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  • America Ferrera Shouts Out Selena Gomez, Jenna Ortega in Critics Choice Speech – POPSUGAR Australia

    America Ferrera Shouts Out Selena Gomez, Jenna Ortega in Critics Choice Speech – POPSUGAR Australia

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    Actress America Ferrera was awarded the SeeHer Award at today’s 2024 Critics Choice Awards, and delivered an acceptance speech that could rival her iconic “Barbie” monologue.

    The SeeHer Award is a non-competitive special award that was established in 2017. It honours women in film who advocate for gender equality in the industry, and portray authentic, boundary-pushing characters.

    Margot Robbie Presented the 2024 SeeHer Award to America Ferrera

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    Margot Robbie presented the award to America Ferrera. In Robbie’s introduction, the actress and Barbie producer highlighted some of Ferrera’s career highlights, including “Real Women Have Curves”, “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants”, and “Ugly Betty”. Robbie also noted that Ferrera became the first Latina woman to win an Emmy for Lead Actress in a Comedy Series when she won for “Ugly Betty”, and remains the only Latina woman who has won in this category.

    “First, and only,” Robbie reiterated. “I imagine being the first in any field can be isolating. I imagine it puts an enormous amount of pressure on you to be perfect, to play it safe, but what I admire most about America is how she has handled that pressure, while never being afraid to speak the truth when it counts the most.”

    America Ferrera Delivers Powerful Speech on the Importance of Representation

    On stage, Ferrera delivered a powerful and heartfelt acceptance speech with effortless charm.

    “I’m just waiting for the teleprompter to show my speech, there it is!” she began, bursting into a grin.

    Accepting the award, Ferrera spoke about her experience being a “first-generation Honduran-American girl in love with TV, film, and theatre who desperately wanted to be a part of a storytelling legacy that I could not see myself reflected in”.

    “Of course, I could feel myself in characters who were strong and complex, but these characters rarely, if ever, looked like me,” Ferrera said. “I yearned to see people like myself on screen as full humans.”

    Ferrera went on to recall her start in the industry, noting that at the time, “it seemed impossible that anyone could make a career of portraying fully-dimensional Latina characters”. She credited the writers, directors, producers and executives behind the scenes who have been “daring enough to rewrite outdated stories” over the years, and “to challenge deeply entrenched biases”.

    She also gave a shout out to Ariana Greenblatt — who plays Ferrera’s daughter in “Barbie” — as well as Jenna Ortega and Selena Gomez, for making their mark in Hollywood as Latina actresses, and playing characters she “could not have seen growing up”.

    “To me, this is the best and highest use of storytelling,” she continued. “To affirm one another’s full humanity, to uphold the truth that we are all worthy of being seen. Black, Brown, indigenous, Asian, trans, disabled, any body type, any gender, we are all worthy of having our lives richly and authentically reflected.”

    America Ferrera Thanks “Barbie” Family

    Ferrera went on to say that she would not be receiving the award if it weren’t for her role in Barbie, and took time to thank Robbie for seeing the “value” in “an entirely female idea that most would have dismissed as too girly, too frivolous or just too problematic”.

    To Robbie, who produced the film, she said: “You had the courage and the vision to take it on. Thank you for gifting the world with ‘Barbie’.”

    Next up was “Barbie” director Greta Gerwig, who Ferrera thanked for her “incredible mastery as a filmmaker” and for proving “that women’s stories have no difficulty achieving cinematic greatness and box office history at the same time”. She also thanked “the Kens” —  Noah Baumbach, Tom Ackerley, David Heyman, and Ryan Gosling.

    Ferrera’s final thanks was to her husband Ryan, who she clarified was “not Gosling”.

    “You see me and my dreams, and you believe and support them as if they were your own. I love you,” she said.

    “This is for every kid yearning to break in — I see you, and you go this,” she finished.

    The 29th Critics Choice Awards are streaming in full on Stan.

    This article was originally published on The Latch. Click here to read the original.

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    Stephanie Anderson

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  • Neve Campbell on Returning to ‘Scream’ Amid Franchise Fallout: “I Would Not be Surprised to Get a Call”

    Neve Campbell on Returning to ‘Scream’ Amid Franchise Fallout: “I Would Not be Surprised to Get a Call”

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    The Scream franchise has lost a lot of blood in recent months but the beloved star who played Sidney Prescott in five films over 25 years isn’t ruling out a return.

    The Hollywood Reporter caught up with Neve Campbell on Saturday afternoon at the BAFTA Tea Party in Beverly Hills, where she offered up a “we’ll see” to whether she would reprise her franchise leading role in the near future. The next installment, which is currently in the works, has been in peril since November when Melissa Barrera was fired over social media posts regarding the conflict in the Middle East between Israel and Hamas. Days later, it was revealed that her co-star, Jenna Ortega, had also exited the next film. Then a month after that, director Christopher Landon parted ways on the project, going so far as to say that his “dream job turned into a nightmare.”

    Campbell has clearly seen the headlines. “I know things are spinning at the moment and I would imagine they are spinning at the top trying to figure out what they’re going to do. I would not be surprised to get a call,” she revealed. “But at the same time, I made a strong statement a few years ago, which is I did not believe that the way that I was treated would’ve happened if I had been a male and that I deserve a certain thing for having carried this franchise for as long as I have.”

    The veteran star was referring to a highly publicized exit in June 2022 over a dispute over pay. “Sadly, I won’t be making the next Scream film,” per that statement. “As a woman I have had to work extremely hard in my career to establish my value, especially when it comes to Scream. I felt the offer that was presented to me did not equate to the value I have brought to the franchise.”

    Looking back on that decision now, Campbell said she took a stand “not in an egotistical way” but as a way to fight for what she believes is right. “We have to stand up for women in this business and know what we’re worth. That hasn’t changed for me,” she continued on Saturday. “So, if they were to come back to me, it would have to be with a respectful offer that I felt was in keeping with what I bring to this franchise.”

    Which leads back to the original question, and Campbell repeated it herself. “Would I do it? There are millions of fans out there of this franchise. These movies mean a lot to people. They mean a lot to me. They mean a lot to [Kevin Williamson]. They meant a lot to [Wes Craven]. They meant a lot to all of these cast members, and we would all love to see this franchise continue. I would hate to see it burn. So we’ll see.”

    Speaking of Williamson, who created the series, he has said he would love to see Campbell step back into Sidney’s shoes. “I would give her the money. I’m sure there’s a number they can agree on that will make them both happy, so hopefully one day they will figure that all out,” he said during a podcast appearance on Happy Horror Time last fall.

    When the news broke that Campbell had exited the franchise, it went viral on Twitter (now X), something Campbell said was a new experience for her. “I had a friend text me and say, ‘You’re trending right now.’ I’ve never been on Twitter. I didn’t know what it meant. She was like, ‘Let me explain.’ She said, ‘You are so loved. People are so passionate about you in these films and people are fighting for you. People want the studio to do right by you.’ That meant so much to me,” she told THR. “Even the fact that it caused a stir, not anti-studio in any way, just that it caused people to stand up and think, maybe they could stand up for themselves in some way, that meant a lot and continues to mean a lot.”

    Campbell attended Saturday’s star-packed BAFTA Tea Party with her friend of 30 years, Emmy winning multi-hyphenate Michael A. Goorjian, whom she met during their days on Party of Five. Goorjian and Campbell were making the rounds to celebrate the good news that his film Amerikatsi had been shortlisted for an Oscar as an international feature from Armenia.

    Michael A. Goorjian and Neve Campbell at the BAFTA Tea Party at the Maybourne Hotel in Beverly Hills on Jan. 13, 2024.

    Alberto E. Rodriguez/Getty Images for BAFTA

    Goorjian told THR that when he heard that his film snagged a spot on the shortlist, he happened to be in Campbell’s kitchen. (Goorjian is living with Campbell at the moment and he’s the godfather of her children with husband JJ Feild.) “I started screaming and she was upstairs,” he recalled. “In film and TV, you meet so many people and work with so many different people. It’s like going to summer camp and you always say, ‘Oh yeah, we’ll stay in touch,’ and you never do. Nev is pretty much one of the only people in the industry that I’ve really stayed close with. It’s a rare thing.”

    Campbell said she knew it was special when they met on Party of Five. “I mean, I loved Michael. I just thought he had an amazing brain and an amazing mind. He had a creative spirit and he’s really kind. He’s from Oakland and he’s really cool. We hung out a lot on Party of Five. If I was hanging out with anyone, it was usually the two of us in each other’s trailers just kicking it.”

    Goorjian wrote, directed and stars in Amerikatsi playing Armenian-American repatriate Charlie Bakhchinyan. The story follows his journey after being arrested for the crime of wearing a tie in Soviet Armenia. Alone in solitary confinement, he discovers that he can see inside of an apartment building near the prison from his cell window, leading to a personal discovery of why he returned home in the first place.

    “I’ve been working on this film for five years,” Goorjian explained. “We shot during the COVID-19 pandemic, so it was pretty crazy. There were a lot of obstacles to finish, but eventually, when we premiered it for an American audience, I saw the reactions and thought that maybe it worked.”

    Campbell also helped along the way, offering feedback. Goorjian said he even remixed the sound of one section based on her notes. “When you’ve been in the business long enough, you have a sense of things,” she concluded. “Michael came to both JJ and I a lot, and we would watch different cuts and give thoughts because it’s always helpful. A truly wonderful director is open to other minds. I worked with Robert Altman years ago, and what was so magical about him is he truly believed that many minds is much better than just his. If you have a lot of creative opinion and you’re open, it’s really helpful. [Michael] is so talented, he really knows what he is doing, but he’s also really open to creative thoughts, which is great.”

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    Chris Gardner

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  • ‘Wednesday’ Spinoff In Works At Netflix

    ‘Wednesday’ Spinoff In Works At Netflix

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    Netflix is looking to build a franchise around its reigning most popular series. A Wednesday spinoff revolving around Fred Armisen‘s Uncle Fester character is in early development at the streamer from MGM Television, Deadline has confirmed.

    Conversations about the offshoot are happening alongside preparations for Season 2 of Wednesday — a new take of The Addams Family starring Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams — which became a ratings and pop culture phenomenon when it launched in November 2023. The horror comedy ranks as Netflix’s most popular English-language series with 252.1M views, almost doubling the next most popular TV season on the streamer.

    Armisen guest starred in one episode of Wednesday‘s first season in a memorable appearance as Uncle Fester, brother of Wednesday’s father Gomez Addams (Luis Guzman), who used his ability to generate electricity to revive Thing.

    Gwendoline Christie, Riki Lindhome, Jamie McShane, Hunter Doohan, Percy Hynes White, Emma Myers, Joy Sunday, Georgie Farmer, Naomi J. Ogawa, Christina Ricci, and Moosa Mostafa co-starred in Season 1, with Catherine Zeta Jones recurring as Wednesday’s mother Morticia.

    The coming-of-age comedy is from Smallville creators Al Gough and Miles Millar and directed/EPed by Tim Burton. Other EPs are Steve Stark (Toluca Pictures),  Andrew Mittman (1.21 Entertainment), Kevin Miserocchi (Tee and Charles Addams Foundation), Kayla Alpert, Jonathan Glickman (Glickmania), Gail Berman, Tommy Harper, and Kevin Lafferty.

    As Deadline previously reported, Season 2 will be filmed in Ireland, with production tentatively slated to begin in late April. Season 1 was shot in Romania.

    There is little information about where the mothership Wednesday series would go thematically in Season 2. Gough and Millar have hinted that we might see more Addams family members — further expanding the universe and potentially setting up new offshoots — and explore further Wednesday’s relationship with her mother while Ortega, who is becoming a producer for Season 2, has indicated that the show would have stronger emphasize on horror over teen romance.

    Bloomberg was first to report the news of the potential spinoff.

    Denise Petski contributed to this report.

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    Denise Petski

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  • ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 To Introduce New Addams Family Member

    ‘Wednesday’ Season 2 To Introduce New Addams Family Member

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    By Philiana Ng‍, ETOnline.com.

    It will be a minute before season 2 of “Wednesday” will be ready to be devoured by fans. But Jenna Ortega and her co-stars offered an early tease of what’s — or rather, who’s — to come in the Netflix series, which follows the titular (anti-)heroine as she enrolls in Nevermore Academy, a school for troubled outcasts, and investigates a murder mystery.

    As part of Netflix’s Tudum fan event in Sao Paulo, Brazil, on Saturday, “Wednesday”‘s Emma Myers, who plays Wednesday’s roommate, Enid Sinclair, shared in a special video that season 2 “was being worked on right now and the storyline is so top secret even we don’t know what’s going to happen.”

    But one thing they could tease: Viewers will be introduced to a new member of the Addams family.

    “This is true!” Myers, who was joined by castmates Hunter Doohan, who portrays Hyde barista Tyler Galpin, and Joy Sunday, who plays siren and Xavier’s ex-girlfriend, Bianca Barclay, all revealed.

    “But we don’t know who it is,” Doohan added as a disclaimer.

    Ortega, who adds a producer credit to her duties for season 2, pitched her ideas for which Addams family member it could be.

    “I would love to see Cousin Itt,” the 20-year-old actress shared, referring to the character that’s composed entirely of blonde hair and wears a bowler hat and sunglasses, speaks in gibberish and is understood only by the Addams family.

    Myers, Doohan and Sunday, meanwhile, all agreed they’d like to see Wednesday’s grandmother, Grandmama, a witch who creates potions and spells, join the party in season 2.

    Which Addams family member will be coming in season 2? Watch the “Wednesday” video below.

    During a recent Variety‘s “Actors on Actors” conversation with “The Great”‘s Elle Fanning, Ortega revealed a shift in creative priorities for season 2.

    “It’s still coming together, but we’ve decided we want to lean into the horror more. Because it is so lighthearted, and a show like this with vampires and werewolves and superpowers, you don’t want to take yourself too seriously,” she explained. “We’re ditching any romantic love interest for Wednesday, which is really great. We’re going to get bolder, more dark.”

    Ortega expressed the importance of getting the character right from the get-go.

    “With a character like Wednesday, who is so beloved, I didn’t want to get her wrong. So I tried to have as many conversations as possible. On set, with the writers and Tim [Burton]. We’d decide what works and what doesn’t. In preparation for a second season, we wanted to make sure that we could start the conversations earlier,” she said, crediting the character for forcing her “out of [her] shell.” “I’m just so curious: I want to see the outfits, new characters that are coming in, scripts and they were gracious enough to let me put the producer hat on.”

    The first season of “Wednesday” is streaming now on Netflix.

    More From ET: 

    Jenna Ortega Shares Shocking Revelation About ‘Wednesday’ Season 2

    Christina Ricci Addresses Her Future in Netflix’s ‘Wednesday’ Series (Exclusive)

    ‘Saturday Night Live’: Jenna Ortega Gets Help From ‘Wednesday’ Co-Star (and ‘SNL’ Alum) Fred Armisen

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    Melissa Romualdi

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  • Who is the monster in Wednesday?

    Who is the monster in Wednesday?

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    Netflix’s hit show Wednesday is a spinoff of the Addams Family. This show has won over the old fans as well as secured tons of new fans. The show revolves around the eldest sibling of the Addams Family named Wednesday. Wednesday is a 16-year-old with psychic powers who starts attending the Nevermore Academy in Jericho, Vermont. Nevermore is the same academy Wednesday’s parents Morticia and Gomez, attended. 

    An unknown force starts killing the students of Nevermore. Despite supernatural hurdles in her way, Wednesday decides that she will uncover the identity of the murderer. When Wednesday starts investigating, she finds out that the being on a killing spree is a monster called Hyde. A Hyde is a person who can turn into a monster through hypnosis or drugs. The Hyde, once trained, can turn into a monster of its own will. This makes the list of suspects endless since the monster can be anybody around Wednesday. The show follows Wednesday as she slowly uncovers this web of mysteries and finally discovers the true identity of the monster and its master. 

    What is the monster in Wednesday?

    What exactly is the monster in Wednesday? The monster makes its first appearance in the first episode when Wednesday almost gets killed by her telekinetic classmate Rowan Laslow and the monster steps in to save her. Later Wednesday tries to convince Sheriff Donovan Galpin that the murderer is in Jericho, Vermont itself. The police get a hold of an image taken by a camera where the monster is visible. Wednesday breaks into the coroner’s office with the Thing, who is actually a hand and also a relative of Wednesday that her parents sent to look out for her. Wednesday and the Thing manage to get a copy of all the information available on the monster’s victims; on looking into it, they find that the monster has been surgically removing body parts from its victims. 

    Wednesday initially suspects Xavier Thorpe, who is a fellow classmate and has the ability to bring his art to life. Wednesday sneaks into Xavier’s art studio and finds sketches of the monster, which leads her to the monster’s lair. She brings along one of the creature’s claws and hands it over to Sheriff Galpin. Eugene Otinger also states that he saw a cloaked figure lurking around in the monster’s lair; Wednesday senses that Eugene might be in danger and finds him injured in the forest. 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

    Wednesday makes her way to Laurel Gate’s mansion, a relative of Garrett Gates. Garret Gates is a former student of Nevermore that Wednesday’s mother, Morticia, killed 30 years ago. At the mansion, Wednesday finds body parts of the Monster’s victims but escapes before she can look into it because she is attacked by the monster. On returning to the cellar, she finds nothing there; Wednesday ends up meeting her uncle Fester who discloses to her that the monster she has been following around is called a Hyde. Wednesday finds her way into the Academy’s library and finds a book that describes a Hyde as being an “artist by nature, but equally vindictive in temperament,” and as she reads further, she finds that a Hyde also has a master. 

    “Born of mutation, the Hyde lays dormant until unleashed by a traumatic event or unlocked through chemical inducement or hypnosis,” the book reads. “This causes the Hyde to develop an immediate bond with its liberator, who the creature now sees as its master. It becomes the willing instrument of whatever nefarious agenda this new master might propose.”

    ALSO READ: Did you know Jenna Ortega rejected ‘Wednesday’ offer? Find out why

    Who is the Monster in Wednesday?

    In episode 7 “If You Don’t Woe Me by Now” we get to know the real identity of Hyde. One of Wednesday’s love interests, Tyler Galpin, turns out to be the monster in Wednesday. At the beginning of the episode, the Jericho police arrest Xavier because they are sure he is the monster. Later when Ttler and Wednesday are out on a date, they kiss, and Wednesday has a vision of the Hyde and Tyler and quickly figures out that he is the monster. Tyler is also Sheriff Galpin’s son. 

    Later Wednesday, with the help of her classmates, they are able to lure Tyler into the forest, where they successfully capture him. In order to get a confession out of him, they resort to torturing him. Wednesday’s classmates disagree with her methods and end up snitching on her by telling Larissa Weems, the principal of Nevermore Academy, and Wednesday gets arrested for this. But Tyler confesses to being the monster at the police station. 

    The monster’s master in Wednesday

    Marilyn Thornhill ends up being the monster’s master. Wednesday initially suspects Dr. Valerie Kinbott to be the monster who is her therapist. When she sees Dr. Valerie Kinbott meeting up with Xavier in the woods. When the monster kills Dr. Valerie Kinbott, on further investigation, Wednesday learns that a botany teacher at Nevermore, Marilyn Thornhill is the Hyde’s master. She figures it out when Eugene tells her that the figure he saw at the monster’s cave wore red boots, which are similar to the ones Marilyn Thornhill wears. 

    Principal Weems and Wednesday team up to get a confession out of her, where the Principal uses her shapeshifting powers. This is when Marilyn Thornhill reveals that her true identity is Laurel Gates, Garrett Gate’s relative, who is thought to be dead. Marilyn Thornhill kills Principal Weems and uses Wednesday’s blood to bring Joseph Crackstone, Jericho’s forefather, back to life. Joseph’s plan is to kill all the outcasts. Wednesday’s friend and roommate, Enid Sinclair, turns into a werewolf and defeats Tyler. Wednesday is saved by her deceased ancestor Goody, whom she frequently sees in her visions; she manages to stop Crackstone from destroying Nevermore. Wednesday and Eugene then successfully defeat Laurel Gates. Wednesday season 1 ends with Xavier’s being let out of prison and Nevermore Academy shutting down for the semester. 

    ALSO READ: Is Wednesday star Jenna Ortega injured? Fans worried after she posts ‘blood-soaked’ selfie

    Actor that plays the role of Tyler Galpin in Wednesday

    The role of Tyler is played by the actor Hunter Doohan. Tyler is a barista in Jericho and is the son of the town sheriff Donovan Galpin. Throughout the season, Tyler gradually gets closer to Wednesday and ends up being a love interest of her’s on the show.  Hunter Doohan is an American actor best known for his work in Soundwave and Truth Be Told. 

    He is also an aspiring director and screenwriter. “I’m hoping to write and direct a feature-length film at some point in my life,” he said in an interview. He added, “I don’t like to plan out too much because I feel like all of the best opportunities that I would have never anticipated have come my way. I would never have seen Your Honor or Wednesday coming my way. They’ve been life-changing experiences. I’m going to stay open and keep on reading great scripts and will hopefully get to work on more great projects.”

    Hunter is married to Fielder Jewett; the couple got married in 2022. Fielder is in law school but previously used to work in the entertainment business. Hunter took to Instagram to share pictures from their happy day and captioned the post, “Trying to sum up your wedding day in an Instagram caption is hard … It was absolutely the best day of our lives! Thank you to everyone who made it so special!”

    Where to watch Wednesday

    The hit series Wednesday, which is an Addams family spinoff, can be watched on Netflix. All the episodes of season one are available on Netflix. 

    Tyler makes a comeback in Wednesday Season 2

    In the last episode, we see Tyler being taken away from Jericho, and he is evidently chained. We watched him turn into Hyde once again as he tried to escape from being captured. In an interview, the makers of the show, Alfred Gough and Miles Millars, spoke about the possibility of Tyler returning in Season 2 of Wednesday, “Yeah. Absolutely. He’s out there,” Gough says. “That’s what we wanted to convey.”

    ALSO READ: Wednesday Season 2: Jenna Ortega doesn’t want Wednesday Addams to ‘play things so safe’ for THIS reason

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  • New York Comes Across As Generically As Woodsboro in Scream VI

    New York Comes Across As Generically As Woodsboro in Scream VI

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    For all the promotional hype surrounding the latest installment in the Scream franchise (officially poking fun at itself for having become that) and how it takes place in New York, there is surprisingly little riffing on that fact. Indeed, if one had anticipated that New York might be the “fifth character” (à la Sex and the City) among the self-described “Core Four” in Scream VI (stylized so that the Roman numeral serves as the “M” in the title), they would be sorely mistaken.

    To be blunt, the only time we really get a “taste of NYC” is during the clips deliberately accented in the trailer. Apart from those (featuring the requisite “bodega” and “subway” scenes), the closest we get to a sense of place is when Samara Weaving steps in for Drew Barrymore’s (as Casey Becker) memorable opening sequence from the original. Weaving plays Laura Crane, a woman waiting for an app-culled date at some “trendy” bar on “Hudson Street” (not really though—for even that is faked in Montreal). As the two go back and forth about how, essentially, they still feel too “uncool” for New York and places like said bar, they both state that they’ve only been in town for a matter of months. In addition, Laura makes mention of being a Film Studies professor specializing in the slasher genre. Clearly, things really have gotten too niche in our post-post-post-post-post-post-modern world. Particularly in academia (already poked fun of saliently in White Noise). After getting her to believe he’s hopelessly lost and can’t find the restaurant, soon enough, Laura’s “date” is able to lure her outside and into an alley. Of course, it’s not really Laura’s date, and it’s not even really New York either—what with so many locations filmed in Montreal.

    This includes one of the other “indelible” New York moments when Samantha “Sam” Carpenter (Melissa Barrera) and Tara Carpenter (Jenna Ortega) find themselves cornered in a bodega with the latest Ghostface. Called “Abe’s Snake Bodega” (the dead giveaway of it not being “Real New York” is that it feels the need to add “Bodega” into its name at all), the scene was shot in Montreal’s Notre-Dame-de-Grâce neighborhood. As were many others doubling as “the greatest city in the world.” Which, as usual, has shown itself to be highly recreatable in [insert other major city here]. And, contrary to popular belief, it’s not because it’s so “indelible” and “unique,” but because it has mutated into its own worst fear: the average metropolis. Something that other major cities haven’t fallen prey to quite so easily. Even San Francisco, for all the talk of the “tech bros” coming in and changing the face of the landscape with their presence, has not succumbed so effortlessly to a generic makeover as New York, particularly Manhattan and most of North Brooklyn (spreading with more and more ease to South Brooklyn and beyond).

    The vast majority of these two particular “sects” of New York have been overrun with corporate takeovers touting (unspokenly) how great it is not only to sell the city back to itself at an even higher price, but also how “necessary” it is to present the city with an array of new job opportunities for its burgeoning young workforce (emphasis on the word “young,” because that’s the demographic most willing to bend over for low-wage employment). Sam is ostensibly one of those youths, as Tara is certain to call her out for having two shitty jobs and no other real reason for being in town apart from monitoring her sister with stalker-like precision.

    To this point, Tara unwittingly brings up a larger issue about New York: that no one would ever go there without an “ambition.” That to go there “just to be there” is not only unheard of, but rather unhinged (perhaps part of the reason it’s so easy to paint Sam that way). Even as a “la-di-da” artist, it’s unfathomable to arrive in town without some cold, hard “goals.” For, unlike other cities that serve as “artistic havens,” New York isn’t solely about “being an artist” for the mere sake of it. More than any other “bohemia” hotspot, it is a place where you’re not only “supposed to” monetize your art, but where you have to if you want to actually survive without being ejected. And who could possibly want to be exiled from such a “fun” place? Where all worth and value is placed on the money you make (this capitalistic reality being on steroids compared to most other cities). In the alternate version of Scream VI that makes better use of its setting, Ghostface isn’t just out for some petty revenge on any of the remaining characters involved in the “legacy murders.” He’s also got personal beef against all of the pretentious, pseudo-influential fucks roaming the streets trying to “hustle” their so-called talents. Call him Patrick Bateman, but less arbitrary/prone to killing the poorest of the poor (a.k.a. the homeless). This making the randomness of the kills far more rife.

    Alas, some would say Kevin Williamson’s original version was never about such a message—with the core of it cutting to what Randy (Jamie Kennedy) said in the 1996 movie: “It’s the millennium. Motives are incidental.” This adding to the “fear factor” of the slasher behind the mask being anyone, at anytime. And yet, “motives” have remained decidedly not incidental for being in New York. In fact, they’ve remained steadfastly the same: you go there to “become” someone. To “make it.” Rarely, if ever, is being there about “disappearing,” as the Carpenter sisters want to do. For, despite the presence of the huddled masses, NYC is among the most visible places a person could “escape to.” Even so, its “singular” visibility (largely contributed to by everyone taking a picture of themselves on every corner where you could potentially be in the background) doesn’t mean it hasn’t long been recreatable in other locations.

    And sure, filming in more affordable environments meant to be New York is nothing new. In the 80s and 90s, Chicago easily doubled for “Gotham” (literally, in The Dark Knight’s case), even in a film like Escape From New York—with the city itself built right into the title. What’s more, look at what a series such as Friends did to recreate the town in a prophecy-like manner on a Burbank backlot. Friends, for as eye-rolled at as it is in the present, had a crystal ball-like use in foreseeing just how increasingly generic the city would become. This, in large part, thanks to stamping out all traces of the very populations that once made it unique with a little phenomenon called “eugenics of the poor.” And pretty much everyone is poor when they live in New York. The Carpenter sisters included. In effect, it has become easier and easier to bill the city as Anywhere, USA (or, in this instance, Anywhere, Canada) because it has lost all sense of the “personal touches” that once made it stand apart from garden-variety corporate infiltration.

    Even NYU has something of the “corporate effect” on the city it profits from. To that end, the university name “Blackmore” (where Tara attends)—actually Montreal’s McGill University—could very well be a dig at NYU needing to up its Black person “quota.” As for other set design details intended to “serve” New York, the use of a Chock Full o’Nuts ad at a reconstructed subway station reads, “Hipsters Like It. But Drink It Anyway.” This, of course, is meant to lend greater “authenticity” to an ersatz New York, despite the reality that “hipster” is a word that has been rendered so oversaturated that it has become meaningless and irrelevant…almost like New York itself. Another notable “subtlety” that actually has nothing to do with New York is a sign that reads, “Le Domas Financial Group.” This name being too much of a coincidence not to apply to the family moniker in Ready or Not, starring none other than the woman playing the first to be killed: Samara Weaving. But, more to the point, Scream (2022) and Scream VI’s co-directors, Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett also directed Ready or Not. Just as the co-screenwriters of Scream (2022) and Scream VI, Guy Busick and James Vanderbilt, also co-wrote Ready or Not. And yes, James is a member of that illustriously moneyed New York family, the Vanderbilts (no wonder he wrote a script like Ready or Not). So perhaps the transition to NYC as the latest Scream location was his idea.

    Whoever determined the “change-up” environment, one must ask: what was really the purpose of setting Scream VI in New York? Especially if the movie wasn’t going to maximize the erstwhile “uniqueness” of the town to its utmost. After all, a subway scene can be done in any major city (even L.A.). The same goes for filming in darkened streets and alleys. Scream VI proved that much by shooting in Montreal. Where more indelible landmarks, like the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building, the Brooklyn Bridge, the Chrysler Building, etc. (all ideal locations for a stabbing, by the way) can’t be so effortlessly remade “in a pinch” as subway stations and a bodega. To be fair, Scream VI offered a token scene of the Carpenter sisters briefly walking around in “Central Park.” After all, that’s where the movie poster embeds the image of Ghostface’s screaming visage with an overhead shot of the park’s greenery and repositioned lakes. Nonetheless, with a tagline like “New York. New Rules,” one might have been expecting slightly more dependency on the location.

    As only the third Scream movie to take place outside of Woodsboro (with Scream 2 set at the fictional Windsor College in Ohio and Scream 3 set in Los Angeles—used with far more panache and specificity, particularly with the rapey producer angle that eerily mirrored the likes of Harvey Weinstein), the pressure on Scream VI to “really do something” with such a divergent (and non-fictional) location was perhaps too great.

    Admittedly, however, Scream is never really about location. The fact that it began in an Anywhere, USA type of town was meant to highlight that—in addition to providing the chilling idea that “nowhere is safe” (something coronavirus has made good on repeatedly since 2020)—the biggest freaks can so often live outside of major metropolises. But, as for the concept of nowhere being safe, that’s something that’s long been alive and well in NYC—at a zenith in the 1970s, complete with a pamphlet warning tourists, “Welcome to Fear City.” Indeed, the reaper-esque image that appears on the cover of the pamphlet could easily pass for Ghostface himself (call it another botched chance to pay much of any real homage to the city in which Scream VI takes place). And, to be candid, the lily-livered snowflakes who turn out to be Ghostface in Scream VI would have no chance of not getting stabbed themselves in that era that can now be referred to as Pre-Generic New York.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Jenna Ortega Needs Work On Her Lying And Maybe That’s A Good Thing

    Jenna Ortega Needs Work On Her Lying And Maybe That’s A Good Thing

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    “Scream VI” star Jenna Ortega might want to fine-tune her lying and lie-detector skills.

    The actor played “Box of Lies” with “The Tonight Show” host Jimmy Fallon on Thursday, losing two of three rounds.

    Not that anyone was keeping score. The players tried to deceive each other by describing the random contents of their mystery boxes while the other had to determine if it was a lie or the truth.

    We have to question Ortega telling Fallon the exact contents of her Cousin It-themed box, a nod to her “Addams Family”-connected role on the Netflix series “Wednesday.”

    She worried aloud that she was being too on-the-nose in her description to perhaps throw the talk show host off, but Fallon correctly guessed that she was telling the truth.

    Ortega finally won a round on the third try, presenting an alternative scenario to the actual Elvis bobblehead that was performing in a bed of marshmallows. Fallon bought it.

    “I lie,” she said with satisfaction, revealing the Vegas-era King figurine.

    Check out what lie Ortega told the host, and the rest of the game:

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  • Jenna Ortega Continues to Prove Her It-Girl Status Front Row at Saint Laurent

    Jenna Ortega Continues to Prove Her It-Girl Status Front Row at Saint Laurent

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    As models strutted down the Saint Laurent runway for the brand’s Fall 2023 menswear collection, there was one person who stole the show from the front row: Jenna Ortega.

    The “Wednesday” star donned a hooded, draped floor-length dress from the brand’s Spring 2023 line, giving her best smize and, to be quite frank, her best serve.

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    Brooke Frischer

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  • Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

    Golden Globes 2023 Recap: Invite Jennifer Coolidge To Every Awards Show

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    In case you missed it, the less important version of the Oscars was last night! The Golden Globes were three and a half arduous hours of acceptance speeches and praise for what felt like the same three movies and shows. If you didn’t get to see the entire awards ceremony, don’t worry. I sure did. Let me catch you up.


    For starters: Austin Butler. No surprise here, Butler won best Actor in a Drama Motion Picture for Elvis. I mean, with a voice permanently stuck in Elvis’ cadence, you’d hope he gets his recognition.

    Austin Butler

    David Fisher/Shutterstock

    There were several awards given to the cast of Abbott Elementary, but the real award of the night goes to Tyler James Williams’ power pantsuit. Quinta Brunson’s mid-speech shoutout to a front-row Brad Pitt will forever live in my memory.

    Tyler James Williams

    Chris Pizzello/AP/Shutterstock

    We’ve all learned that what makes these shows bearable is inviting Jennifer Coolidge and handing her the mic. After warning the crowd that pronunciation wasn’t her strongsuit, the White Lotus favorite stole the show with quite the tearjerker.

    With equally iconic speeches from herself and creator, Mike White, Coolidge credits White for getting her neighbors to speak to her again and giving her life even though he killed her off in the show. Similarly, Mike White called out the audience for “passing onWhite Lotus originally.

    What a year it was for streaming TV shows. Hopeful nominees like Jenna Ortega (Wednesday), Evan Peters (Dahmer), Selena Gomez (Only Murders in the Building), and Jeremy Allen White (The Bear) were notable names in the crowd. Both Jeremy Allen White and Evan Peters received their first ever Golden Globe.

    Michelle Yeoh

    CAROLINE BREHMAN/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

    Movies like The Fabelman’s, The Banshees of Inisherin, and Everything, Everywhere, All At Once took home multiple awards. My personal favorite speeches came from Michelle Yeoh and Ke Huy Quan, who spoke about second chances in the industry. Yeoh even threatened physical violence when the music turned on to usher her off stage.

    And with the season opener of Awards Season behind us, it’s time to buckle up. We’re just getting started.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • The 16 Best Dressed Celebrities at the Golden Globes 2023

    The 16 Best Dressed Celebrities at the Golden Globes 2023

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    If the 2023 Golden Globes tell us anything about the fashion we’ll be seeing on the red carpet this awards season, we’re in for a treat.

    The first big ceremony of the circuit kicked off with a parade of standout looks. Among our favorites: Sheryl Lee Ralph’s embellished purple Aliétte number, Seth Rogen’s delightfully pink Dior Men suit, Britt Lower’s sculptural Bach Mai gown.

    Catch all the best dressed celebrities from the 2023 Golden Globes below. 

    Britt Lower Bach Mai Golden Globes 2023 Photo by Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Michaela Jae Rodriguez Balmain Golden Globes 2023  Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Michelle Williams Gucci Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Michelle Yeoh Armani Privé Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Nicole Byer Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Margot Robbie Chanel Haute Couture Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Tyler James Williams Amiri Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Hannah Einbinder Carolina Herrera Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Letitia Wright Prada Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Jenna Ortega Gucci Golden Globes 2023  Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Jessica Chastain Oscar de la Renta Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Seth Rogen Dior Men Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Laverne Cox vintage John Galliano Golden Globes 2023 Photo by Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Megan Stalter vintage Versace Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Jenny Slate Rodarte Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images

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    Ana Colón

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  • The 11 Best Beauty Looks From the 2023 Golden Globes

    The 11 Best Beauty Looks From the 2023 Golden Globes

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    On Jan. 10, celebrities from film and television gathered in Los Angeles for the 2023 Golden Globe Awards. But the occasion wasn’t merely an opportunity for actors to receive awards — it was also a chance for them to don some memorable fashion and beauty looks.

    Shoulder-skimming hairstyles were a dominant beauty trend of the night: Jenna Ortega’s shaggy crop is sure to rocket straight to the top of the list of most-requested salon looks for 2023, while Lily James and Angela Bassett both wore vintage-y bobs for a touch of Old Hollywood glam. 

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    Stephanie Saltzman

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  • Jenna Ortega OPENS up about fighting ‘so hard’ for one storyline in Netflix’s Wednesday

    Jenna Ortega OPENS up about fighting ‘so hard’ for one storyline in Netflix’s Wednesday

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    Jenna Ortega is presently making headlines for her amazing performance in Netflix’s supernatural series Wednesday. For now, over two weeks, Wednesday has been streaming successfully on the OTT platform. The American actress lately received backlash for filming a famous dance scene of the show while suffering from COVID-19. Recently, The Fallout actress, in one of her interviews, opened up about a storyline that she was totally against in the series.

    Jenna Ortega opens up on fighting one storyline in Wednesday

    According to Just Jared, Jenna Ortega recently talked about one storyline that she didn’t like to be a part of, on the series. She criticised the scary love triangle that was formed between her character, Tyler Galpin (Hunter Doohan) and Xavier Thorpe (Percy Hynes White). “I told them very early on that I didn’t want her to be in the middle of a love triangle,” she said in a video interview with Etalk. The 20-year-old actress shared she was always against the idea of forming a love triangle. “I’ve always been against the love triangle idea.”

    She added how she found it really hard fighting the love triangle and how her character Wednesday never wanted to be a part of such an affair. “As far as the boys went, I had to accept it – but honestly, I’m going to fight this love triangle thing so hard. Because I don’t think Wednesday would ever be in a love triangle,” she stated.

    Jenna Ortega on talking about the love triangle with scriptwriters

    The Stuck in the Middle actress revealed that she has already spoken about this part with scriptwriters. “I talked to the writers about this and they said ‘don’t worry, don’t worry, it’s not gonna be that.’”

    She elaborated that there might be a chance of things turning really sweet between the relationship. “I think there’s an opportunity there for a really sweet, platonic relationship because I don’t think it’s shown enough, men and women having safe, platonic relationships that don’t become romantic.”

    She reflected that a sibling-type relationship would be a wonderful choice between her and Xavier Thorpe. She disclosed about an honest feeling of her and said that boys are likely the last thing on Wednesday’s mind.

    About Netflix’s Wednesday

    Created by Alfred Gough and Miles Millar, Wednesday, is an American coming-of-age supernatural horror-comedy series based on the character Wednesday Addams from The Addams Family. The show stars Jenna Ortega in the lead, with Catherine Zeta-Jones, Luis Guzmán, Isaac Ordonez, Gwendoline Christie, Riki Lindhome, Jamie McShane, Fred Armisen, and Christina Ricci appearing in supporting roles. The first season with 8-long-episode was released on Netflix on November 23, 2022.

    ALSO READ: Wednesday star Jenna Ortega reveals she had COVID-19 while filming THIS scene from the show

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  • 2022 Winter Fashion Trends That Are Selling Out As We Speak

    2022 Winter Fashion Trends That Are Selling Out As We Speak

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    It’s officially December so it’s time to accept that we are in the thick of the winter season. I tried to put it off for as long as possible, but unfortunately I need a jacket from the moment I step outside.


    I prefer summer clothing because I can never dress appropriately in the cold. Too many layers and I’m suffocating when indoors, too few and I’m hypothermic. Seriously, how do you win?

    It’s even harder for me to debut a fashionable outfit if I’m going to cling to my jacket all night long. Even if I take it off, it’s spending the night wrapped around my waist Soccer Mom style. It’s not like it matters anyway. I’m normally layered in sweaters and long sleeves paired with knit flowy pants – shapeless.

    Sure I’m more comfortable without an ounce of clothing clinging to my body, but after a while I forget how to even dress myself. And that’s why I have been paying very close attention to this 2022’s winter fashion trends. I pore over TikToks and peruse Vogue in my free time so I can catch a trend early and capitalize.

    It’s not just to get ahead of the trend, but to get ahead of the heartbreak when I go to purchase and it says SOLD OUT.

    There’s nothing worse than falling in love with clothing for nothing. For the 2022 fall fashion trends, we saw mini UGGs, Birks, and equestrian style. Winter is going to look a bit different.

    If you want some winter fashion tips before you get all of that Christmas money, we’re in this together. Here’s what’s in my cart:

    Apres-Ski Chic

    Perhaps the most prevalent trend is the Post-Ski-Heading-To-Party look. Think fair isle sweaters and sherpa pullover quarter zips. It’s all about the Aspen vibes.

    We’re seeing the rise of winter accessories paired with cropped puffer jackets. The earmuff has swapped out our favorite pair of over-the-ear headphones, and people are opting for the baclava-style scarf as a style statement.

    Perfect for days where you’re spending more than an hour outdoors, the Apres Ski look is equally warm and stylish. To achieve this look, here are my recs:

    All Lace Everything

    With the popularity of
    Wednesday on Netflix, everyone is emulating Jenna Ortega’s style. A high-neck lace long sleeve paired with leather flare pants and you have yourself a Wednesday-approved outfit.

    The best way to ensure your lace stays in style for years to come is picking the most basic style that you can dress up or down. My fave basic lace pieces are:

    Statement Peacoats

    The peacoat is the ultimate jacket to wear with your nice outfits, but it even looks good with a sweat set. People are sporting all types of peacoats, but the most popular ones seems to be the plaid.

    Make a statement with your peacoat. Fur trimmed, bright colored, patterned. It’s your way to say “the outfit underneath is just as great” (even if it’s not). But, seriously, let your peacoat do the talking for you this year.

    Midi Lengths

    Wearing a sundress in the winter isn’t an option. Believe me, I’ve tried to make it work. If you think a maxi dress is too formal, the midi length will give you both coverage and a little bit of skin. The perfect balance.

    The midi dress is great for your date night, brunch outing, or anything in between. And how lucky are you to be able to pair it with an aforementioned peacoat! Any shoe complements the midi dress – even a sneaker.

    Collared Sweater

    It seems like this year’s biggest sweater trend is the take on the rugby polo. Throw a collar on any knit sweater and I guarantee you it’s both studious and trendy.

    I’m always sitting in a sweater, so this has to be my easiest purchase on this list. When styling your collared sweater, think flare jeans for a bit of contrast and a nod to the ever-popular ‘70’s style.

    Cute Bombers

    If you’re looking for a “going out” jacket this winter that still gives your outfit some flare: enter the bomber jacket. Try out fun statement sleeves, a bold texture like leathers, or sherpas, or even just a classic color. Remember, your jacket may be the only thing people are seeing that day, so make it count!

    A bomber is the Cool Girl jacket this 2022 winter. Hang it off your shoulders for an unbothered queen appearance or shrug it around your elbows to show off your top. It’s slouchy and casual yet gives the right amount of spice to your fit.

    All products featured are independently selected by our editors. Things you buy through our links may earn us a commission.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • ‘Wednesday’ Star Jenna Ortega Spills the Details of Her First Day on Set

    ‘Wednesday’ Star Jenna Ortega Spills the Details of Her First Day on Set

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    First things first: Jenna Ortega is taking the internet by storm after her showstopping performance in Netflix’s new show Wednesday, but there’s more than meets the eye when it comes to this young actress. So, ELLE decided to ask Jenna a bunch of her Firsts! Watch along to discover the first celebrity she’s ever met, her first heartbreak, and even her first impression of The Addams Family when she was just nine years old.

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  • ‘Wednesday’ Fans Are Freaking Out Over How Thing’s Scenes Were Filmed With A Real Actor

    ‘Wednesday’ Fans Are Freaking Out Over How Thing’s Scenes Were Filmed With A Real Actor

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    By Zach Seemayer, ETOnline.com.

    You have to hand it to Netflix! The streaming platform gave fans a behind-the-scenes look at the filming of their new series “Wednesday”, and some fans were shocked to learn how one particular character was brought to life so convincingly.

    Wednesday, Tim Burton’s supernatural drama series, follows the titular Wednesday Addams (Jenna Ortega) during her time at the Nevermore Academy, a school for outcasts and paranormally powerful teenager.

    She is accompanied at the school by Thing — a living, disembodied hand (who is also a friend of the family) that serves as her companion, accomplice and sidekick.

    While many viewers assumed that Thing was a creation of pure CGI magic, it turns out Thing is actually played by a real actor, Victor Dorobantu.

    In some production stills snapped during the filming of the series, Dorobantu can be seen rocking a blue screen body suit covering everything but his hand — which had been made-up with latex to look like it had been severed, allowing the hand-actor to still move his fingers and perform as Thing.

    “Give a big hand to Victor Dorobantu, the incredible actor who plays Thing on ‘Wednesday’,” Netflix captioned the post, which featured a number of different snapshots from different scenes.

    Unsurprisingly, many fans were shocked to learn that Thing was portrayed by a real actor, and wasn’t fully fabricated with computer wizardry.

    ET’s Denny Directo spoke with Dorobantu on the carpet at the premiere of Wednesday Nov. 16, and the actor opened up about the challenges of playing Thing.

    “It’s a really hard process, because you have to show emotion through a simple hand that doesn’t have a voice or subtitles,” Dorobantu explained. “It’s a lot of hard work to show emotion through a hand. I know a lot of people won’t understand, but after they see the season, they will get it.”

    “Wednesday” is streaming now on Netflix.

    MORE FROM ET:

    Jenna Ortega Reveals She Choreographed Iconic ‘Wednesday’ Dance Scene

    ‘Wednesday’: Jenna Ortega and Gwendoline Christie on Shocking Ending

    Why Jenna Ortega Wore a Black Veil to ‘Wednesday’ Premiere

    Fred Armisen on Transforming Into Uncle Fester for ‘Wednesday’

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    Brent Furdyk

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  • Mother of the Misery Chicks: Wednesday Addams As the Forebear for Emily the Strange and Daria

    Mother of the Misery Chicks: Wednesday Addams As the Forebear for Emily the Strange and Daria

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    There’s an episode in season one of Daria called “The Misery Chick.” In it, a former quarterback/golden boy who attended Lawndale High, Tommy Sherman, is welcomed to the school anew so that he might commemorate a goal post named in his honor on the football field (it all has to do with his legendary “technique” of accidentally running into the goal post every time he scored a touchdown while waving at the crowd). As is to be expected, Daria and Jane are less than impressed with his sudden infection of every corner in the school as he skulks around “propositioning or insulting” whoever he comes across.

    When Daria is forced to give him a piece of her mind upon seeing him obstructing access to her locker, Tommy insults her back with the assessment, “You’re one of those misery chicks. Always moping about what a cruel world it is. Making a big deal about it so people won’t notice you’re a loser.” This is the crux of what a “grim girl” a.k.a. “misery chick” must contend with: easily scandalized normies lashing out at the slightest shattering of their worldview. And it was a prototype that Wednesday Addams laid the groundwork for.

    It seems no coincidence that with the advent of grunge in the 90s, the commodification of misery would play into not only the revival of Wednesday through Christina Ricci in The Addams Family and Addams Family Values, but also in the brand-new 90s icons of Daria herself and Emily the Strange. The latter first appeared in her germinal form even before Daria’s on Beavis and Butt-head. That’s right, Emily in her genesis materialized on a skateboard in 1991. From Santa Cruz Skateboards, Emily was eventually sold to San Francisco-based company Cosmic Debris, by which time comics and merchandise starring the Wednesday-esque cartoon were ramping up.

    Even so, Daria Morgendorffer was likely the more recognizable between the two in the late 90s. After all, she had her own animated MTV series complete with non-stop sarcastic lines, often courtesy of Glenn Eichler. Emily’s lines were instead more one-dimensional, the stuff of t-shirts and bumper stickers—including, “I Want You…To Leave Me Alone,” “Strange is not a crime” and “Emily isn’t lazy. She’s just happy doing nothing.” So is Daria, usually—her favorite pastime being to sit on the couch (whether alone or with her only friend, Jane) and watch Sick, Sad World. That is, when she isn’t in her padded room reading. Wednesday, too, prefers solitude, generally repulsed by her parents’ displays of affection and/or annoyed by her brother’s stupidity. This being part of what compels her to torture him on a constant basis.

    Daria’s own sense of schadenfreude is more limited to the verbal. Case in point, in the aforementioned episode, “The Misery Chick,” Jane consoles Daria, “Maybe he won’t live that long.” Daria responds, “Come on, you know wishes don’t come true.” At that moment, the sound of the goal post crashing down on Tommy’s body can be heard offscreen. The “beloved” (though generally hated) quarterback’s death prompts many of the show’s characters to approach Daria for “advice.” Mainly about how to deal with being sad. As Kevin, the current quarterback at Lawndale, puts it, “I figure you think about depressing stuff a lot. You’re that type, you know.” His girlfriend/the head cheerleader, Brittany adds separately, “You’re used to being all gloomy and depressed and thinking about bad stuff.” Her English teacher, Mr. O’Neill, puts it even more bluntly with, “That’s your thing, right? Facing the void.”

    Daria is anything but “flattered” by this sudden form of popularity. For it only feeds into what Tommy had accused her of being. At the same time, Jane points out that what it all really amounts to is that they’re not accustomed to thinking at all, and want advice on how to do so before they can all return to their regularly-scheduled vegetative state.

    Wednesday suffers from a similar plight, but is far less bothered by it than Daria (at least in her Christina Ricci rendering). And Emily, too, would likely be more unbothered than Ms. Morgendorffer, for she is the admitted direct descendant of Wednesday. This much was made clear during a lawsuit that occurred over the character’s origins. For Cosmic Debris was sued by the creators of a 1978 children’s book called Nate the Great Goes Undercover, featuring an Emily-like character named Rosamond. With the same dark hair, dress style and Mary Janes—along with the accompaniment of some cats—Rosamond’s similarity to Emily might have been written off as pure coincidence were it not for the additional presence of a very familiar line next to Emily’s image: “Emily did not look tired or happy. She looked like she always looks. Strange.” The line next to Rosamond was, almost identically, “Rosamond did not look hungry or sleepy. She looked like she always looks. Strange.”

    So it was that Cosmic Debris had to establish that such a “misery chick” trope was long ago established by the likes of Vampira and Wednesday Addams. Maila Nurmi’s Vampira, however, was actually a concoction inspired by Morticia Addams (at that time, still unnamed) in the Charles Addams cartoons showcased in The New Yorker. So, by that logic, the Addams women truly are the progenitors of all so-called misery chicks—with Vampira then effectively creating Elvira, Mistress of the Dark through her channeling of Morticia.

    The most noticeable difference between Morticia and her daughter, however, is that Wednesday is decidedly asexual (except in the Tim Burton world of Wednesday). Whether or not that’s because she’s still “too young” seems irrelevant. For girls start to unveil interest in “crushes” fairly early on. Wednesday, on the other hand, has far more pressing torture methods to explore. Daria is also pretty much avoidant when it comes to sex, preferring to admire Jane’s brother, Trent, from afar. What’s more, the series’ writers didn’t see fit to display Daria so much as even kissing a boy until the finale of season four. Perhaps the universe imploded so much as a result that there was only one more season after that.  

    Asexual or not, Wednesday forged a path for “misery chicks” everywhere to be themselves, even if it came with constant mockery. Especially since most misery chicks are presented as middle-class white girls—but hey, don’t discount that unique form of misery unto itself.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Softcore Gloom: The Gentrification of Wednesday Addams Includes Nods to Charmed, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Gilmore Girls and Harry Potter

    Softcore Gloom: The Gentrification of Wednesday Addams Includes Nods to Charmed, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, Gilmore Girls and Harry Potter

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    Maybe it seems ironic to say that the character of Wednesday Addams has been “gentrified,” considering she’s no longer white. And sure, in Jenna Ortega’s hands (whether that includes Thing or not), Wednesday is perfectly “passable” as a macabre dark mistress. To those who examine the presentation of the character more deeply, however, it’s clear to see that she’s been sanitized for the sake of making her more “likable” (read: watchable) to normies and outcasts alike. Except that the true outcasts of this world will not be encouraged to find that Wednesday’s so-called black heart is as penetrable as the Grinch’s.

    It all starts promisingly enough when Wednesday reveals her lust for exacting revenge to be uncompromising in the first episode, “Wednesday’s Child Is Full of Woe.” This is where we’re introduced to her at Nancy Reagan High—the school’s namesake being a pointed dig at any preppy, pastel-wearing git that Wednesday might be likely to encounter. Except for the fact that, in the present, with the greater commodification of “weird” as normal, one would be less likely to see such 80s-era “queen bees” of a Republican persuasion “running” the school. Nonetheless, one is willing to go along (at first) on this journey helmed by Tim Burton and writers Alfred Gough and Miles Millar (all three being white men serves as something of a “behind-the-scenes” case in point of the aforementioned gentrification).

    Suspending disbelief that “normies” still reign supreme in the era of their disfavor (with normies themselves having adopted the “trends” embodied by “freakdom”), we watch as Wednesday vindicates her brother Pugsley’s (Isaac Ordonez) bullying by the jocks of the water polo team, their ringleader being the fittingly-named Dalton (Max Pemberton). To secure justice for Pugsley, she thusly targets the team at their most vulnerable: half-naked in the pool during practice. Unleashing two bags’ worth of piranhas (as Edith Piaf’s “Non, je ne regrette rien” plays) into the water, we learn afterward that Dalton ends up losing a testicle. But Wednesday maintains, “I did the world a favor. People like Dalton shouldn’t procreate.” For yes, she does hold fast to her “savagery” for all of episode one, complete with her declaration, “I don’t have a phone. I refuse to be a slave to technology.” Her Luddite ways, of course, will be thrown out the window by the eighth and final episode, “A Murder of Woes,” after fellow student and semi-“love” interest, Xavier Thorpe (Percy Hynes White), gives her one as a parting gift at the premature end of the school year.

    Xavier is sort of like the Tristan Dugray (Chad Michael Murray) to townie Tyler Galpin’s (Hunter Doohan) version of Dean Forester (Jared Padalecki). Which brings us to Wednesday’s Rory Gilmore-esque (Alexis Bledel) nature in this edition. Complete with both girls being bookish introverts with writerly aspirations, each starting out at public school (in Rory’s case, Stars Hollow High) before being presented with the opportunity (fine, obligation for Wednesday) to attend a private. Wednesday’s is called Nevermore Academy, not just a private school like Rory’s Chilton, but a private boarding school. Which is where the Hogwarts Academy element comes in. But more on the Harry Potter similarities later. As for those well-versed in poetry ought to detect, “Nevermore” is a direct reference to Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven.”

    Poe being the “mascot,” of sorts, for darkness and lovers of the grim and grotesque, it’s only natural that the writers should see fit to make him a former alumnus of the academy. There’s even a Poe Cup competition in episode two, “Woe Is the Loneliest Number,” during which Wednesday’s blooming friendship with her roommate and would-be werewolf, Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers), is further solidified by Wednesday’s desire to help her beat the long-reigning winner, Bianca Barclay (Joy Sunday). It is she who embodies the school’s proverbial “most popular girl” role—though no one can say for sure if that’s because she’s a siren with a very persuasive voice.

    The character of Bianca harkens back to yet another Netflix series, Chilling Adventures of Sabrina. A show that, who would have predicted, turned out to be much less afraid of full-stop darkness than Wednesday. In it, Sabrina Spellman’s (Kiernan Shipka) own rival at The Academy of Unseen Arts, Prudence Blackwood (Tati Gabrielle), serves as the locks shorn, Black mean girl of the equation. And, like Wednesday and Bianca, Sabrina and Prudence eventually seem to develop a mutual respect for one another after Bianca and Prudence get over the fact that the chosen boy of her affection prefers Sabrina and Wednesday, respectively, to her.

    The magical facet of Wednesday’s Burton-ified persona doesn’t just relate to Chilling Adventures of Sabrina, either. Even more than that, it echoes Charmed. Most overtly via Wednesday’s powers of premonition mirroring Phoebe Halliwell’s (Alyssa Milano). Charmed in general also seems to cast a towering shadow over the series. At one point, Wednesday tells Thing as she touches a book of spells in “Friend or Woe, “Codex Umbarum—that’s Latin for Book of Shadows.” This being the name of the book the Halliwell sisters use as well for their spellcasting. Then there is Rowan Laslow (Calum Ross), a fellow student at Nevermore with the power of telekinesis… just like Phoebe’s oldest sister, Prue (Shannen Doherty). But yes, more obviously connected to Charmed is Wednesday getting premonitions the same way Phoebe does. The latter, too, can’t control when or where the premonitions will arrive, triggered by touching something seemingly arbitrary that leads to a vision that will ultimately offer a bigger clue.

    This is the component that suddenly makes Wednesday a teen detective who actually gives a shit about saving her school from an unknown and sinister antagonist. That Wednesday and Pugsley had to be forced to go to school in general during the first series run of The Addams Family should be an indication, however, that Wednesday would never care enough about any “institution” of learning to stick around and save it. Indeed, there are glimmers of Wednesday’s contempt for the entire construct of school at the beginning, when she notes of Nancy Reagan High, “I’m not sure whose twisted idea it was to put hundreds of adolescents in underfunded schools run by people whose dreams were crushed years ago, but I admire the sadism.”

    Other callbacks to Wednesdays of the past show up in moments both big and small, from Wednesday telling Tyler she used to decapitate her dolls with a guillotine as a child (this being mentioned in the 60s sitcom version of the show) to her particular way of dancing to her having an ancestor who was a witch to her utter contempt for whitewashed pilgrim history just the same as Christina Ricci’s Wednesday in Addams Family Values. And, speaking of, Ricci’s own presence in the show goes largely wasted and underused. Except when she has the gumption to say to Wednesday, “Never lose that, Wednesday. The ability to not let others define you.”

    Alas, Wednesday is gradually being conditioned, molded and defined by norms and conventions as the series goes on. This includes her cringeworthy romance plotlines with both Tyler and Xavier. If anything, Wednesday would be more prone to asexual tendencies, the antithesis of Morticia (Catherine Zeta-Jones). Worse still, they actually have Wednesday kissing a boy already in season one. Goddamn, at least work up to that kind of thing. All “sexual” interactions when it comes to Wednesday Addams, after all, should be strictly Bollywood.

    Even more unnatural is that Tyler, who writes her off as “Grim Reaper Barbie” (that “Barbie” can be associated with Wednesday at all in this series should tell one everything), has the gall to actually take some kind of “ownership” over Wednesday. Doing so when she confesses to him that she is deigning to attend the Rave’n dance (Nevermore’s version of a prom) with Xavier in episode four, “Woe What A Night.” He then bitches out, Dean-style in Gilmore Girls, and berates her, “I mean, call me crazy, Wednesday, but you keep giving me these signals.”

    Of course, the “real” Wednesday would never give any signals to a boy apart from a death stare. Regardless, she lets him continue to whine, “I thought we liked each other, but then you pull something like this and I have no idea where I stand. Am I in the ‘more-than-friend’ zone or just a pawn in some game you’re playing?” Wednesday, genuinely looking guilty, therefore emotional, about what he’s saying, becomes cliché enough to reply, “I’m just dealing with a lot right now.” No outright ignoring or horrification over how some guy would try to make her apologize in any way for her behavior.  

    But herein lies the rub with the true essence of the character. No normie actually has the stomach to watch how a misanthrope would realistically behave without some “light” sugar-coating to it. Some glimmer, through plot device, that all the character really needs is to be “drawn out.” That their defenses are only up because they’re just protecting themselves, but secretly want to be an active participant in “society.”

    Maybe that’s why something about Wednesday feels tantamount to “dark and weird” Billie Eilish going blonde pin-up and then dating an older white male that fronts an “indie” band. In both scenarios, the lack of faith in audiences to want to stick with such a bleak character/persona—an “anti-hero” (and not in the chirpy, Taylor way), if you will—is part of the capitulation to “Disney-fication.” But oh, let’s not forget about the Harry Potter-fication as well. For, not only does the headmaster, Principal Weems (Gwendoline Christie), end up dead, but the “Voldemort” of the narrative also ends up inexplicably brought back to life in the last episode. A dash of Pretty Little Liars even gets thrown in when Wednesday receives a stalker-y text (because, lest one forget, she has an iPhone now) in the vein of “A.” By this juncture, the only on-the-nose “quirky” aspect missing is some background music from Lana Del Rey (“Ultraviolence” would be a good choice).

    Hence, whatever season two holds, it’s sure to provide more of Wednesday “gradually” opening up to people as she feigns cold-bloodedness through her barbing dialogue. Yet, to borrow from a meme that gained traction during the Trump presidency (“I know this isn’t the USA Miley was talking about partying in”), “I know this is isn’t the dark and macabre Wednesday that Christina Ricci’s version would have grown up to be.”

    Angela Chase once told Jordan Catalano, “Admit it… That you have emotions.” That appears to be what Tim Burton, et al. is saying to Wednesday with this “modernized” rendering of her. And yet, to quote another character from a teen drama, Blair Waldorf, “You have to be cold to be queen.” In this instance, queen of misanthropy. Which Wednesday no longer really is, leaving that, ostensibly, to the descendants she inspired in the animated personages of Daria and Emily the Strange.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • All Actresses Who Have Played Wednesday Addams Ranked Worst To Best

    All Actresses Who Have Played Wednesday Addams Ranked Worst To Best

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    Netflix’s Wednesday premiered on November 23, 2022, marking the first live-action Addams family TV adaption since The New Addams Family in 1998. The series is directed by the gothic horror king, Tim Burton, and sees Jenna Ortega take on the titular role of Wednesday Addams. Wednesday is also a unique series in that it is the first Addams family adaption to focus solely on one member of the family. However, it’s no surprise that Wednesday was picked as the main protagonist.

    Wednesday is the one member of the Addams family who, in nearly every interpretation, manages to shine on her own and isn’t too dependent on her family as Gomez, Morticia, and Pugsley tend to be. Additionally, she boldly breaks the mold of what a little girl is expected to be by being independent, unemotional, fierce, and with a morbid sense of humor. Ortega did a masterful job of portraying Wednesday as an “outcast” at odds with both her family and the world. However, Wednesday has been onscreen since 1964, with several actresses portraying the character and each putting their twist on her. Here is every actress who has portrayed, or voiced, Wednesday, ranked worst to best.

    7. Cindy Henderson

    Cindy Henderson as Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family (1973)
    (Taft Broadcasting)

    Cindy Henderson was the second actress to portray Wednesday and the first to lend her voice to the character in an animated series. Henderson voiced Wednesday in the 1973 animated series The Addams Family. However, the show only ran for one season and Henderson never reprised her role as Wednesday afterward. She largely stepped away from the film industry after the 70s. Meanwhile, although The Addams Family cartoon was strange, funny, and ghoulish, it didn’t quite do justice to Wednesday. She wears a pink dress in the series and is portrayed as rather timid, sweet, and happy. Henderson gave her a soft, sweet voice but without adding much personality to it.

    6. Nicole Fugere

    Nicole Fugere as Wednesday Addams in Addams Family Reunion
    (Warner Home Video)

    Nicole Fugere portrayed Wednesday in the 1998 film Addams Family Reunion and in the TV series The New Addams Family, which ran for one season between 1998 – 1999. Fugere was the last live-action Wednesday before Ortega. She made a strong Wednesday with her interest in the macabre and her intense rivalry with her brother, Pugsley (Brody Smith). However, she didn’t quite nab the melancholy and woeful portrayal of Wednesday that Charles Addams initially imbued into the character. Instead, she leaned more to the remorseless, frightening, and sadistic side of Wednesday. While she was masterful at portraying Wednesday’s severe side, she made the character a little flat by not exploring her more sorrowful and sophisticated side.

    5. Chloë Grace Moretz

    Chloe Grace Moretz as Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family (2019)
    (Universal Pictures)

    Chloë Grace Moretz was the third actress to voice an animated Wednesday. Moretz portrayed Wednesday in the 2019 animated film The Addams Family and its sequel, The Addams Family 2. Though the films follow the whole Addams family, they hone in on Wednesday. The first film sees Wednesday befriend a girl from school and consider adding a bit of color to her life. Meanwhile, the sequel explores Wednesday growing older and feeling distant from her family. Moretz does a fantastic job of finding a balance between Wednesday’s sadism and melancholy. She also provides Wednesday with a nice icy tone. The only issue is that Wednesday changes a bit too quickly throughout the films, and sometimes the characteristics that make her Wednesday fade a bit.

    4. Debi Derryberry

    Debi Derryberry Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family (1992)
    (Turner Entertainment)

    Debi Derryberry portrayed Wednesday in the 1992 animated series The Addams Family. The Addams Family was released in the wake of the live-action The Addams Family film in 1991, which reignited interest in the macabre family. It ran for 2 seasons and was an enjoyable and quirky take on the Addams family that included funny one-liners and some slapstick humor. Derryberry is an American voice actress most well known for portraying Wednesday Addams and Jimmy Neutron. Derryberry offered a very unique take on Wednesday. Her Wednesday wasn’t as macabre, dark, or menacing as some other iterations, but Derryberry masterfully kept the emotion out of her voice and gave Wednesday a very mature and sophisticated tone. It certainly meshed well with the idea of Wednesday being an old soul or a “child of woe.”

    3. Lisa Loring

    Lisa Loring as Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family (1964)
    (ABC)

    Lisa Loring was the very first actress to take on the role of Wednesday. She portrayed Wednesday in the 1964 live-action sitcom The Addams Family. Loring was just a tender 6 years old when she took on the role. At such a young age, she wasn’t quite old enough to nab the melancholy aspect of Wednesday. She just couldn’t help looking and sounding adorable and innocent. However, she did manage to pull off Wednesday’s signature death stare and an innocent interest in the macabre. Loring was a very realistic young Wednesday, one who showed traits of morbidity and melancholy that made it clear she wasn’t quite the innocent little girl that she appeared to be on the outside.

    2. Jenna Ortega

    Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams in Wednesday
    (Netflix)

    Jenna Ortega is the most recent actress to play Wednesday. She made her debut on November 23, 2022, when Netflix dropped the first season of Wednesday. Ortega, by far, offers the most layered version of Wednesday yet. From the onset, though, she masterfully portrays the “child of woe” with an expression of perpetual, subtle sadness. She also captures Wednesday’s maturity, sophistication, and brilliance. Where she differs from previous interpretations is in her psychic powers, anti-social personality, humor, and her disdain for her mother. In some ways, these are good changes as they make her transition from a child to an adolescent realistic. At the same time, it slightly tarnishes the legacy of the Addams family, which was that they always perceived themselves as normal and were a close-knit loving family, who taught others to embrace their peculiar, but harmless, differences.

    1. Christina Ricci

    Christina Ricci as Wednesday Addams in Addams Family Values
    (Paramount Pictures)

    While Ortega was a worthy successor of Wednesday, she couldn’t quite top the iconic legacy of Christina Ricci’s take on the character. Ricci took on the role of Wednesday in Barry Sonnenfeld’s 1991 film The Addams Family and its sequel, The Addams Family Values. Ricci shined as Wednesday because she perfectly encompassed everything that Charles Addams had intended her to be. She was dark, yet not overly complex, choosing to shield herself in a constant haze of gloom and sorrow. However, Ricci’s Wednesday, though maintaining her inability to express emotion, still was able to express skill and passion as she tormented her brothers or challenged America’s white-washed Christopher Columbus history. Ricci proved the most masterful take on Wednesday because she could give her a personality and a place in her family, without having to change her fundamental characteristics of morbidity and lack of emotion.

    (featured image: Netflix)

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    Rachel Ulatowski

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  • With A Callback to Addams Family Values, Wednesday Prompts Thanksgiving Revelers to Remember That It’s Still “Pilgrim World”

    With A Callback to Addams Family Values, Wednesday Prompts Thanksgiving Revelers to Remember That It’s Still “Pilgrim World”

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    Being that Wednesday has arrived to Netflix just in time to capture the “Thanksgiving spirit,” it’s clearly no coincidence that, in episode three of the mostly Tim Burton-directed series, screenwriter Kayla Alpert should offer a callback to one of the most memorable plotlines of 1993’s Addams Family Values. In it, Wednesday (Christina Ricci) and Pugsley (Jimmy Workman) are forced to go to a horrendous normie summer camp called Camp Chippewa. Worse than that, Wednesday is enlisted to play the part of Pocahontas in a Thanksgiving-themed play (yes, in the summer) put on by their ghoulishly white-bread camp managers/counselors, Gary (Peter MacNicol) and Becky Granger (Christine Baranski).

    After the Grangers attempt to brainwash Wednesday, Pugsley and a fellow outcast named Joel Glicker (David Krumholtz) with a marathon of Disney movies, Wednesday emerges from the isolated cabin pretending that the “immersion therapy” has worked. Even going so far as to smile at the awaiting crowd of normies, including the odious Amanda Buckman (Mercedes McNab)—the Aryan ideal in every way. But the Grangers should have known better than to believe Wednesday could be so easily cajoled into “normalcy” by visions of The Brady Bunch and Annie. Instead her performance was all designed to lure them into a false sense of security before she changes tack on the script’s dialogue at the last minute.

    So it is that, rather than “sweetly” agreeing to break bread with the pilgrims, Wednesday as “Pocahontas” (who wasn’t even alive anymore during the “first Thanksgiving”) suddenly declines the invitation and declares, “You have taken the land which is rightfully ours. Years from now, my people will be forced to live in mobile homes on reservations, your people will wear cardigans and drink highballs. We will sell our bracelets by the roadsides, you will play golf and enjoy hot hors d’oeuvres. My people will have pain and degradation, your people will have stick shifts.”

    Barring the part about the stick shifts, the monologue has remained fairly timeless. Nonetheless, with the world of Wednesday being set in a Salem-esque town called Jericho featuring a theme park billed as Pilgrim World, it was ripe for throwing more shade at the white forebears who came to the “colonies” to claim the land as their own. What’s more, both Wednesday and Jericho’s “founding father,” Joseph Crackstone (William Houston), appear to be at the center of some ominous prophecy unveiled by Rowan (Calum Ross), a fellow student at Nevermore Academy (the school for outcasts where Wednesday is exiled after unleashing some piranhas on the water polo players at Nancy Reagan High). Wanting to understand more about why a pilgrim would be in the mix, Wednesday asks at the beginning of “Friend or Woe,” “If I’m going to be responsible for Nevermore’s demise, the question is: why am I sharing this apocalypse with a pilgrim?”

    The answer starts to slowly unravel as Wednesday continues her search for Rowan’s murderer while Nevermore gears up for its “Outreach Day”—meaning the students from the school are “allowed” to enter Jericho freely under the pretense of volunteer work that enables them to “commingle” with the town’s normies. Wednesday does her best to get through the torture, complete with being subjected to seeing more signage that urges people to “Visit Pilgrim World: Where History Comes to Life.”

    Initial mention of the theme park is made in episode one, “Wednesday’s Child Is Full of Woe,” when Wednesday encounters a trio of meatheads, including Lucas Walker (Iman Marson), the son of Pilgrim World’s owner. Approaching Wednesday sitting at a table at local coffee shop the Weathervane, Lucas and his henchmen are all dressed in pilgrim garb while on their break from working at one of the only sources of “industry” in town. Mocking them and the park itself, Wednesday ribs, “Why are you three dressed like religious fanatics?” “We’re pilgrims.” She returns, “Po-tay-toh, po-tah-to.” They shove an advertisement her way and announce, “We work at Pilgrim World.” Briefly studying it, Wednesday bites back, “It takes a special kind of stupid to devote an entire theme park to zealots responsible for mass genocide.”

    For yes, like her Christina Ricci foremother playing Wednesday, this is one character who will not suffer the bullshit of such Republican holidays as Thanksgiving. And, fittingly, in Addams Family Values, the “outcasts” were viewed by the Grangers as those that white society has long “othered.” Which is why Becky (truly the perfect name) casts only “the ethnic ones” as Native Americans (further insulting the “misfits” of the camp by appointing a white girl their leader). During her “Native American” casting announcements, Becky uncertainly lists out all of the “ethnic” names, grudgingly stating, “Mordecai, Yang, Esther, um, Consuela, Irwin and, um, I’m still not sure just how to pronounce this…Jam-ahl, Jay-mul? Whatever.”

    The self-superior sentiments of white people like her are crystallized all the more in the dialogue of the so-called play, with Amanda in the part of lead pilgrim Sarah Miller. Trying to make the slaughter of innocent people come across as “palatable,” “Sarah” says things like, “You are civilized as we—except we wear shoes and have last names.”

    Meanwhile in “Friend or Woe,” Wednesday swaps her volunteer assignment at Uriah’s Heap with her roommate, Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers), so that she can infiltrate Pilgrim World and try to find out more about this dastardly “founding father.” Upon entering, it’s plain to see that the “enterprise” is like a monetized version of The Crucible as one man shouts, “Welcome to Pilgrim World! Witch trials every day! Two o’clock, four o’clock!”

    Soon, the outcasts are given an introduction by Arlene (Lisa O’Hare), who greets, “I am Mistress Arlene. A real OC.” The Nevermore kids stare at her, dreading what they seem to know she’s going to tell them regarding what that play on “OG” stands for: original colonist. Wednesday’s nightmares continue when she’s instructed that her assignment will be to pass out samples of fudge in the fudge “shoppe” that inexplicably exists at Pilgrim World. Wednesday not only informs German tourists that fudge didn’t exist in this time period, but also that, “All proceeds go to upholding this pathetic whitewashing of American history.”

    Christina Ricci’s Wednesday would be proud. And yes, Ricci herself has given her blessing to the project by appearing as a teacher at Nevermore named Marilyn Thornhill, who gets introduced to Mayor Noble (Tommie Earl Jenkins) by Principal Weems (Gwendoline Christie) as follows: “In the spirit of outreach, she’s Nevermore’s first normie teacher.” What that will mean for “normie-outcast” relations (this being a foil for white-“other” relations) remains unclear.

    The fact that Wednesday is this time around portrayed by a Mexican-descended actress like Jenna Ortega lends further meaning to her railing against the normies that would support an operation like Pilgrim World (especially its Black owner, Mayor Noble). To boot, her psychic vision of the past unearths the torment of her ancestor, Goody Addams (also played by Ortega), a fellow “outcast” who gets to have an Arthur Miller-esque moment of dialogue when she derides Crackstone (before being sentenced to burning for witchery), “It is you, Joseph Crackstone, that should be tried. We were here before you. Living in harmony with the nature and the native folk. But you have stolen the land. You have slaughtered the innocent. You have robbed us of our peaceful spirit. You are the true monster! All of you!” This extends to those who still presently celebrate Thanksgiving like it’s not one of the most obscene holidays ever foisted upon the American public.

    Wednesday’s reminder of this dark period in Jericho’s (and the U.S.’) history leads her to seethe over the fact that the entire purpose of Outreach Day is centered around the celebration of a new bronze statue in the town square. One that immortalizes Crackstone. So obviously, she enlists Thing to blow it up with the simple tools of some gasoline in the fountain and a match. And, honestly, it doesn’t feel like such a monument’s “erection” could even be possible in the present climate, with long-standing statues of white supremacists already being political battlegrounds, let alone brand-new ones.

    In the wake of the explosion, during which time Wednesday happily plays Vivaldi’s “Winter” (from The Four Seasons concerto) on her cello, Principal Weems automatically accuses Wednesday of the “crime.” By now notorious for being an outcast among the outcasts, Weems chastises her, “You’re a trouble magnet.” Wednesday replies, “If trouble means standing up to lies. Decades of discrimination, centuries of treating outcasts like second-class citizens or worse.”

    The idea of labeling Native Americans as “outcasts” might be a bit of a whitewashing, slightly offensive move unto itself, and yet, was that not how all “minorities” were made out to be by the white European settlers of the 1600s (and beyond)? Wednesday adds to her ardent condemnation of, among other things, Pilgrim World and the white supremacy it promotes, “Why be complicit in this cover-up? Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it.” And maybe that’s why Americans continue to engage in the “act” of Thanksgiving every year, all while wondering how racism can remain be the dominant “tenet” of the nation.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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