Salman Khan’s hosted show Bigg Boss to make one of the biggest entries of the season! According to reports, WWE star The Undertaker is set to join the reality show.
Bigg Boss 19 is already making huge noise, and going by reports, this year’s season could very well become one of the most grand in the show’s history. Each year, the producers introduce a combination of television stars, social media personalities, and occasionally even international celebrities to keep the viewers engaged. But here, they appear to be going all out. As per a report by Bhaskar English, none other than WWE icon The Undertaker has been contacted to join the show. Sources have come forward and stated that they are in talks with him and if everything goes as planned, The Undertaker will be joining the Bigg Boss house in November for roughly 7 to 10 days. But he will not be a contestant but a guest of honor, which is enough to drive fans wild.
Mike Tyson set to join Bigg Boss 19?
Quite interestingly, The Undertaker is not the sole global star in negotiations with the producers. A little while back, it was reported that boxing great Mike Tyson could also join Bigg Boss 19. According to The Times of India, the discussions are well-advanced between Tyson’s team and the producers, and negotiations for his charges are now on. If the agreement is sealed, Mike Tyson will join in October for a week or ten days. His visit, as with that of The Undertaker, will be as a guest but will certainly increase the entertainment value and turn the show into a worldwide trending topic.
Who are the international celebs who joined Bigg Boss?
Bigg Boss has had some international celebs over the years, some of whom have left a strong memory on the viewers. Names such as Sunny Leone, Nora Fatehi, Elli AvrRam, Natasa Stankovic, Claudia Ciesla, Abdu Rozik, Aoora, and Jade Guddi have all featured in the show in the past. Among them, Pamela Anderson had been a guest, and news of her appearance made headlines all over the nation. With this background, the potential to have global legends such as The Undertaker and Mike Tyson in the house is a strategic exercise to gain not only Indian eyeballs but also worldwide eyeballs.
When will Bigg Boss 19 premiere?
Bigg Boss 19 will air on August 24, 2025, on Colors TV and JioCinema. Rumors indicate that this is going to be one of the longest seasons in history, with the finale to occur in February 2026. With all the hype surrounding celebrity guest lists, international visitors, and longer drama, fans are impatiently waiting for the lights to go up.
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Sport has a unique way of capturing the human spirit, and few narratives resonate more strongly than the triumph of the underdog.
Against all odds, teams and athletes rise to the occasion, defying expectations and rewriting history.
It’s these moments that remind fans why they watch, why they believe, and why the thrill of competition never fades.
Today, whether you’re reliving these unforgettable moments or keeping up with the latest shocks in real time, on-the-go betting made simple is within reach thanks to the LiveScore Bet app, giving fans an extra layer of excitement as they follow the action.
Leicester City’s Premier League Miracle // 2015/16
PHOTO: Richard/Unsplash
Perhaps the greatest underdog story in modern football, Leicester City entered the 2015/16 Premier League season at 5000/1 to win the title.
Managed by Claudio Ranieri and powered by Jamie Vardy’s fairytale rise from non-league football, the Foxes defied logic, toppling giants like Manchester City, Arsenal, and Chelsea to lift the trophy. Their improbable run remains the gold standard of sporting miracles.
Buster Douglas Stuns Mike Tyson // 1990
Mike Tyson was the most feared man in boxing—undefeated, ruthless, and seemingly untouchable. Enter James “Buster” Douglas, a 42/1 outsider few gave a chance.
In Tokyo, Douglas not only stood toe-to-toe with Tyson but floored him in the tenth round, producing one of the biggest shocks in sporting history and redefining what was possible in the ring.
Greece Win Euro // 2004
International football has seen its fair share of surprises, but Greece’s triumph at Euro 2004 stands alone—beating Portugal in their own backyard and reducing a fresh-faced Cristiano Ronaldo to tears.
Otto Rehhagel’s side entered the tournament as outsiders, yet their discipline and resilience carried them past giants like France, the Czech Republic, and hosts Portugal. It was a masterclass that stunned the continent.
The Miracle at Medinah // 2012
During the 2012 Ryder Cup at Medinah, the European team staged an improbable comeback against the dominant U.S. squad, who led 10-6 after the first two days.
Needing a stunning finish, Europe won 14½–13½, completing one of golf’s greatest team upsets in history.
New York Giants Win Super Bowl XLII // 2007
The New York Giants entered Super Bowl XLII as clear underdogs against the undefeated New England Patriots.
Thanks to a clutch drive capped by David Tyree’s “helmet catch,” the Giants won 17-14, ending the Patriots’ perfect season bid and delivering one of the greatest shocks in NFL history.
Danny Willett Wins the Masters // 2016
English golfer Danny Willett entered the 2016 Masters at 125/1 pre-tournament. Amid a collapse by the favourite Jordan Spieth on the back nine, Willett stayed composed to win his first major, proving that patience and focus can defy enormous odds.
From Leicester City’s miraculous season to the Miracle at Medinah and from Greece’s Euros win to the Giants stunning the Patriots and Tom Brady, underdog stories remind us why sport is so compelling.
ATLANTA (AP) — YouTuber-turned-cruiserweight boxer Jake Paul and undefeated WBA lightweight champion Gervonta “Tank” Davis have agreed to fight on Nov. 14 at Atlanta’s State Farm Arena.
Paul’s promotional company, Most Valuable Promotions, and Netflix announced the highly unusual matchup Wednesday. Netflix will stream the fight worldwide to its more than 300 million subscribers.
The 30-year-old Davis (30-0-1, 28 KOs), a three-division world champion, would be the first star near his ostensible prime to face Paul (12-1, 7 KOs), the online celebrity who has become one of the world’s highest-paid combat sports athletes despite never fighting an elite boxer.
Netflix and Nakisa Bidarian, Paul’s business partner, did not refer to the fight as an exhibition, but it’s unclear how Georgia officials would allow the matchup to be held as a competitive bout, given the fighters’ dramatic difference in size and experience.
Paul typically weighs more than 200 pounds in the ring, while Davis is a 135-pound champion who has never fought above 140 pounds. The fighters did not announce a contracted weight or the number of rounds in their planned bout.
The fight would mark a return to Netflix for the 28-year-old Paul, whose victory last November over the then-58-year-old Mike Tyson drew an estimated 108 million viewers globally.
Instead of pursuing a cruiserweight belt, Paul recently discussed a fight with two-time heavyweight champion Anthony Joshua — a more logical opponent in terms of size and strength — but shifted his focus to the popular Davis. who has jousted with Paul on social media for years.
Perhaps Paul can look inside his own family for a plan: His older brother, Logan, weighed 189 pounds before fighting Floyd Mayweather at 155 pounds in an eight-round exhibition bout in 2021. Promoters said the spectacle sold more than 1 million pay-per-view buys and made more than $80 million.
Davis has been billed by his promoters as “the modern day Mike Tyson” because of the frequency with which he has won by knockout, but his career and life have been rocky in 2025. He struggled to a shocking draw against Lamont Roach Jr. in his most recent ring outing in March, and he was arrested on a domestic violence charge in Florida last month before the misdemeanor battery case was dropped last week.
Bidarian said Paul and Davis are “favorites of the Gen Z and Gen Alpha audiences,” and that their bout will “determine the true face of boxing’s next generation.”
“This isn’t just a fight, it’s a spectacle that brings together two of the most electrifying figures in boxing today,” Netflix vice president Brandon Riegg said.
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Jake Paul trash-talked New York City during Fanatics Fest on Sunday as he faced off with boxing legend Mike Tyson for the first time since their match was rescheduled.
Thousands packed into the Jacob Javits Center on Aug. 18 to see Tyson and Paul trade verbal barbs ahead of their Nov. 15 fight in Texas. The event even drew notable figures like Logan Paul and Mayor Eric Adams.
Upon the fighters entering either side of the Fanatics Fest Theater stage, journalist Ryan Clark questioned Paul’s motivation to face off with one of the most vicious boxers in the world to which the social media star turned boxer stated, “to make history.”
Mike Tyson enters the stage on the watchful gaze of a Jake Paul sign. Photo by Dean MosesJake Paul says “F*ck New York” after he is greeted by a chorus of boos.Photo by Dean Moses
“Making history is what it is all about for me. I’m a kid from Ohio,” Paul responded to a deafening chorus of boos. The internet star then made things a little too personal with the Big Apple.
“New York, you are just like Mike Tyson, you were good 20 years ago. F*ck you New York, dumb a** Democratic city,” Paul said.
Tyson, the Brookly native, was once considered boxing’s biggest villain — but he got a hero’s welcome at Fanatics Fest, where the hometown crowd cheered and beckoned him to “f*ck Jake up.”
Logan Paul attends the press conference. Photo by Dean MosesMike Tyson was a man of few words at the press conference. Photo by Dean Moses
During the press conference, Tyson was a man of few words, stating that he was feeling much better after having to postpone the fight due to a medical issue. Tyson even made light of the press conference, smiling and giving sarcastic responses like “I was terrified” when Clark questioned if he was really sick or just afraid to face Jake Paul in the ring.
The legendary boxer did state that it was due to his fame that the fight between the men has become a media sensation.
“Who else is he going to fight to make this happen?” Tyson said pointing at the crowd. “You got a Youtuber fighting the greatest fighter that ever lived.”
The press conference with their shoving one another while Tyson laughed in Paul’s face.
Tyson couldn’t help but laugh at Paul during the face off.Photo by Dean MosesPaul became enraged and pushed Tyson for laughing in his face. Photo by Dean MosesMike Tyson and Jake Paul face off for the first time since their match was postponed.Photo by Dean Moses
After a press conference for his upcoming fight with Mike Tyson, Jake Paul posted a video to Instagram showing turbulence in his private jet and claiming that it had been struck by lightning. What do you think?
“Clearly not enough.”
Braden Macgregor, Tree Debarker
Report: Guy Riding Weird Thing
“Is he the shitty brother or the terrible one?”
Taio Gibbs, Fish Sitter
“Lucky. Near-death experiences are great for engagement.”
Relive the most infamous moment in boxing history with these Mike Tyson Cannabis Ear Bites. A play on the infamous Mike Tyson Biting the Ear of Evander Holyfield, these cannabis bites is a collaboration both former heavyweight boxers. Each bite is shaped like an ear, infused with real cannabis and gives a nice little zing in the mouth.
“I’m living my life disciplined now, so I’m going to have to fight disciplined now,” he said.
Tyson, during a 2018 TV interview, said he’d abstained from sex for about five years, apparently because he believed it would make him a better boxer.
“I’m an idiot, you know,” he told Graham Bensinger during the interview back then. “… I just went by what people told me.”
Tyson’s publicist told USA TODAY Sports the boxer was giving up marijuana to comply with rules in the fight with Paul. Marijuana is on the list of banned substances enforced by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, which oversees combat sports in Texas.
Mike Tyson arrives on the red carpet before the 2023 ESPYS at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles on July 12, 2023.
Internet personality turned prizefighter Jake Paul, 27, will box former heavyweight champion Mike Tyson, 57, in a match that will be streamed on Netflix in July. What do you think?
“What does the dignified world of boxing have to gain from featuring some attention-seeking interloper?”
Korben Deraney, Well Surveyor
This Week’s Most Viral News: March 8, 2024
“I don’t need another reason to cancel my Netflix subscription.”
Jake Paul will square up with Mike Tyson in a live-streamed Netflix boxing match this summer. Yes, you read that correctly.
Source: Gilbert Flores/Alexander Tamargo / Getty
According to Variety, the bout is scheduled to take place at the AT&T Stadium in Texas and will be available to Netflix subscribers and people with a password hookup. The last time Paul faced off with an iconic boxer, Floyd Mayweather sent him running like Forest Gump a year ago.
More details about the co-main event and the undercards will be revealed at a later date.
More from Variety:
“This will not be the first time Paul and Tyson have appeared on a boxing card together. Paul fought in the co-main event of the pay-per-view that saw Tyson fight an exhibition match against Roy Jones Jr. in 2020, which was Tyson’s first boxing match since 2006.”
Mike Tyson, 57, is obviously one of the greatest boxers of all time. He only lost 6 fights from 1985 to 2005, when he retired. Jake Paul, 28, started boxing in 2018 and turned pro in 2020. The former content creator has nine wins and one loss under his belt thus far.
Jake’s record is nothing to play with, either, so he might stand a chance. Jake clearly feels froggy, as evidenced by his recreating some of Mike Tyson’s greatest (and most disturbing) media moments:
In case anyone was confused, Unc still got it, though.
Tyson sounds as curious about how Jake will survive the fight as everyone else. However he seems pretty confident about how the fight will inevitably end.
“I’m very much looking forward to stepping into the ring with Jake Paul at the AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas,” Tyson told Netflix in a statement, according to People.
“He’s grown significantly as a boxer over the years, so it will be a lot of fun to see what the will and ambition of a ‘kid’ can do with the experience and aptitude of a GOAT. It’s a full circle moment that will be beyond thrilling to watch; as I started him on his boxing journey on the undercard of my fight with Roy Jones and now I plan to finish him.”
This could go either way, but it would be crazy to be a GOAT and lose a boxing match to a YouTuber-turned-boxer. Who you got your money on?
“I had heard about it before I read about it,” recalled Seth Abraham, the former head of HBO Sports on its demise. He was president of Madison Square Garden at the time. “It was very, very sad to see that brand sort of go away.”
And away it did with all its great pugilistic memories.
HBO’s first big fight was Joe Frazier vs. George Foreman for the heavyweight championship in 1974, followed by classics like Foreman-Muhammad Ali, Ali-Frazier III, Sugar Ray Leonard-Thomas Hearns I and II, Mike Tyson-Buster Douglas, Oscar De La Hoya-Floyd Mayweather Jr., and the Arturo Gatti-Micky Ward trilogy to name a few.
Now Showtime Sports, HBO’s longtime rival in televising the sweet science, took a ten count.
The final “Showtime Championship Boxing” broadcast was Saturday, Dec. 16 featuring WBA “regular” super middleweight champ David Morrell Jr. vs. Sena Agbeko.
Their final pay-per-view bout was the David Benavidez vs. Demetrius Andrade bout on Nov. 25 for the WBA interim super middleweight crown won by Benavidez by sixth-round stoppage.
Showtime has had its own run of memorable events like: Marvelous Marvin Hagler-John “The Beast” Mugabi (debut 1986), Tyson-Donovan Ruddock I and II, Tyson-Evander Holyfield I and II, Pernell Whitaker-Julio Cesar Chavez, Mayweather-Canelo Alvarez, Mayweather-Conor McGregor, Deontay Wilder-Tyson Fury I, and Errol Spence Jr.-Terence Crawford.
HBO and Showtime even partnered up for Lennox Lewis vs. Tyson and Mayweather vs. Manny Pacquiao. Now they are both gone.
Boxing fans have always suffered withdrawals as they’ve seen staples like Gillette’s Cavalcade of Sports, USA Tuesday Night Fights and even the Daily News Golden Gloves tournament become extinct.
Just five months ago in a RingTV.com article, Stephen Espinoza, 12 years the president of Showtime Sports stated proudly:
“This is the healthiest boxing has been since I’ve been president of Showtime Sports. The sport is in a fantastic place.”
So, what happened to boxing that just 50 years ago was still a major draw for sports fans? The glory of the 1976 Olympic boxing team hadn’t come into fruition yet. George Foreman was the heavyweight champion of the world and Muhammad Ali and Joe Fraizer were still fighting.
Roberto Duran was still a force at lightweight and “No Mas” wouldn’t happen until 1980.
Closed circuit TV was booming, but now the sport has become the niche-iest of niche sports.
Boxing has done much of the damage to itself.
Take October’s freak show where the WBC heavyweight champion of the world — Tyson Fury — decides to take a non-title fight against the former UFC heavyweight champ who never had a pro boxing match.
Instead of fighting Anthony Joshua which would have been a mega-fight in the UK, or unifying the titles against WBA, IBF and WBO champ Oleksandr Usyk, (which is now a go for Feb. 17 in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia), he fights Francis Ngannou, gets dropped in the third round of a scheduled 10-rounder and wins a dubious split decision.
Tyson Fury, of England, the WBC and lineal heavyweight champion, fights with former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, of Cameroon, during their boxing match to mark the start of Riyadh Season at Kingdom Arena, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, Sunday, Oct. 29, 2023. (AP Photo/Yazeed Aldhawaihi)
The biggest problem with boxing are the organizations. If you look at the ratings of the four organizations they have regular champs, super champs, interim champs, champs in recess and don’t forget the “Franchise” champ, whatever that is.
There are also too many weight divisions as two more have been recently added.
The WBC created the bridgerweight division for fighters weighing between 190-224 pounds. It was named after a six-year-old (named Bridger) who saved his sister from a stray dog. True.
Earlier this month, the WBA followed up by creating the super cruiserweight division (200-224) minus the canine hook.
Of course, sanctioning fees will be required for all fighting for these prestigious titles.
The WBC also showed their stupidity by not sanctioning undisputed featherweight champ Amanda Serrano’s October successful title defense against Danila Ramos.
The Brooklyn native was not allowed to defend the WBC portion of her title because she decided to fight, just like the men, in a 12-round, three minute championship contest. The women’s championship bouts are 10-rounds and two minutes.
“The WBC has refused to evolve the sport for equality,” she said to ESPN.com. “So, I am relinquishing their title.”
Then there are the “stripped” champs.
Terence Crawford defeated Errol Spence Jr. in July to unify the welterweight division for the first time in the four-belt era. Crawford added Spence’s IBF, WBA and WBC belts to his own WBO title.
Four months later, the IBF stripped Crawford of their strap and anointed Jaron “Boots” Ennis their new title holder, moving him up from his “interim champ” status.
Got it?
By the way, after Ngannou lost to Fury, the WBC, in its wisdom, installed him at No. 10 in the ratings even after a loss and with a record of 0-1.
Go figure.
Boxing can’t get out of its own way even when they have a good thing going.
This two-part series will take a look at why boxing had such a high broadcast kill rate for HBO and Showtime, and if the sport can be rebuilt.
Boxing, thy name is niche.
* * *
Showtime’s bottom line for 2023 should have made any bean counter flush with joy.
“This year the industry had its first million buy event in April with the Tank Davis-Ryan Garcia fight,” points out R. Thomas Umstead, Senior Content Producer, Programming for Multi-Channel News and Broadcasting and Cable. “Hadn’t seen that in a couple of years and that wasn’t even a fight where you would consider it being a million buy fight.
“There was a lot of marketing in there. It brought in a new audience that we hadn’t seen before in younger viewers.”
Boxing has a numbers problem not with the amount of viewers, but with their age, points out Abraham.
“One of the never ending problems [with boxing] is its audience dying,” he declares. “Men 60, 70, 80 and older who grew up with boxing, they’re dying. Young men [it’s] mixed martial arts. That’s what they’re interested in and the WWE.
“Boxing has failed to replace and replenish its audience.”
Showtime had been in the boxing business for 37 years and was highly successful, but then their parent company — Paramount Global — decided to go in another direction with scripted entertainment and not boxing.
“There will still be boxing,” predicts Abraham. “There’s no question that this sport will exist, but it will exist on a microscopic level, on a very small level, and it will continue to lose fans.”
And what of boxing’s long-term outlook?
“Smaller, smaller, smaller, smaller,” warns Abraham, “and one day pickleball will jump over it.”
Hopefully, that’s far off in the future but boxing better come up with new ideas — and fast.
* * *
The death of newspapers and the loss of boxing writers has also damaged the sport. Sadly, Keith Idec of BoxingScene.com and Mike Coppinger of ESPN.com are the only two full-time boxing writers left in the U.S.
Major newspapers have had no dedicated boxing writer for years and that medium helped grow the sport just like another did in the past.
“The first fight I ever heard on the radio was Joe Louis and Max Schmeling when I was seven-years old,” recalls former HBO boxing analyst Larry Merchant, now 92-years old. Besides working for HBO, Merchant covered sports as a columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News and the New York Post. “That made me want to hear other fights that were on the radio.
“I got interested in Henry Armstrong and Sugar Ray Robinson and others. That’s how it works in America because we do have so much competition.”
Pickleball, anyone?
* * *
For Stephen Espinoza, the head of Showtime Sports, it’s a bittersweet time.
“It’s been 12 years since I embarked on this pretty drastic career change going from an entertainment attorney who had never worked at a TV network before to being the head of a sports division responsible for programming and content,” he said, five weeks before the big shutdown. “I’ve never second guessed or doubted that decision once.”
But as the leader comes the tough decisions especially with layoffs during the holidays.
“It was brutal,” said Espinoza. “Anyone who does sports television makes tremendous sacrifice. We just did a pay-per-view (Benavidez-Andrade) on Thanksgiving [weekend] and to have to deliver this kind of news to people who have dedicated themselves personally and professionally to supporting the sport was absolutely brutal.
“We’ve got several employees who are in excess of 30 year employees and a handful who have been here since the very start of Showtime sports in 1986. That was truly the end of an era and the passing of something really important, not just in the sport of boxing but for televised media overall.”
In Part 2 of this series, boxing experts predict the future of the sport.
After 37 years of boxing action, Showtime Sports has signed off for the final time. Paramount Global confirmed in October that the network’s sports operation will be dissolved by the end of the year, with future sports programming falling under the CBS Sports banner. Sports chief Stephen Espinoza and his team will depart at the end of the year.
Now Showtime Boxing’s four decades chronicling the sport, the athletes involved and some of its greatest bouts has been documented in End of an Era, a 38-minute special produced by multi-time Emmy-winner Sam Shouvlin and Emmy-nominated All Access director Nick Manning.
Among those bouts are “Marvelous” Marvin Hagler’s defeat of John “The Beast” Mugabi, both of Mike Tyson‘s epic battles with Razor Ruddock, Evander Holyfield bouts with Buster Douglas and Michael Morrer, Tyson-Holyfield I and II, Pernell Whitaker vs. Julio César Chávez, Diego Corrales’ defeat of José Luis Castillo, Manny Pacquiao vs. Shane Mosley, the 2018 bout between Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury, several Jake Paul fights and Floyd Mayweather Jr.’s bouts against Canelo Álvarez, Marcos Maidana, Manny Pacquiao Conor McGregor and Logan Paul.
End of an Era is available now on the Showtime Sports YouTube Channel. It is also embedded below.
End of an Era gives viewers a backstage pass to some of the greatest bouts in boxing history, including the “Bite Fight” between Mike Tyson and Evander Holyfield, the epic clash between Diego Corrales and Jose Luis Castillo, which many call the greatest fight of all time, and the exhilarating trilogy between Rafael Márquez and Israel Vázquez.
The special is set against the backdrop of the final Showtime pay-per-view event, Benavídez vs. Andrade in November, the special takes viewers behind the scenes with a group that is widely regarded as one of the leading boxing production teams in the world.
Showtime Championship Boxing debuted in March 1986, and was broadcast live on the first Saturday of every month. A sister program, ShoBox: The New Generation, occasionally aired on Friday nights, featuring fights between boxing prospects. It has exited the sport after nearly 2,000 bouts and five years after longtime rival HBO did the same in 2018.
The special chronicles the history of Showtime Boxing through interviews its broadcasters, including International Boxing Hall of Fame play-by-play man Al Bernstein and reporter Jim Gray aa well as legendary ring announcer Jimmy Lennon Jr. Also included are Showtime Boxing host Brian Custer, play-by-play announcer Mauro Ranallo, three-division world champion Abner Mares and Spanish language commentators Alejandro Luna and former world champion Raul Márquez, among others.
Former boxing world champion Mike Tyson will visit a Farmingdale dispensary Saturday to promote his new line of cannabis products.
Tyson has partnered with upstate cultivator Hudson Cannabis and collaborated with licensing firm CarmaHold Co. to launch the cannabis brand Tyson 2.0, which is being sold at several New York dispensaries including Strain Stars at 1815 Broadhollow Road, where he will meet fans and showcase the product line.
“Bringing Tyson 2.0 to my hometown is a dream come true,” Tyson said in a company statement.
Courtesy of Tyson 2.0
The Tyson 2.0 brand features several cannabis products, including flower, pre-rolls, extracts and edibles.
Tyson, who grew up in Brooklyn, joins a growing list of sports stars and celebrities who have entered the cannabis market in recent years including Snoop Dogg, Willie Nelson, Seth Rogen, Tommy Chong, Jay-Z, Carlos Santana and many more.
Tyson has said he’s used cannabis to relax his body and focus his mind that aided him in reaching heights in his boxing career.
“Cannabis has always played an important role in my life,” Tyson said on the Tyson 2.0 website. “Cannabis has changed me for the good both mentally and physically, and I want to share that gift with others who are also seeking relief.”
Tyson is scheduled to be at the Strain Stars dispensary from 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 9.
Castlevania: Nocturne, the sequel series to Konami’s popular animated vampire saga, Castlevania, recaptures the magic that its predecessor brought to the dance back in 2017. A tightly written show with multifaceted heroes and villains, outstanding action sequences, and imaginative monster designs, its meticulously constructed dialogue will have you hanging off of every word. Simply put, Castlevania: Nocturne makes sure that nearly every scene in its eight-episode season is equal parts purposeful, engaging, and beginner-friendly to viewers who may have missed the original series.
A Saucy Romance Game Where You Play As Dracula
The show,which takes place 300 years after Castlevania and loosely adapts the PC Engine classic Castlevania: Rondo of Blood, is set during the height of the French Revolution in 1792, and follows Richter Belmont, a descendant of Trevor Belmont and Sypha Belnades, who, alongside his adoptive sister Maria Renard, fight to stop a tyrannical “Vampire Messiah.” The pair have the cards stacked against them because the big bad, Erzsebeth Báthory—who’s based on the folklore surrounding a real-life historical figure—has allied herself with counter-revolutionary aristocrats and key political figures around the world, and plans on using her ungodly powers to blot out the sun so vampires can terrorize the world at their leisure. Suffice it to say, this generation of vampire hunters has one hell of a task ahead of them and the show doesn’t shy away from showcasing them being out of their depth.
Rather than setting up Maria and Richter to be hyper-capable carbon copies of their predecessors, as popular generation-spanning anime like Naruto are wont to do, the show instead opts to underscore how their inexperience puts them on the backfoot during nearly every deadly encounter in the show. Unlike Sypha and Trevor, who we meet as fully realized adults in the midst of their epic and perilous quest, Maria, Richter, and their newfound allies Annette and Edouard possess a youthful eagerness to rush into the fray headfirst without a tangible plan, and it backfires. After all, Richter is only 19 years old and hasn’t been tasked with saving the world as often as his ancestors have, so it’s to be expected that he’ll have some growing pains as a hero.
Nocturne’s greatest strength is how it allows its heroes to be vulnerable. While Trevor’s sardonic swagger in Castlevania comes as a result of him weathering years of failure and pyrrhic victories, Richter’s haughtiness derives from his fear that he won’t be strong enough to save the ones he loves. Basically, Richter is the embodiment of the Mike Tyson quote, “Everybody has a plan until they get punched in the mouth.” His metaphorical sucker punch comes in the form of Olrox, a charismatic Aztec vampire who murdered his mother when he was a boy, traumatizing him to the point that he can no longer use magic and freezes up in fear or flees whenever Olrox makes a sudden appearance.
Image: Netflix
Richter’s cowardice never comes off as grating, but instead humanizes him by making him a fallible hero who still has a lot to learn before he can face Erzsebeth or Olrox. Personally, I found it beautiful that Nocturne’s hard-knocks coming-of-age tale for Richter let him cry on multiple occasions as he worked through his trauma, something anime protagonists are rarely allowed to do. Rest assured, Richter inevitably comes out the other end as the hero that fans of the Castlevania games have come to love, and he does so in a gratifying way that pays off toward the midway point of the season.
Nocturne isn’t afraid of letting its side characters bask in the limelight, too
Much like how Castlevania transformed Isaac the forge master into the most compelling character in the show, so too does Nocturne with Annette and Edouard, newfound allies of Richter and Maria’s. While the French Revolution provides set dressing for Richter and Maria’s fight against Erzsebeth and her cronies, the show also weaves in the Haitian Revolution, letting its Black characters partake and triumph in their own revolutionary struggle.
In episode three, Freedom Is Sweeter, written by Zodwa Nyoni, we learn that Annetteescaped from slavery in Haiti, where the slave trade was under the vampiric rule of Erzsebeth and her French regime, and partook in the Haitian Revolution using Creole incantations to aid Saint-Domingue ’s freedom fighters. It’s in this episode that we also discover how she and Edouard, a talented opera singer who initially felt at odds with the show’s grimdark premise, used his status as a commodity and a free man to aid Annette in her escape from a slave plantation after the brutal death of her mother. This episode is a clear standout this season, brilliantly meshing real-life events with Castlevania’s fantastical lore. Nocturne does something rare and extraordinary by making these Black characters, who in the hands of another anime might have been fridged to motivate its Caucasian heroes, the emotional lifeblood of the series, even as it establishes the pair as effective narrative foils to Maria and Richter.
Castlevania: Nocturne’s first season lays the groundwork for a series that has the potential to eclipse the greatness of its predecessor while raising the bar for video game adaptations in the process.
Ric Flair has put himself in some pretty precarious situations in the ring, but the wrestling legend thought he was in danger when smoking marijuana one time.
Flair who has a marijuana line under the boxer’s ‘Tyson 2.0’ brand, said ‘I actually thought I died’ during the ordeal – and compared it to the medically induced coma he was placed in during 2017.
‘All of a sudden… it finally hit three o’clock in the morning and I kinda sat up in blur and went, ‘I’m back,’ the 74-year-old wrestler said on Theo Von’s ‘This Past Weekend’ podcast.
‘I called someone on the phone and said, ‘is this really you?’ That’s how screwed up I got.’
Ric Flair recounted the hilarious story while speaking with comedian Theo Von
Mike Tyson and Ric Flair have been in the marijuana business together since last year
The boxer’s ‘Tyson 2.0’ marijuana company is said to be ‘profitable and in a strong position’
The wrestler said that people weren’t talking back to…
A Death Stranding player just discovered that if you don’t put up enough of a fight in its climactic boss battle, antagonist Higgs will pull a Mike Tyson and bite your character’s ear off. It’s not just an attack animation, either. Once bitten, a good chunk of Sam’s ear is gone for good.
The Week In Games: What’s Releasing Beyond Pikmin 4
On Sunday, Twitter user naven0m uploaded a Death Stranding clip of themself uncovering the hidden gameplay detail in its final climatic boss fight. In the clip, protagonist Sam Porter Bridges (Norman Reedus) is facing villain Higgs Monaghan (Troy Baker) in a knock-down, drag-out battle of fisticuffs. The sequence even has Tekken-like health bars that appear above the characters, making the walking simulator’s climactic face-off feel like something out of a genuine fighting game. It’s kinda wild, but then, it is a Kojima game, after all.
However, if you refuse to jab Higgs in his very punchable face while blocking his attacks, he’ll eventually guard-break Bridges and chomp the tip of his right ear clean off. The presentation and horrifying energy of it all is weirdly reminiscent of what clickers often do to Joel, also played by Troy Baker, when you get killed in The Last Of Us.
In a follow-up post, naven0m posted screenshots of Bridges’ ear post-boss fight, revealing that a sizable chunk of it remains missing. You can check out the gnarly clip below.
According to GamesRadar, the event will only be triggered by players blocking every one of Higgs’ blows and never countering him when prompted. Most players would never stumble upon this, since the game clearly expects you to fight back, and since Higgs is such a dastardly scamp who can’t keep getting away with more demonic acts of terrorism.
Last December, director Hideo Kojima revealed his next project was a direct sequel to Death Stranding titled Death Stranding 2, and he showcased a typically bizarre trailer featuring a noticeably older Bridges, with Léa Seydoux also reprising her role as Fragile. While the game doesn’t have a release date, it’ll be neat to discover if there’s a unique Bridges character model reflecting the possible outcome that players got Sam’s ear noshed off by Higgs.
New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman suggested why former President Donald Trump may appear on the podcast of former boxer Mike Tyson.
Haberman, talking to CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Friday, noted how Trump and Tyson are longtime associates with Trump “actually an advisor of sorts” to the athlete in the 1980s, who became one of his staunchest defenders when the boxer was convicted of rape.
That Trump is, per Politico, reportedly in talks for an appearance on “Hotboxin’ With Mike Tyson” is “not entirely surprising,” Haberman said in a video shared online by Mediaite.
It also served as “a reminder that Trump has this unique niche that he tries to appeal to just in terms of cultural aspects of the country,” she added.
“He has been a public figure, he has been a celebrity. He has also been sort of a sports figure. And he has been, or at least, connected to the world of wrestling, connected to the world of boxing,” she continued.
Trump’s campaign has “long seen that as an advantage that it can press, especially as it tries to appeal to men,” Haberman said, acknowledging there was “a potential recipe for things getting a little complicated in an interview, but we’ll see.”
Mike Tyson’s biopic project is getting delayed due to the ongoing health issues to Hollywood star Jamie Foxx. Reportedly, the actor has been the top preference to play Tyson in the biographical television series which would be executive produced by Tyson, Foxx, Antoine Fuqua and Martin Scorsese. Recently, in an episode of “Valuetainment” podcast, host Patrick Bet-David discussed Jamie’s health with Tyson.
Mike Tyson talks about Jamie Foxx’s health
During the discussion, Mike hinted that Jamie was supposed to play his character in his biopic. He said, “Well, it was a possibility. I don’t know what’s going to happen now. But, you know, it’s a strong possibility. Because, you know, Jamie’s closer to my age, so in order to do him, they were going to do what they did with [the movie] Benjamin Button. They were going to make him look younger.”
Mike also said that he has no idea about Jamie’s current health situation and also talked about life’s unpredictability with the host. He said, “Hey listen, we can’t anticipate our next breath. We don’t know when we’re going to die. After we leave this, bad stuff could happen.” Furthermore, talking about Jamie’s health update, Mike said, “If we don’t know by now, they don’t want us to know.”
What happened to Jamie Foxx?
On April 11, the Academy Award-winning actor experienced a mysterious medical emergency. The news was shared by his daughter Corinne on Instagram on April 12 that her father had “experienced a medical complication” the day before. She also wrote, “We know how beloved he is and appreciate your prayers. The family asks for privacy during this time.”
The Ray actor was in Atlanta filming the Netflix film Back in Action, which also stars Cameron Diaz and Glenn Close. The movie is helmed by Foxx’s Horrible Bosses director Seth Gordon.
I watched The Super Mario Bros Movie during its opening week with the intent of writing this Easter eggs and references article, only to realize that the movie is nothing but Easter Eggs and references. A thorough roundup would be indistinguishable from a wholesale rundown of the entire movie.
The plot for The Super Mario Bros Movie is paper-thin. Narratively, the characters are static bordering on inert; there’s no arc or growth to any of them. It’s just one action set piece to the next; your enjoyment is intimately tied to your pre-existing knowledge of these characters and your ability to recognize a parade of homages to Nintendo history.
It is, in other words, narratively identical to a Mario 2D platformer. Critics are complaining about the lack of characterization and depth in the Mario movie. But to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, there is no “there” there. We needn’t be so harsh.
Take that away, and we’re left with a reel of Easter eggs, which is exactly how this movie was intended. Here are 20 of the best ones that we spotted. Which one was your favorite?