’t add up to much. Millie Bobby Brown stars as a rebellious teenage girl in an alternate version of 1994 where robots grow tired of doing menial jobs and revolt against humans, and the youngster’s search for her kid brother involves a scruffy smuggler (Chris Pratt), colorful mechanical mascots, a tech bro bad guy (Stanley Tucci) and an overly sentimental streak. (Peep my ★★ review.)

    While you’re in a streaming mood, my colleague Marco della Cava interviewed director Rachel Mason about her new documentary “Last Take: Rust and the Story of Halyna” (streaming now on Hulu). The film digs into the controversies surrounding the filming of the Western movie “Rust,” where a prop gun held by Alec Baldwin discharged during rehearsal and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins. Mason says she wanted to “show the overall human toll” of the tragedy and its aftermath, plus weighs in on “Rust” ultimately being finished. “If you knew Halyna, it’s impossible not to think she would want it completed,” Mason says.

    Even more goodness to check out!

    Got thoughts, questions, ideas, concerns, compliments or maybe even some recs for me? Email [email protected] and follow me on the socials: I’m @briantruitt on Bluesky, Instagram and Threads.