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Tag: conan o'brien

  • How to Watch the 2026 Oscars Nominations

    The 2026 nominations stream at 5:30 a.m. PT across ABC, Hulu and the Academy’s platforms

    The Academy Awards love tradition, but nomination morning is one of the only parts of awards season that still feels genuinely electric. Just names, categories and that immediate shift in the air where a handful of films become the story for the next two months. And for 2026, the Academy is giving viewers plenty of ways to tap in.

    The nominees for the 98th Academy Awards will be revealed during a livestream from the Academy’s Samuel Goldwyn Theater. The announcement kicks off at 5:30 a.m. PT. If you’re watching from L.A., the most familiar option will be to watch through ABC’s Good Morning America Live broadcast. But the Academy is also pushing hard into streaming, making the nominations available on Oscar.com and the Academy’s social platforms, plus ABC News Live, Disney+ and Hulu. There’s also an ASL stream on YouTube, which feels long overdue for an event this public.

    Once nominations land, the real season begins. The ceremony is set for March 15, 2026, airing live on ABC with streaming available on Hulu. Conan O’Brien is returning as host, which signals the Academy is sticking with a safe pick that can still bring some personality to the room without turning the night into a full comedy show.

    But nomination morning is never just about how to watch. It’s about what’s coming. And a few titles already feel like they’re built to show up, not because anything is guaranteed, but because they hit the Academy’s favorite pressure points.

    One Battle After Another has that “event film” energy the Oscars still respect. The kind of movie that feels expensive, ambitious and serious in a way voters can point to as proof they’re rewarding real filmmaking. If it lands the way it’s expected to, it’s immediately in play for Picture, Director and craft categories, especially the ones that reward scale.

    Hamnet feels like prestige in its purest form. A period storytelling, with heavy literary weight and emotional tragedy. Fitting in the lane where the Academy tends to live comfortably. Usually bringing at least one performance that becomes the serious pick everyone rallies around. For this, the gravitational force is Jessie Buckley’s performance as Willam Shakespeares wife.

    And then there’s Sinners, which has the potential to be the chaos pick. The Academy has been cracking the door open for darker genre work, but only when it feels unavoidable. If Sinners hits with critics and lands culturally, it’s the type of film that can rack up nominations through craft first, cinematography, editing, sound, score, then muscle its way into bigger categories to anchor itself as the momentous force it was on the big screen.

    That’s the thing about nomination morning. It isn’t just about quality. It’s timing, narrative and momentum. If these films arrive with the weight they’re carrying right now, expect to hear their names early and often when the list starts rolling.

    Devon James

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  • Conan O’Brien Reportedly ‘Wracked With Guilt’ After Seeing Rob Reiner Hours Before His Murder—He Feels He ‘Could’ve Changed What Happened’

    Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele, attended Conan O’Brien’s party with their son, Nick, and hours later, their bodies were found in their Los Angeles home. Reportedly, the former late-night host is feeling overwhelming guilt about what happened to his friends.

    A source told Rob Shuter’s ShuterScoop Substack that Conan is “blaming himself” after spectating an argument between the parents and son. “He keeps thinking, ‘What if I had stepped in? What if I’d pulled Rob aside or shut it down?’” the insider said. “He feels like maybe he could have changed the course of what happened.”

    “Conan is replaying every detail in his mind,” another insider added. “He’s wracked with guilt and keeps wondering if anything he did—or didn’t do—could have made a difference.”

    Sources told People that Nick and his parents were heard in a “very loud argument” at the party. “Nick was freaking everyone out, acting crazy, kept asking people if they were famous,” a source said.

    Related: Rob Reiner’s Eerie Last Words Before His Murder Revealed by Close Friend Eric Idle: ‘Last Thing He Said to Me…’

     The 32-year-old reportedly had a tense conversation with actor Bill Hader at Conan O’Brien’s holiday party on Dec. 13. Sources told NBC News that Nick had allegedly interrupted Hader’s conversation. When the comedian told him that the conversation was private, Reiner’s son appeared to stand still and stare before “storming off.” The couple left the party early.

    Rob and Michele Reiner’s bodies were discovered on Dec. 14, allegedly by their daughter Romy. Nick was arrested on Dec. 16 and is charged with 2 counts of murder and faces a special circumstance allegation of using a deadly weapon, according to court documents. If convicted, he could face a maximum sentence of life without the possibility of parole or the death penalty.

    Lea Veloso

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  • Adam Sandler will receive AARP’s Movies for Grownups career achievement award, his second AARP prize

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Adam Sandler will be the next recipient of AARP’s Movies for Grownups career achievement award, the group said Tuesday.

    And maybe this time, the actor will wait for his signal.

    When Sandler won the group’s best actor prize in 2020 for“Uncut Gems,” he rushed to the stage too fast — before host Conan O’Brien had time to sing his praises. O’Brien made comic hay of the moment, sending the sheepish actor back to his seat with instructions to await “a signal.”

    From his “Saturday Night Live” roots to beloved comedies like “Billy Madison” (1995) and the cult classic “Happy Gilmore” (1996) to dramas like “Punch-Drunk Love” (2002) and his high-energy turn in “Uncut Gems” (2019), Sandler, 59, has displayed an ever-growing range.

    This summer he reprised “Happy Gilmore” on Netflix and in November will appear alongside George Clooney in Noah Baumbach’s “Jay Kelly.”

    Winner of the 2023 Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, Sandler “is one of Hollywood’s most enduring and ever-evolving stars, whose talents resonate across generations,” AARP said in a statement on Tuesday.

    Myechia Minter-Jordan, the group’s CEO, called the actor “a Hollywood legend whose remarkable career has set a new standard for comedic storytelling, captivating audiences across generations.

    “Adam’s enduring success, his ability to reinvent himself, inspire laughter, and move us through dramatic performances is a testament to the power of creativity at every age,” Minter-Jordan said.

    AARP launched the Movies for Grownups initiative in 2002 to advocate for audiences over 50, fight ageism in Hollywood and promote movies “for grownups, by grownups.”

    Actor Alan Cumming will host the ceremony in Beverly Hills on Jan. 10, to be broadcast by “Great Performances” on PBS in February.

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  • ‘If I Had Legs I’d Kick You’ explores a mother’s existential crisis

    Sometimes the best films are the ones that are most difficult to describe, the ones that can’t be boiled down to a pithy tagline or plot summary.

    This is almost certainly the case with “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” one of most audacious films of the year, in which Rose Byrne plays a mother on the edge. There’s an unseen kid with a mysterious illness. There’s the constant humming of medical equipment. There’s a hole in a ceiling that may be coming to life. There’s A$AP Rocky as a motel employee. There’s a phone husband and Conan O’Brien’s uninterested therapist. And there is the feeling of exhaustion so deep, so endless it manifests not in rest but in mania.

    For writer-director Mary Bronstein, her film is an experience that she likens to likens to being on a roller coaster.

    “Everything is going as expected but then at some point you pass by the operator and the operator’s not there and then the roller coaster keeps going and it gets faster and faster and so you feel like you’re gonna fly off into the ether,” she said. “I describe it as an existential terror.”

    It might not be all that surprising then that the film, expanding this weekend, was born out of an existential crisis. Bronstein, who 17 years ago made the cult mumblecore classic “Yeast,” featuring a pre-fame Greta Gerwig and the Safdie brothers, had walked away from the industry. But about eight years ago, life took her to San Diego where she would lose herself and find her way back to filmmaking.

    A film born in a motel bathroom

    The move to San Diego was not a happy one. Her 7-year-old daughter needed to be there for medical treatments and her husband needed to stay in New York for work.

    For a disorienting eight months, Bronstein played the part of full-time caregiver while they lived in a tiny, dingy motel room. The only place she had to herself was their depressing little bathroom where she would go after her daughter was asleep and drink cheap wine and binge food under the awful glow of the overhead fluorescent lights. And she felt herself disappearing.

    “My wants and needs didn’t factor into the equation. The task at hand was to get her better and to go back to New York,” she said. “And then this other thought started forming like, ‘Oh, wait a minute, she is going to get better. And we are going to go back to work. And then what the hell am I going to do? Who am I? It was a literal, actual existential crisis.”

    That’s when it hit her: “I’m an artist,” she said. She started writing the script, her first since “Yeast,” in that awful motel bathroom.

    A promising debut and a quick retreat

    Bronstein came to filmmaking through performance, through the theater, studying at New York University’s Tisch and the Playwrights Horizon studio. But she quickly realized that she didn’t actually want to act: She wanted to be the one creating characters and working with actors.

    “Yeast” was made in opposition to the films she’d seen on the festival circuit the year prior, with her now husband Ronald Bronstein, where she saw a lot of male fantasies of women on screen.

    “It made me angry and I made ‘Yeast’ with that kind of rage,” she said. “I had never seen a film that reflected a very particular experience I had which is the trouble of navigating friendships from one stage of life to another, when boyfriends enter the picture, jobs and interests that have nothing to do with you.”

    Like “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You,” “Yeast” was a pure expression of feeling. But when it premiered in competition at SXSW in 2008, it was met with a lot of hostility — especially from young male filmmakers.

    It was a disheartening experience. Instead of soldiering on in an independent filmmaking community that didn’t seem to want her, she went away and did other things: She got a graduate degree in psychology, she had a kid, she ran an underground preschool in Williamsburg, and she wrote feminist theory for academic books.

    In other words, she lived a life. And making films wasn’t part of it, for her at least.

    Clawing her way back in

    Bronstein’s husband is Josh Safdie’s creative partner who co-wrote and co-edited “Uncut Gems ” and “Good Time” as well as the upcoming “Marty Supreme,” which he also produced. And yet when she decided to write and make “If I Had Legs…”, she felt completely outside of any infrastructure or industry. She had no manager. No one was asking what she was going to do next.

    But as with “Yeast,” she just knew she had to tell this story. And for the first time people willing to put money into making it happen agreed. The only creative concessions she made were logistical, she said.

    O’Brien describes Bronstein as one of the most tenacious people he’s ever met. After he’d agreed to be in the film she told him that she was coming to Los Angeles and needed three hours a day with him for a week.

    “There’s a part of me that’s thinking, ‘Really?’” O’Brien said. “I thought, ‘This isn’t really going to happen. She says that but we’re probably going to do an hour.’”

    He was wrong, and glad about it. It was a week of intense character work that proved enormously helpful.

    “She is so confident in her vision and she’s so confident about what needs to happen,” he said. “There are people that make movies because that’s their job and they just keep making them because that’s what you do. Mary is someone who has something to say. That, I think, really is the mark of a true artist.”

    When the picture was locked, she texted O’Brien saying, “I made the movie I wanted to make.” That alone was enough: He was certain it was going to be great. Most audiences seem to agree too, from its festival run to its theatrical rollout, Bronstein has captured something about the zeitgeist, about motherhood, about the pressures of being a caregiver that gets under your skin and stays there.

    “It was a very urgent expression that I wanted to capture in the film. I didn’t want that energy to die on the screen,” Bronstein said. “And I think I succeeded — maybe too much for some people, but for me, just in the right way.”

    An overdue reappraisal and what’s next

    Somewhere in the past few years “Yeast” has had its own resurgence, getting occasional screenings at art theaters around the country and abroad. The film had always had a few champions, including The New Yorker critic Richard Brody, but suddenly she noticed a fandom of 20-somethings emerging.

    “They freak for this thing,” Bronstein said.

    She’s not exactly sure why, but she has some theories about collective anger and the catharsis of seeing aggression on screen in a new way. Like many great filmmakers, she was, perhaps, ahead of her own time in 2008.

    Now, she said, people are asking her “what’s next?” She has some ideas brewing. But she did promise one thing: This time, she said, it won’t take another 17 years.

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  • Werner Herzog on AI-Generated Movies: ‘They Look Completely Dead’

    Legendary filmmaker and ‘Here Comes Honey Boo Boo’ superfan Werner Herzog can see the beauty in just about everything, with two notable exceptions: Chickens and art created by artificial intelligence. During an appearance on the podcast “Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend,” Herzog spoke of the incredible possibilities presented by technological advances, but lamented the sheer lifelessness of its application in areas that require humanity.

    Much of the conversation between O’Brien and Herzog centered around the idea of truth (fitting for a guy who just wrote a book called The Future of Truth), which inevitably led them into a conversation about AI. Herzog, who is a fascinating mix of a man somewhat removed from technology but also filled with endless wonder about everything, didn’t dismiss the technology out of hand, but has some grave concerns about it.

    “AI, I do not want to put it down completely because it has glorious, magnificent possibilities,” he said, citing its potential uses in scientific fields. “But at the same time, it is already en route to take over warfare. … It will be the overwhelming face of warfare of the future.”

    He also simply can’t find much value in generative AI’s takes on works of art.

    “I’ve seen movies, short films, completely created by artificial intelligence. Story, acting, everything. They look completely dead. They are stories, but they have no soul,” he told O’Brien. “They are empty and soulless. You know it is the most common, lowest denominator of what is filling billions and billions of informations on the internet. The common denominator and nothing beyond this common denominator can be found in these fabrications.”

    Those fabrications of AI are a real point of fascination for Herzog. In his new book, according to an excerpt from The New Republic, he writes AI “sees its occasional errors, and arrives at strategies and decisions that were not programmed in it by humans,” and notes that its outputs arrive “with a little pinch of chaos and imprecision, as is also embedded in human nature.”

    While talking to O’Brien, Herzog brought up how AI generates these falsehoods and how we have to navigate them. “And of course, cheating, pretending, propagandizing—all these things are like a nemesis. It is out there, and we have to be alert to it.” His advice? Simply do not take anything entirely at face value. “Again, I say, when you are curious and access different sources, very quickly you will find this is invented.”

    In general, Herzog is not much for technology. He didn’t own a cellphone until, according to his telling, he had to get one after he was unable to retrieve his car (an 18-year-old Ford Explorer) from a parking garage in Dublin without downloading an app. But it’s not that he fears it. He just doesn’t trust it. “Everything that comes in via your cellphone or your laptop, emails, whatever—you have to distrust, you have to doubt,” he told O’Brien. In response, O’Brien offered up that he gets updates on his phone when his cats use the litter box because it is internet-connected, and proposed that it should be illegal for anything to require an app to function.

    Herzog spoke of how natural navigating technology is for younger people, how effortlessly they spot a phishing email that he wouldn’t be able to identify. He compared the instincts of humans using technology to those of prehistoric men foraging for food and learning to avoid poisonous berries. “They had a natural acquired suspicion about things, and it was so natural that we can certainly assume that they didn’t hate nature,” he said. “They just knew how to navigate. And it’s the same thing—you don’t have to hate the internet and the cell phone and whatever is coming at you in this new media, you just have to maintain a complete level of suspicion.”

    All of this comes from Herzog’s greater search for truth, which is central to his new book. On the podcast, he assessed, “Nobody knows what truth is.” And in some ways, it doesn’t matter. O’Brien and Herzog share that in art, sheer truth sometimes matters less than telling a good story. But in the rest of the world, the concept of truth is just as elusive, and the cause of conflict and strife. Whose truth are we operating from?

    “Truth is not a point somewhere far out in the distance,” Herzog says. “It’s more a process of searching for it, approximating, having doubts.” O’Brien at one point added, “Emotions get us to a truth sometimes that facts cannot deliver.” That is perhaps why AI art falls so flat. The truth lies in the emotion the work conveys and provokes. AI has nothing to offer.

    AJ Dellinger

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  • Listen to ‘The Conan and Jordan Show’ on Conan O’Brien Radio

    Listen to ‘The Conan and Jordan Show’ on Conan O’Brien Radio

    Jordan Schlansky has gone from Conan O’Brien’s associate producer (with “various duties”) to his co-host – with the launch of The Conan and Jordan Show exclusively on SiriusXM’s Conan O’Brien Radio (ch. 104).Conan and Jordan will explore their strange relationship and get to know each other even better during their radio series. In the debut episode, the pair delved into Jordan’s favorite band, Rush, and his pronunciation of Socrates, among other topics. Plus, they spoke with several callers live on air, including a mysterious one at the end who may or may not be among the “great dry wits of all time.” Check out the full episode anytime on the SiriusXM app or throughout the week on Conan’s channel, Conan O’Brien Radio.

    About Conan O’Brien Radio

    Conan O’Brien Radio is available on channel 104 on the SiriusXM app and car radios. Executive produced by Conan, the 24/7 channel features the biggest interviews and funniest stand-up moments from Conan’s iconic TBS show, as well as select Team Coco podcasts, including Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, plus Inside Conan and Conan O’Brien Needs a Fan. Check out more about the channel here.

    Matt Simeone

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  • Conan O’Brien Hosts an ‘In Utero’ 30th Anniversary Special

    Conan O’Brien Hosts an ‘In Utero’ 30th Anniversary Special

    Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, and Steve Albini will celebrate Nirvana’s third and final album, In Utero, during a special episode of the Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend podcast. The former Nirvana members and Albini, who produced In Utero, will talk to Conan about the conception, birth, and life of the iconic group’s third and final studio album – three decades after its release.


    Stream Team Coco Radio (Ch. 106) on the SiriusXM App & web player


    The episode, which will also feature music from In Utero, will premiere October 23 at 6pm ET on both Team Coco Radio (Ch. 106) and Lithium (Ch. 34). Hear encores throughout the week or stream it anytime on the SiriusXM App.

    Conan O’Brien, Dave Grohl, Krist Novoselic, and Steve Albini

    In Utero debuted on September 21, 1993 – only about six months before legendary frontman Kurt Cobain’s tragic death. After working with producer Butch Vig on their breakthrough album Nevermind (1991), Nirvana hired Albini, who previously produced two of Cobain’s favorite records: the Pixies’ Surfer Rosa (1988) and the Breeders’ Pod (1990). Like Nevermind, In Utero was a critical and commercial success and is considered one of the greatest albums of the ’90s. The album includes favorites like “Heart-Shaped Box,” “All Apologies,” “Pennyroyal Tea,” and more.

    nirvana frontman Kurt Cobain

    Kurt Cobain during Nirvana’s iconic MTV Unplugged performance in 1993 (Getty Images)

    Also in September 1993, Conan launched his inaugural talk show, Late Night with Conan O’Brien, which he hosted until February 2009. Over the years, countless music acts – including seminal alt-rock bands like Grohl’s Foo Fighters – performed on Conan’s influential NBC show, as well as his other late-night series.

    Team Coco Radio is available anytime on channel 106 on the SiriusXM App and car radios. Executive produced by Conan, the 24/7 channel features the biggest interviews and funniest stand-up moments from Conan’s iconic TBS show, as well as select Team Coco podcasts, including Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend, plus Inside Conan and Conan O’Brien Needs a Fan. Check out more about the channel here.

    nirvana members and conan o'brien

    Krist Novoselic, Steve Albini, Dave Grohl, and Conan O’Brien


    Jackie Kolgraf

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  • Resurfaced Clip Shows Harrison Ford Laughing At Playing Indiana Jones When He’s 80: ‘Indiana Jones And The Comfortable Bed’

    Resurfaced Clip Shows Harrison Ford Laughing At Playing Indiana Jones When He’s 80: ‘Indiana Jones And The Comfortable Bed’

    By Emerson Pearson.

    No matter Harrison Ford’s age, he’s still outrunning boulders and cracking his whip.

    After visiting O’Brien’s podcast earlier this week, a viral clip from “Late Night with Conan O’Brien” resurfaced recently, featuring the host joking with Harrison Ford about the actor playing Indiana Jones when he’s 80 years old.

    The joke turned somewhat true as Ford recently appeared in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” just weeks before turning 81. O’Brien quipped that at 80, Ford could do movies where the treasures are brought to him.


    READ MORE:
    Harrison Ford Playfully Mocks Conan O’Brien Over Han Solo Note: ‘You Can’t F—ing Remember That?’

    Ford laughed, and O’Brien suggested the title for an “Indiana Jones” film with an 80-year-old Ford: “Indiana Jones and the Comfortable Bed.”

    “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” marks Ford’s final appearance as the iconic archaeologist. However, the 81-year-old actor has no plans to retire from acting. Ford has recently joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe in the film “Captain America: Brave New World” and has other projects lined up, including the Apple TV+ comedy series “Shrinking” and the Paramount+ drama series “1923.”

    When asked about retirement last month, Ford expressed: “I don’t. I don’t do well when I don’t have work. I love to work. I love to feel useful. It’s my Jones. I want to be helpful.”


    READ MORE:
    Movie Review: Harrison Ford Gets A Swashbuckling Sendoff In ‘Indiana Jones And The Dial Of Destiny’

    For Ford, acting is more than a job; it’s a passion that he intends to continue pursuing, adding: “The intensity and the intimacy of collaboration. It’s the combined ambition somehow forged from words on a page. I don’t plan what I want to do in a scene. I don’t feel obliged to do anything. I’m naturally affected by things that I work on.”

    Audiences can watch Ford reprise his role as the adventurer in “Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny” now playing in theatres nationwide.

    Emerson Pearson

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  • Chris Martin No Longer Eats Dinner

    Chris Martin No Longer Eats Dinner

    Chris Martin has cut back from three square meals a day to one at the advice of The Boss.

    A week after his ex-wife Gwyneth Paltrow shared her controversial broth-based diet, the musician revealed his own complicated eating schedule on the Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend podcast published Monday, confessing that he doesn’t “actually have dinner anymore.” Martin explained, “I stop eating at 4, and I learned that from having lunch with Bruce Springsteen.” He added that he, “was lucky enough to go over there to lunch the day after [Coldplay] played Philadelphia last year,” noting that even before implementing Springsteen’s routine he already “was on a really strict diet anyway.” But when he sat down to eat with the legendary singer, Martin realized that the 73-year-old looked “more in shape” than him at the time. When Springsteen’s wife Patti Scialfa revealed that it’s because her husband “only eat[s] one meal a day,” Martin thought, “Well, there you go. That’s my next challenge.” He then joked that Springsteen’s one meal a day is comprised of a “flank of buffalo with a steroid sauce.”

    In 2021, Springsteen spoke with Tim McGraw in an interview for Apple Music, during which he was also asked about how he stays in top physical condition. “The biggest thing is diet, diet, diet,” the “Born in the U.S.A.” musician explained. “I don’t eat too much, and I don’t eat bad food, except for every once in a while when I want to have some fun for myself. So I think anybody that’s trying to get in shape, exercise is always important of course, but diet is 90 percent of the game.”

    And last week, Paltrow admitted that she is also a big fan of intermittent fasting, taking long stretches between eating and waiting until 12 p.m. to have her first meal of the day. On the March 13 episode of the Art of Being Well podcast, she said, “I have bone broth for [lunch] a lot of the days. Then for dinner I try to eat according to paleo, so lots of vegetables.” During the conversation, the Goop founder was also hooked up to an IV drip which she claims made her “feel so good.” Clips from that conversation went viral on TikTok and soon after stars like Tess Holliday and Meghan McCain accused the actor of disordered eating. But in an Instagram Story on Friday, Paltrow addressed some of those concerns, explaining that her diet choices are due to “very high levels of inflammation” caused by her battle with long COVID-19. “I have been really working to really focus on foods that aren’t inflammatory,” she explained. The former actor also noted that her eating habits are not “meant to be advice for anyone else” as they are “based on [her] medical results and extensive testing.”

    Emily Kirkpatrick

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