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  • Bobby J. Brown, The Wire Actor, Dead at 62

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    Bobby J. Brown, who played Officer Bobby Brown in the last two seasons of The Wire, died at the age of 62 after injuries from a barn fire in Maryland, TMZ reports. His daughter confirmed that he died from smoke inhalation on February 24. The Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner ruled his death an accident. He was reportedly trying to jump-start a vehicle when a fire broke out; his wife alleged sufferd burns trying to help him. ​”Bobby J. Brown was a formidable talent and a true professional who brought a rare intensity and authenticity to the screen,” his agent Albert Bramante said in a statement. “From his early days as a champion in the ring to his standout performances in projects like The Wire, Bobby was a ‘character actor’ in the truest sense — someone who elevated every scene he was in. We were proud to represent him and will miss his presence and his passion for the craft deeply.”

    “My dad was an amazing human being,” his daughter Reina told People. “He was super awesome. He was a pillar in the community, and he’s going to be missed by a lot of people.”

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    Alejandra Gularte

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  • ‘The Wire’ actor Bobby J. Brown dies in tragic barn fire accident at age 62

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    “The Wire” star Bobby J. Brown has died, Fox News Digital can confirm. He was 62.

    Brown’s talent agent, Dr. Albert Bramante, shared a statement following his client’s sudden passing.

    “Bobby J. Brown was a uniquely talented actor and a man of great character. From his deep roots as a Golden Gloves champion to his impactful performances on screen, Bobby brought an unmistakable authenticity to everything he did,” the statement began.

    Bobby J. Brown and Wendell Pierce on “The Wire.” (Alamy)

    “He was a dedicated professional and a true joy to represent. Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and loved ones during this incredibly difficult time,” Bramante’s statement concluded.

    A press release obtained by Fox News Digital stated that firefighters reported a barn fire with entrapment just after 10 PM on Feb. 26. 

    “Firefighters arrived to find a 50-by-100-foot barn nearly fully engulfed in fire. Family members on scene confirmed that one individual was still inside the structure. After the fire was brought under control, firefighters located a deceased male victim within the barn,” the St. Mary’s County press release stated.

    Fire

    Firefighters responded to a fire in St. Mary’s County, Maryland on Feb. 26. (ST. MARY’S COUNTY)

    The press release stated that the individual was attempting to jump-start a vehicle in the barn. St. Mary’s County stated that the victim contacted his wife, requesting a fire extinguisher, but by the time she came outside, the fire had engulfed the barn. 

    The victim’s wife suffered burns to her hands and was transferred to the hospital. The press release did not list Brown by name. 

    According to TMZ, Brown died on Tuesday in Maryland after being caught in a barn fire. Brown’s daughter told the outlet that her father died from smoke inhalation.

    “Our thoughts and prayers are with his family and loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.”

    — Dr. Albert Bramante, talent manager

    The Maryland Office of the Chief Medical Examiner told TMZ that Brown’s cause of death was ruled “diffuse thermal injury and smoke inhalation.” The cause of death was also ruled an accident, according to the outlet.

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    TMZ reported that Brown entered the barn to jump-start a vehicle. He called a family member, requesting a fire extinguisher, but by the time they arrived, the barn was up in flames, according to the outlet. TMZ shared that Brown’s wife suffered “severe burns” trying to save him.

    Bobby J Brown

    Bobby J. Brown in “We Own This City.” (Paul Schiraldi /©HBO / Courtesy Everett Collection)

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    Brown’s breakout role was Officer Bobby Brown on “The Wire.” He also appeared in “Law & Order: SVU” and “We Own This City.”

    The star is survived by his wife and two daughters.

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  • ‘Traitors’ Star Colton Underwood Finally Faces His Dark ‘Bachelor’ Past

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    What I would say is, unfortunately, a lot of closeted men end their life by suicide. That easily could have been me. I could have been part of that statistic. Instead, I’m here. I will have a lot of sadness and shame about things that I did in my past, and I will have to live with that for the rest of my life. That is on me 100%.

    Even going through this six years later, [The Traitors] was my favorite show I’ve ever done. I didn’t really expect people to draw a line from how I showed up and played Traitors to my past, but that happened. Unfortunately, now I have to relive what happened six years ago with my husband and with my kid, as a father. As somebody who’s changed so much, to see things pop up on social media and to hear certain things—it’s challenging, right? That was such a traumatic time for a lot of people. It’s something I’m gonna always sort of have to own moving forward.

    There are some people in the world—and online—that will simply never forgive you. Why do you keep putting yourself on TV?

    It’s a great question. “Why do you keep putting yourself through this, dude? Like, go away if you don’t want it.” (Laughs.) I love the entertainment industry. I love representing same sex couples who want to have kids, hosting Daddyhood [Underwood’s podcast]. Having some of my gay friends reach out and be like, “It was so cool to watch you grab Rob’s backpack [on The Traitors]. Like, that representation on television was epic to see from a gay man. Oftentimes we have to shrink ourselves when we enter these masculine spaces, and the fact that you like put your chest out was really cool to see.”

    What gets me to show up every single day is the lives that I’ve saved. I say that because I’ve received messages from people across not only our country, but like, because of Netflix, the world, saying, “I didn’t see a path out. I didn’t know what my life was, but watching your story and watching what you went through helped me come out and saved my life.” Those are the ones that I hold onto dearly and that motivate me, that make my skin a little thicker.

    But don’t get me wrong, I still have days where I just want to go away. (Laughs.) I wanna live on a farm. I never want to be seen. I texted my team after the reunion—I was like, “I need to go away and get off camera.”

    Okay, last question: the banquet outfit. What were you thinking?

    I stand by it.

    Really? Defend it.

    Alan Cumming went on Watch What Happens Live and called it “castle couture.” Like, if I have Alan Cumming’s stamp of approval…. By the time of that banquet, the dog pile was already happening on social media. I was an easy target, low-hanging fruit. We did receive a mood board from production of what that night was gonna be. And if you saw the mood board, you’d be like, “Okay, he showed up. He delivered. He is the mood board.” You’re in Scotland playing Traitors, and it is one of the gayest shows on television. I wanna lean into it.

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Traitors UK Has Landed on Peacock

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    Photo: Mike Marsland/WireImage

    We’re just hours away from the fourth season finale of The Traitors dropping, but fans of the franchise fearful of suffering withdrawal pains, fret not: Peacock has more traitorous content ready to go. In addition to a reunion special dropping tonight, the streamer is also gifting us Yanks season four of Traitors UK, which wrapped its run on the BBC last month with record ratings. All 12 episodes of the Claudia Winkleman-hosted version of the Studio Lambert format will drop on Peacock early Thursday morning (5 a.m. ET, to be precise), allowing faithful viewers to binge-watch the whole season right after the U.S. edition wraps up (or right before if you’ve got Thursday off and nothing else to do).

    Unlike Peacock’s take on the format, the main version of Traitors UK features a cast of non-celebrities playing the game rather than a collection of reality stars and other pop culture notables. (The BBC did launch a spin-off with celebrities last fall, and that version has been streaming on Peacock since November.) In addition, NBC has already announced its own all-civilians take on Traitors that’s expected to air on the network (and stream on Peacock) this fall. Now all we need is for Alan Cumming and Winkleman to cross-over on to each other’s versions of the show, or at least swap costume designers for an episode.

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    Josef Adalian

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  • ‘Father Knows Best’ star Lauren Chapin dead at 80 following long 5-year cancer battle

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    Lauren Chapin, best known for her role as Kathy “Kitten” Anderson on the classic television series “Father Knows Best,” has died. She was 80. 

    On Tuesday, Chapin’s son, Matthew, announced the news via Facebook.

    “After a long hard-fought battle over the past 5 years, the time has come. My mother Lauren Chapin passed away from her battle with cancer tonight,” Matthew wrote, tagging a fan page for his mother. “I’m at a complete loss for words right now. Please keep my sister and family in your thoughts and prayers as we go through this incredibly tough time.”

    A tribute was posted on her website, describing Chapin as “the bright-eyed child actress who captured America’s heart.”

    Lauren Chapin, best known for her role in “Father Knows Best,” has died. She was 80.  (The Everett Collection)

    “From 1954 to 1960, Lauren brought warmth, innocence, humor, and authenticity to millions of homes,” the tribute read. “As the youngest member of the Anderson family, her expressive face, honest curiosity, and unforgettable delivery made ‘Kitten’ one of television’s most cherished child characters. She represented the sweetness and sincerity of a generation and helped define the golden age of family television.”

    “Behind the scenes, Lauren’s life was marked by both triumph and hardship,” the post continued. “Like many child stars, she faced personal struggles after early fame. Yet her later years reflected remarkable resilience. She embraced faith, shared her testimony openly, and dedicated herself to helping others overcome addiction and adversity. Through speaking engagements, ministry work, and outreach, she turned her experiences into hope for others.”

    ‘FATHER KNOWS BEST’ STAR BILLY GRAY REFLECTS ON CHILD STARDOM, 1962 POT BUST: ‘I DON’T HAVE TIME FOR REGRETS’

    Lauren Chapin

    Chapin is seen with her “Father Knows Best” co-star, Robert Young.  (The Everett Collection)

    Chapin leaves behind a legacy of “timeless television memories, courage through life’s challenges, a spirit of redemption and faith, and a childhood character who will forever live in America’s heart,” the tribute concluded. 

    Chapin landed her role on “Father Knows Best” when she was 9 years old. The beloved sitcom ran for six seasons, from 1954 through 1960. The cast reunited for various TV specials in 1977.

    Born in Los Angeles on May 23, 1945, Chapin came from a family of entertainers. Her older brothers, Billy Chapin and Michael Chapin, were both child actors as well. 

    Chapin faced many personal hurdles as a child. 

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    By age 11, she said she had a “manic depressive personality.”

    Lauren chapin

    The beloved sitcom ran for six seasons, from 1954 through 1960. (NBCU Photo Bank)

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    “It was very difficult to understand how Kathy Anderson could be loved and protected and Lauren Chapin lived a whole different kind of life,” she said during a 1989 appearance on “Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee.” “I didn’t understand how God could let me suffer.”

    According to her website, Chapin was awarded “Honorable Mayor” of three cities in the states of Oklahoma, Texas and Florida for her numerous charity activities. 

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    In the past six years, Chapin raised well over $2 million for underprivileged and abused children through her public appearances and fundraising efforts.

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    'Grey's Anatomy' star Eric Dane dead at 53

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  • Commentary: For Sacramento State, visions of football glory clouded in fuzzy math

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    The USC football schedule this year starts with a vacancy. The Trojans plan to welcome an opponent to be determined to the Coliseum on Aug. 29, and Sacramento State would love to be that opponent.

    “We’re trying,” Sacramento State President Luke Wood said Monday.

    Wood announced last week that the Hornets had jumped into the Football Bowl Subdivision, the upper tier of NCAA Division I football, and what more glamorous way to make an FBS debut than against the most storied team in California?

    Wood called the Hornets’ move to join the Mid-American Conference in football “a calculated business decision that would provide our university with the greatest possible exposure.”

    However, the $975 million he trumpeted in economic impact over the next five years appears unsupported by a study from a consulting firm Wood thanked publicly, primarily because of its reliance on a metric dismissed by experts as flawed and outdated for more than a decade.

    The metric is called advertising value equivalency (AVE), cited by Collegiate Consulting in its study as the basis for the lion’s share of the claimed economic impact: $600 million over five years from broadcast exposure. Sacramento State provided The Times with a copy of the study.

    In a post on social media late Monday, Collegiate Consulting explained the figure Wood had instead announced for economic impact from broadcast exposure: $675 million over five years, citing what the firm said was the MAC average annual valuation of $135 million.

    “You’re trying to put a dollar value on something you don’t easily have a price tag on,” said Holy Cross economics professor Victor Matheson, past president of the North American Assn. of Sports Economists.

    Collegiate Consulting did not respond to messages seeking comment.

    The premise of AVE is simple: An advertisement has a cost, so the value of publicity in any form — say, dozens of references to Sacramento State in a three-hour ESPN game — can be calculated in relation to the cost of an ad.

    “The industry moved away from AVE a long time ago,” said Sal Della Monica, executive vice president of strategic integration and marketing at MikeWorldWide, an international public relations firm. “It’s absolutely outdated, and not a real indicator of economic value.”

    If someone sees Sacramento State on TV, that’s exposure. If someone then buys a ticket to a Sacramento State game, or enrolls at Sacramento State, that’s economic impact.

    “We expect the exposure would generate revenue through corporate partners and ticket sales and merchandise, all those types of things,” Sacramento State athletic director Mark Orr said, “from national audiences seeing Sacramento State on their television.”

    Said Matheson: “They’re conflating appearing on TV and losing 52-7 to Bowling Green with a targeted ad designed to actually bring people to Sacramento to spend money and spend tuition dollars. They are conflating just being on TV with actual advertising.”

    Della Monica said today’s sophisticated metrics allow for economic impact to be traced to its source rather than broadly estimated in advance — for instance, if you bought a ticket based on a TV promotion that required a click to redeem.

    Isn’t a televised football game in itself a three-hour advertisement for the school? Yes, but …

    “We saw you on ESPN, and now we want to sponsor you?” Della Monica said. “That isn’t how sports sponsorships work.”

    Even Russell Wright, the founder of Collegiate Consulting, acknowledged to CBS Sports that economic impact estimates by themselves are of limited use.

    “Unless there’s something actionable after the fact it’s not really economic impact, it’s more economic valuation,” Wright said.

    Wright told CBS that Wood’s $675 million estimate of broadcast-related economic impact was “not anywhere in our report.” (It’s not.) Wright also said Wood’s $975 million estimate of total economic impact mischaracterized the study.

    Wood said he simply took the one-year estimate in the study and multiplied it to account for Sacramento State’s five-year agreement with the MAC. He said he was baffled by Wright’s comment.

    “I wonder how that was asked of him,” Wood said. “Over five years is exactly what I said.

    “I’m a professor. I’ve done economic impact studies. Multiplying that number by five years is perfectly appropriate.”

    That adjective would not apply to a public skirmish between the president of the university and the consultant that conducted the study commissioned by the university.

    Cal State campuses in Long Beach, Fullerton and Northridge dropped football to save money decades ago, and today each campus enrolls more students than Sacramento does. For Wood and Orr, the football upgrade in Sacramento nonetheless represents a play to increase enrollment — particularly from out-of-state students that pay higher tuition — and engage a region with almost 3 million residents and limited sports options.

    “It’s us and the Kings,” Wood said.

    UC Riverside, in a larger metropolitan area, also dropped football long ago but jumped into Division I and the Big West Conference for its sports in 2000. The school billed itself as the Inland Empire’s Division I home team, but community and donor support languished, and the basketball teams still play in a student-funded gym designed as a student recreation center.

    Wood envisions crowds of 20,000 in a new or renovated stadium, at a cost estimated in the study from $171 million to $300 million. Sponsorship revenue is up 300 percent, Orr said – to $1.7 million.

    Orr said the models are Boise State and James Madison, not USC.

    What the Hornets want from USC is not a rivalry, just the $1 million or so the school would pay Sacramento State for what the Trojans would assume would be an easy win. The Hornets’ budget cannot work without those kinds of games, year in and year out.

    There is a narrow but viable lane to success here, but the chances decrease as talk of profits and losses outpaces talk of wins and losses.

    Sacramento State is running a deficit. The athletic department is paying $23 million over five years to move its football team into the MAC and paying travel costs for league opponents to play in Sacramento. Student fees and university funds subsidize intercollegiate sports; those two sources comprised 87% of Sacramento State’s 2024 athletic budget, according to Knight Center data. (The average figure for MAC schools: 66%.)

    The skeptics only get louder with billion-dollar claims of economic impact.

    “My usual rule of thumb is, move the decimal point one place to the left,” Matheson said. “But, man, when it comes to this advertising stuff, probably move it two or three.”

    The way Wood sees it, it might be an audacious vision, but why not? Nowhere else in America can you find a media market so large with neither an NFL nor an FBS team.

    “If we were in any other part of the country, what we are doing would not work,” Wood said.

    In this one? Check back in five years. In the meantime, they’ll fight on, particularly for that USC check.

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    Bill Shaikin

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  • The Voice Commentator Druski Teams Up With NBA All Stars for Season 29

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    The Voice: Battle of Champions is poised to be one of the most legendary seasons yet.

    Us Weekly can exclusively reveal that season 29 of NBC’s singing competition series will feature commentary from social media star and comedian Druski, in addition to multiple NBA legends including former Los Angeles Lakers star Derek Fisher.

    “We’re your new coaches,” Druski, 31, shares in the must-see announcement. “Whoa, whoa. We’re actually not your new coaches. We’re just doing color commentary. My bad, bro. I get mixed up with the words. That’s my fault.”

    All jokes aside, Druski will be joined by a string of NBA All Stars throughout the season, to align with Legendary February at NBC.


    Related: ‘The Voice’ Season 29 Coaches Revealed: Find Out Who’s Returning

    The Voice quickly became a success after it debuted on NBC in 2011, with Carson Daly as host and a group of successful coaches ready to find the next superstar. Kicking off the first season, Blake Shelton, Christina Aguilera, CeeLo Green and Adam Levine filled the coaches’ chairs, each bringing their different expertise to the […]

    In the past month alone, NBC has aired Super Bowl LX, the NBA All-Star Game and the 2026 Winter Olympics. Meanwhile, NBA on NBC brings prime time NBA games to NBC and Peacock every Sunday night from February 1 through April 5.

    “This ultra competitive season needs some expert analysts,” Druski shares in the clip. “And with me? NBA legend, the one and only Derek Fisher. We’re breaking down the competition from a whole new angle. We’ll be here throughout the blinds tracking every triple turn. This is going to be fun.”

    Starting Monday night, coaches John Legend, Kelly Clarkson and Adam Levine will turn their red chairs if they like what they hear during the legendary Blind Auditions.

    If multiple coaches turn, the singing contestant gets to pick which team they want to be on.

    As an added twist to season 29, Battle of Champions will feature an all-new Triple Turn Competition and Super Steal.

    “This season, triple turns matter,” Fisher, 51, says when describing the moment when all three coaches turn their red chairs and fight for a contestant. “The coach who wins the most gets a big advantage in the battles.”

    Fisher knows a thing or two about being competitive. As Druski pointed out, the NBA player is the proud owner of five NBA championship rings thanks to his career primarily as a Los Angeles Laker.

    He now serves as an advisor of The Play Equity Fund, an organization committed to providing the transformational power of sport and play to all children, in addition to his roles as an analyst on NBA on NBC. 

    Last December, millions of viewers cast their vote for the winner of The Voice season 28.

    College student Aiden Ross, a member of Team Niall Horan, earned the top prize after an electrifying vocal performance of JVKE’s “Golden Hour,” followed by a heartfelt rendition of “The Winner Takes It All” by ABBA in the finale.

    “Since the minute [my] chair turned around [in Aiden’s blind audition], I just felt like I was looking at myself up there,” Horan, 32, exclusively told Us Weekly in December 2025. “Like, there’s so many comparisons to be made. … That youthful energy that he’s got, you know, the excitement to want to make records and write songs and stuff like that, is something that I see a lot of myself in. But I’m definitely not as talented as that dude.”

    Find out who will win over America’s heart next when The Voice airs on NBC Mondays at 9 p.m. ET. Stream new episodes the next day on Peacock.

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    Mike Vulpo

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  • Panasonic partners with Skyworth in strategic shift for European market – Tech Digest

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    Panasonic has announced a major strategic partnership with China’s Skyworth, marking a fundamental shift in how the Japanese brand will produce and sell televisions in Europe.

    The deal, unveiled today (February 23, 2026) aims to revitalize Panasonic’s TV business by leveraging the massive manufacturing scale of one of the world’s largest electronics groups.

    Under the terms of the agreement, Shenzhen Skyworth Display Technology will take over the heavy lifting of sales, marketing, and logistics across the European region.

    Meanwhile, Panasonic will pivot towards high-level product development, quality assurance and maintaining premium brand standards. Notably, the two companies will jointly develop Panasonic’s high-end flagship OLED models.

    Trends towards economies of scale 

    This move mirrors a broader industry trend where legacy Japanese brands are seeking survival through collaboration with Chinese manufacturing giants. The partnership is strikingly similar to the joint venture recently formed between Sony and TCL, where Sony spun out its Bravia business to lean on TCL’s production efficiency.

    The driver behind these deals is, of course, the increasingly brutal economics of the global TV market. Profit margins in the industry have become razor-thin due to fierce price competition and high production costs.

    By partnering with a “top-five” global manufacturer like Skyworth, Panasonic gains access to world-class R&D investment and economies of scale that are difficult to achieve independently in the current climate. “The new business model will leverage Panasonic’s core strengths in AV processing and quality together with Skyworth’s global manufacturing scale and speed,” said Akira Toyoshima, CEO of Panasonic Entertainment & Communication.

    The reorganization also involves internal changes at Panasonic. From April 1, 2026, the company’s Entertainment Division will be reintegrated into the main Panasonic Corporation. This move is designed to strengthen its consumer business, with Europe identified as the primary strategic market for this long-term recovery plan.

    For existing customers, Panasonic has emphasized that service remains a priority. The company will continue to provide after-sales support for all TVs sold prior to the transition in March 2026, as well as for those sold under the new partnership starting in April.

    By combining Japanese engineering with Chinese manufacturing prowess, Panasonic hopes to secure a profitable future in a market where scale looks set to become the ultimate survival tool.

    Via Kulwinder Singh Rai

    Sony spins out Bravia TV business in joint venture with China’s TCL


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    Chris Price

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  • As ‘Outlander’ Ends, Caitríona Balfe Enters a Brave New World—One She’s Long Been Building For Herself

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    Heughan and Balfe as Jamie and Claire on season eight of Outlander in 2026.Robert Wilson

    Now that the horny antics of Heated Rivalry are sweeping the globe, what would Balfe tell breakout stars Connor Storrie and Hudson Williams about navigating their newfound fame? “I haven’t seen Heated Rivalry yet,” she admits. “But it seems that phenomenon far eclipses our show. You got to just be grateful for the experience,” Balfe continues, adding with a laugh: “And make sure that you send messages to your parents not to watch certain episodes.”

    And a word of warning from one half of TV’s most beloved onscreen couples to another: know when to log off. “The fans have been beyond generous, sending so much love towards us, and initiatives we’ve supported. That has far eclipsed the negativity,” says Balfe. But she’s also learned the value in staying offline. “In the beginning, we were all so much more active on social media, or at least I used to be back in the day before it became a cesspool,” she says. “It’s hard not to absorb some of it. But then you quickly realize these people aren’t in my life. My life is not online.”

    These days, Balfe utilizes her social platform to raise awareness for causes close to her heart, including the current humanitarian crisis in Gaza. “I’ve always been politically literate and voiced my opinions before I was an actor,” she says. “If you’re standing up for children, that just goes without saying. That to me isn’t even being political, that’s being a human being. We should all be able to just blanketly agree that children should be protected. That shouldn’t be picking a side. If you’re alive at this moment, you should be able to just live how you want.” Although Balfe is inclined to get politically involved, each actor must make that decision for themselves, she adds, “I don’t think that we should be policing each other.”

    Balfe often felt a calling towards advocacy during her eight seasons on Outlander. At the start of season five, she and Heughan became executive producers alongside mainstay EPs Ronald D. Moore, Maril Davis, and Matthew B. Roberts. “The writers changed every season. Sam and I were the throughline that had to filter all these different voices that were coming in so that the character remained the same throughout,” she explains now. “Like with any job, if you’re going to be somewhere for a decade, you need to keep growing. You need to keep adding to your skillset, otherwise you become stagnant.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Paradise Season-Premiere Recap: Elvis Has Left the Bunker

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    Paradise

    Graceland

    Season 2

    Episode 1

    Editor’s Rating

    4 stars

    Season two kicks off with a beautiful detour into the life of Annie Clay (Shailene Woodley), an apocalypse survivor living in the ruins of Graceland.
    Photo: Ser Baffo/Disney

    Fire up your favorite emo cover of an ‘80s rock anthem because Paradise is back, baby. Let’s begin with a quick refresher as to where we left off with your favorite bunker show: A super volcano underneath the Antarctic ice shelf erupted and caused both worldwide tsunamis — Australia was gone first, I’m sorry to say — and a massive ash cloud that blocked out the sun. On top of Mother Nature’s chaos, as the world began to collapse, several governments got trigger-happy with their missiles, and it looked like everyone was about to go nuclear, because sure, why not? It’s the end of the world as we know it … until President Cal Bradford steps in.

    In a game-changing twist, we learn that at the last minute, Cal uses a super-secret failsafe that fries every electric circuit on earth and thus kills all the nuclear warheads before they can detonate, while also leaving any non-bunker survivors without any electricity. Because oh yes! There are survivors outside the not-so-secret Colorado bunker! And, as our evil billionaire Samantha “Sinatra” Redmond reveals to Secret Service Agent Xavier Collins, his wife, whom he had believed died after watching a nuke on track to blow up Atlanta, is one of the survivors, and she’s been using a radio to try and get in touch with him. Once Xavier and fellow agent (and Cal’s secret girlfriend) Robinson have solved the mystery of the president’s murder — it was the fake librarian with a vendetta after the love of his life got sick and died while they were helping construct the bunker! — Xavier gets on a plane, escapes the bunker, and goes to get his girl.

    Even just skimming the surface, there’s a whole lot to remember. But guess what? You actually don’t need to remember most of it because the season-two premiere has almost nothing to do with our main players from the bunker (until it totally does). In fact, we spend the entire hour with new characters and we trade in the Colorado bunker for a much cooler place to hunker down while the world ends: Graceland. I know what your first question must be: Does this mean that instead of ‘80s rock, we get emo covers of Elvis Presley songs? You betcha. So many emo Elvis covers.

    Instead of picking up where Paradise left off, “Graceland” takes us back in time and introduces us to Annie Clay (played by Shailene Woodley) and proceeds to show us what happened to her before, during, and after the apocalypse. I’m sure some people might be frustrated that we aren’t hopping directly back into the main action of the series, but if I’m being honest, it took me maybe five minutes to be completely invested in Annie’s story. This is partially because I’ve lived through Dan Fogelman and Sterling K. Brown’s other joint venture, This Is Us, so I’ve become accustomed to detours with random characters who eventually tie into the main story. But mostly, “Graceland” works because of Woodley’s magnetic performance.

    When we first meet Annie, she’s a poor teenager taking care of her ailing mother, at one time a successful doctor who was eventually felled by her mental health issues. The one thing that seems to help her mother is Elvis Presley. His portrait is on the mantle. Annie goes on the tour at Graceland over and over and over again to tell her mother about it. After her mother dies, Annie’s on her own. We see her in med school. She’s smarter than her colleagues. She’d be an excellent doctor. Unfortunately, she has debilitating panic attacks. The day she drops out of med school, she finds herself crying in her car outside the gates of Graceland. We’ve all been there. When security guard Gayle comes upon her and hears her story, she takes pity on her and eventually Annie becomes a tour guide at Graceland. Elvis’s safest place in the world has now become hers. And that’s before she turns it into her own personal fallout shelter and post-apocalypse living space.

    One day, Annie’s giving a tour when she notices everyone checking their phones and freaking the fuck out. This is it, the end of the world. We catch glimpses of news reports we saw in season one, and we hear Cal’s big speech. Annie is smart enough to know not to waste time panicking. Instead, she grabs Gayle and the two gather as many supplies as they can find. Food from the Visitor Center, blankets from the Presleys personal collection upstairs, and Annie even breaks into the case displaying one of Elvis’s guns. At the end of the world, she might need to be armed. They’re going to hunker down in the TV room, and it all seems like a good plan until Gayle takes a tumble down the stairs and breaks her leg.

    Paradise speeds through Annie and Gayle’s first 45 days in the TV room. Gayle’s injury is a doozy — Annie has reset her leg, but there is an infection, and Annie doesn’t have much to work with. The huge ash cloud has settled in, and it’s freezing, but Annie refuses to set a fire in the fireplace lest the smoke alert others that someone’s in Graceland. From the glimpses they get of what’s going on out in the streets — looting, fires, violence — that’s a smart move. Annie tries to keep Gayle’s spirits up with her Elvis impersonation, as one does. On Day 45, Gayle isn’t cold anymore, and Annie knows exactly what that means — she holds her only friend in the world until she dies and then she buries her in the Presley family plot before finally letting out every emotion she’s been feeling with one gut-wrenching scream. Annie is truly alone at the end of the world.

    Almost two years after the eruption — it’s Day 689 — the sun returns. Annie can breathe again. She can also start to grow things, which is so nice because how many cans of beans has this woman eaten and is her GI tract okay? Annie is alone, but things could be so much worse than spending your day reading in the Jungle Room and mainlining Bush’s Best; She’s tucked away safely and no one seems to bother her.

    And then someone bothers her. One day, Annie spots a group of six armed men at the gates. She grabs her gun and hides up by Elvis’s handy two-way mirror. But while these guys, led by a scruffy young guy named Link, pull Annie out of her hiding spot, they don’t seem to want to hurt her. They want to know where Elvis’s collection of vintage cars is. Link tries to talk to Annie and prove he isn’t a bad guy, and just as you think it might be working, Annie slams his head with something very heavy and makes a run for the TV room. Her safe space. She locks herself in there for three days. On that third day, the men are still in the house, but they are also cooking something that smells amazing and so she leaves the room. Finally, although still hesitant to let anyone in, Annie can see that these guys don’t want to hurt her. In fact, they’re just a big bunch of nerds. Link explains that he was in Louisville working at an REI store when the volcano erupted, and he wisely stocked up on sleeping bags and coats. He eventually ran into Geiger, an older guy who decided someone needed to travel around the country to each of the 94 nuclear power plants and attempt to shut them down before a disastrous meltdown could occur. Nerdiest of the nerds — they call him Urkel — explains that because of the ash cloud, the earth’s temperature has dropped twenty degrees. He also has a theory about a secret device that must have knocked all the power out. His buddies brush it off, but my fingers are crossed that one day he’ll learn he was dead right and he’ll drop a sarcastic “did I do that?” and we’ll all laugh about it. We need some laughs!

    While hearing about the catastrophic changes to the environment and the unfathomable death toll — Link estimates two-thirds of the U.S. population has been wiped out — these are all things we knew or, at least, could have guessed. One of the most important pieces of info dropped by this group, however, is that when they show up at Graceland, it’s been about three years since the volcano erupted. This, of course, means that Annie’s timeline has caught up with where we were in season one of Paradise.

    Link and his team assure Annie that they’ll be out of her hair soon enough, and slowly, she begins to warm up to them. She fixes Link’s broken wrist, and the team takes apart some of Elvis’s cars to use the parts elsewhere. She and Link talk about the stars and the falling satellites, about his terrible beard, and he shows her his pre-beard student ID card. (The fact that he went to Caltech tells us he’s probably more than just a sales clerk.) On the eve of the team’s departure, they all have a fancy dinner together in the dining room. Annie puts on one of the Presleys’ dresses. Link cuts back his beard. They totally want to fuck. At dinner, they play “one thing you miss/one thing you don’t,” and it takes Annie awhile, since so much of life before was hard for her, but what she misses most is giving tours here at Graceland. And so, they ask her for a tour. Eventually, Annie and Link pair off and things get hot and heavy in the Jungle Room. As someone who has been on the Graceland tour, I’m assuming this is a new addition.

    It’s a gorgeous scene that goes from the two of them talking, of Annie opening up, and then breaking down into sobs as he holds her close to him, to them in bed together. The chemistry between Shailene Woodley and Thomas Doherty is off the charts, and I buy everything they’re selling. I can’t shake the moment when Annie weeps into his shoulder. She’s been holding everything in for so long to survive, and finally being seen, being touched again after three years, is the push to just release it all. And he doesn’t back away from it. He understands it from the jump. Maybe this isn’t the speculative fiction thriller from season one, but I’m down with basking in a little story about human connection for an hour.

    The episode isn’t solely a reflective one. There are some important developments. In the morning, Link and his team are headed up to St. Louis — in order to avoid the apparently rough parts of Arkansas — and then out to Colorado … to find a secret bunker they know is out there that has enough power that could restart the world. He also mentions something dangerous in the bunker, but can’t explain further. He wants Annie to “come restart the world” with him. But in the morning, Annie has once again locked herself in the TV room. She is too scared to leave her safe place, even for Link. Link, who is suffering from a mysterious nose bleed and headaches by the way, begs her to open the door but she won’t, and he doesn’t have time to wait. Geiger comes and grabs him and reminds him how urgent it is to get to that bunker and to find and “kill Alex.” Are you also trying to list the names of everyone we know in the bunker? I cannot think of an Alex. Is “Alex” a person at all? When they leave, and Annie finally comes out of the room, she finds that Link has left her gear, a map, and a note that promises he’ll come back for her.

    This promise sustains Annie as she remains at Graceland alone once again and — surprise! — turns out to be pregnant. This promise is probably why, when a now VERY pregnant Annie hears a plane crash and sees that the wreckage and pilot are in the rough parts of Arkansas, she assumes it must be Link coming back for her, and she hops on her horse to rescue him. Out alone in the woods, Annie comes across that wrecked plane and its unconscious pilot, but it is not Link — it’s Xavier.

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    Maggie Fremont

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  • Industry’s Myha’la and Marisa Abela on Fighting, Friendship, and Platonic Kissing in the Club

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    “We are old now,” Myha’la says with a smile to her Industry costar Marisa Abela on Zoom. Considering the fact that both actors are 29 years old, that sentiment is far from true. However, four seasons into the buzzy British banking drama, it does feel like we’re a long way from the early days of Industry when their respective characters, Harper Stern and Yasmin Kara-Hanani, were first-years on the trading floor at Pierpoint & Co, diving headfirst into the wild world of finance.

    In the penultimate episode of Industry’s fourth season, “Points of Emphasis,” Harper and Yas run through the gamut of human emotions. They begin the episode as business adversaries, hurling insults at one another, and end the episode as friends dancing till dawn in a perfect girl’s night out, sealed with a kiss—a fact that makes both actors giggle, recalling the shoot. For Abela, the club scene was both sentimental and nostalgic. “It felt like season one of Industry in that we’re just two girls dancing in a club,” she says. “It felt like that time in Berlin in season two, or all the season one stuff with Robert. It really felt like, ‘Oh yeah, this is the show that we set out to make.’”

    But before they can get to that point, the frenemies have to hash it out. “I really resented you for being a breathing example of how I was less than,” Harper says to Yasmin, over drinks at a pub. “And I choose to love you for being a breathing example for how I can be more,” Yasmin responds. That conversation was “the most honest and vulnerable conversation that they ever have” in Myha’la’s opinion. “They both ask for each other’s comfort in a way that there’s no hidden agenda, there’s no nothing,” she continues. “It’s pure, platonic need for comforting each other.”

    Many important characters have come and gone from the Industry universe—Gus (David Jonsson), Robert (Harry Lawtey), and most recently Harper’s mentor Eric Tao, played by Ken Leung. But throughout all the shifts and changes, Harper and Yasmin’s friendship—flawed though it may be—has served as the anchor of the buzzy HBO series. Below, Marisa Abela and Myha’la go deep on Yasmin and Harper’s complicated relationship, their sometimes toxic tether, and what we can expect for Industry’s season four finale.

    Spoilers for Industry below.

    Vanity Fair: After a season of being either separate or at odds, at the end of episode seven, we finally get to watch our girls together again, dancing at the club. What was it like filming that moment?

    Myha’la: It was so special. As much as we know the audience wants our girlies together and to have their dancing at the club moment, we really wanted it too. It does feel like an accumulation of all the seasons, everything they’ve gone through together. It’s the most intimate they could possibly be—that they’ve ever been. It was also really fun. It was a very fun shoot day.

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Coldplay kiss-cam’s Kristin Cabot hits Miami beach in bikini before crisis conference keynote

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    Coldplay kiss-cam’s Kristin Cabot is enjoying some fun in the sun ahead of her keynote speech at a crisis communications conference in Washington, D.C.

    The former HR executive for Astronomer was photographed enjoying a day at the beach in Miami, Florida, on Friday, Feb. 13. 

    In the photos, the 53-year-old mom of two can be seen showing off her toned abs in a baby blue bikini, which she paired with a large sunhat and a pair of sunglasses, as well as a few chains around her neck, gold jewelry around her wrists and another pair of sunglasses in her hands.

    She can be seen cooling off and bracing for waves as she stands ankle-deep in the water.

    Cabot paired her blue bikini with a sunhat, sunglasses and gold jewelry. (MiamiPIXX/VAEM / BACKGRID)

    COLDPLAY KISS CAM WOMAN SLAMS GWYNETH PALTROW FOR ASTRONOMER AD: ‘WHAT A HYPOCRITE’

    Cabot first gained national attention when a video of her and her boss at the time, former Astronomer CEO Andy Byron, enjoying a romantic moment at a Coldplay concert went viral in 2025.

    The two were caught cozying up with each other on the Jumbotron, and once they realized the attention was on them, Cabot immediately turned away and dodged the camera, while Byron exited the frame. 

    Kristin Cabot in a sunhat and a blue bikini while in Miami, Florida in February 2026

    Cabot took a dip in the water while visiting the beach in Miami, Florida. (MiamiPIXX/VAEM / BACKGRID)

    “Either they’re having an affair or they’re just very shy,” Martin joked as the audience laughed.

    Following the scandal, Cabot submitted her resignation as head of HR at Astronomer, while Byron was first placed on leave and then later resigned.

    During an interview with The New York Times in December 2025, Cabot opened up about the now-infamous night and what it cost her.

    Kristin Cabot standing on the beach in a blue bikini in Miami, Florida.

    Cabot showed off her toned abs while cooling off in a blue bikini in Miami, Florida. (MiamiPIXX/VAEM / BACKGRID)

    “I made a bad decision and had a couple of High Noons and danced and acted inappropriately with my boss,” Cabot said. “And it’s not nothing. And I took accountability and I gave up my career for that. That’s the price I chose to pay. I want my kids to know that you can make mistakes, and you can really screw up. But you don’t have to be threatened to be killed for them.”

    She went on to say that she had previously opened up to Byron about issues in her marriage and recalled him telling her he was “going through the same thing,” adding that that admission “sort of strengthened our connection.” She recalled kissing him for the first time at the concert after a few drinks and then wrapping his arms around her.

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    Once they appeared on-screen, she said “it was like someone flipped a switch” and that she “was so embarrassed.” What followed was intense scrutiny on social media, with Cabot saying she was doxxed and received over 500 calls a day in addition to death threats.

    “My kids were afraid that I was going to die, and they were going to die,” she said.

    Cabot will be speaking about her experience and how she was able to “take control of her narrative and rewrite her story” following the Coldplay scandal, as the keynote speaker during the “Taking back the narrative” panel at the PRWeek Crisis Comms Conference in Washington, D.C., on April 16.

    She will be joined on stage by journalist and communications professional Dini von Mueffling.

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    Coldplay’s frontman Chris Martin questioned if the couple was having an affair as he caught them on the Kiss Cam.

    Cabot is set to be the keynote speaker and discuss how she was able to “rewrite her story” following the Coldplay kiss-cam controversy. (@calebu2/TMX)

    “While attending a Coldplay concert in July and unwittingly appearing on the kiss-cam for a few seconds, Kristin Cabot’s life blew up in an instant,” the event description read. “Online harassment, constant death threats, and 300 billion views to date: a never-ending media frenzy. From the outside, it was an amusing, if unflattering meme; but for her, everything changed that day.”

    It continued: “Cabot experienced firsthand the extremity of public shaming that women have long experienced when in the negative spotlight of the media, one their male counterparts often seem to avoid. During this session, the former Astronomer chief people officer and her PR representative, industry legend Dini von Mueffling, share the strategy — both immediate and long-term — that has helped Cabot take control of her narrative and rewrite her story.”

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  • Morgan Fairchild refused to ‘sell my soul’ for Hollywood fame

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    Morgan Fairchild may have made audiences wonder if she was “too sexy for TV,” but she refused to play Hollywood’s so-called game to get ahead.

    The actress, whose breakout role in the soap “Flamingo Road” cemented her bombshell image before she became a glamorous vixen on “Falcon Crest,” has a new podcast, “2 B—-es From Texas,” co-hosted with her sister, Cathryn Hartt. The show features never-before-heard stories from their decades in showbiz and sit-down interviews with celebrity friends.

    The 76-year-old told Fox News Digital that, looking back, she didn’t want “to sell my soul” to get ahead.

    DYAN CANNON TRIED ‘DRUGS, MEN AND PILLS’ BEFORE BECOMING A ‘GOD GIRL’

    Morgan Fairchild is seen here in 1984 promoting the TV special “Blondes vs Brunettes.” She is now the co-host of the podcast “2 B—-es From Texas.” (Bob D’Amico /American Broadcasting Companies via Getty Images)

    “When I first moved to L.A., everyone told me, ‘If you don’t go to the right parties, if you don’t sleep with the right people, and if you don’t do what everybody does, you’re never going to get anywhere,’” she said. “Well, I don’t even drink, much less do drugs. I just never did. When they told me that’s what it takes to make it here, I thought, ‘Then I guess I just won’t have a career.’”

    “I know there are jobs I lost because I wouldn’t sleep with people,” Fairchild reflected. “I know that, and I accept that I wasn’t willing to accept that. I just wasn’t willing to sleep with them.”

    Mark Harmon being seduced by Morgan Fairchild in "Flamingo Road."

    Morgan Fairchild played Constance Weldon Carlyle on “Flamingo Road,” which aired from 1980 to 1982.  (United Archives GmbH)

    Before becoming an ’80s icon, Fairchild got her first taste of Hollywood with a small, uncredited role in 1967’s “Bonnie and Clyde,” starring Warren Beatty and Faye Dunaway.

    WATCH: HOLLYWOOD LEGEND LORENZO LAMAS ENDORSES REPUBLICAN FOR CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR

    “I went to a cast party, and I realized everybody was a little strange,” she said. “The next day, I was walking with one of my mentors, and he said, ‘You seem a little down.’ I told him, ‘I really like working on this movie, but I’m realizing it’s a strange world. I walked out on this party, but that’s the reality of the business, and I can’t just keep walking out on reality.’”

    “He gave me the best piece of advice I ever got,” Fairchild shared. “He said, ‘Nonsense, you can always walk out on reality.’ So that’s how I approached Hollywood. 

    Morgan Fairchild in bed wearing a slinky black dress for a film.

    Morgan Fairchild is seen here starring in 1982’s “The Seduction.” (Pictorial Press Ltd)

    “I create my own reality. I live my own life the way I want to. Those are the choices, as long as you can accept the downside, which is that if you don’t do these things people tell you that you have to do, you may not work. As long as you’re willing to accept that, then you’re fine.”

    A close-up of Morgan Fairchild wearing a purple blazer.

    Morgan Fairchild co-hosts “2 B—-es From Texas” with her sister, actress Cathryn Hartt. (Tibrina Hobson/Getty Images)

    Fairchild said she never regretted doing things her own way when it came to focusing on her acting career.

    “I never had to look back on anything,” she said. “I made my decision early on that I was not going to sell my soul or my pride or my dignity to succeed in this business. I might’ve done a little better if I had, but I was willing to live with that.”

    Loni Anderson wearing a pink tank top with red pants being embraced by Morgan Fairchild wearing a yellow blouse with black pants and a skinny black belt.

    Loni Anderson and Morgan Fairchild are seen here in this undated photo. (Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

    Like on her podcast, Fairchild enjoys revisiting her past — even the times she unexpectedly found herself in hot water.

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    Morgan Fairchild filming a scene for "Flamingo Road."

    Morgan Fairchild is seen here opposite Mark Harmon in “Flamingo Road.” (United Archives GmbH)

    Fairchild said People magazine photographed her in early 1981 for a feature on her role in “Flamingo Road.” The issue’s release was postponed after the attempted assassination of President Ronald Reagan that March.

    “It was right at the end of our first season, and we didn’t know yet if we were going to get picked up for a second season,” she said. 

    Morgan Fairchild in 1980s attire and big hair for "Falcon Crest."

    Actress Morgan Fairchild as Jordan Roberts, a San Francisco attorney in “Falcon Crest,” circa 1985. (CBS via Getty Images)

    “That left People magazine with no hook for the cover. And then, Jerry Falwell, founder of the Moral Majority, and Rev. Donald Wildmon declared me ‘too sexy for TV.’ They tried to censor me and get me kicked off TV.”

    Morgan Fairchild wearing a glamorous black and emerald green sparkling gown in the 1980s.

    Morgan Fairchild became a sex symbol in the 1980s. (Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

    “They handed me the cover back,” Fairchild said with a laugh. “They gave People the hook, and it got a lot more coverage than it would have otherwise.”

    Falwell and Wildmon publicly denounced what they viewed as indecent and immoral television, targeting prime-time shows they said glorified promiscuity. Fairchild’s sensual “Flamingo Road” character soon became a high-profile symbol of the content they condemned.

    Jimmy Kimmel holding Morgan Fairchild's People magazine cover story.

    Jimmy Kimmel brought up Morgan Fairchild’s People magazine cover during her appearance on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” that aired on Nov. 11, 2025. During the interview, Kimmel asked Fairchild about the controversy linked to Jerry Falwell and the Moral Majority. (Randy Holmes/Disney via Getty Images)

    The backlash didn’t hurt Fairchild’s career. Instead, it helped launch her into stardom. People magazine’s July 1981 cover story ran with the headline, “Is she too sexy for TV?” She later earned a Golden Globe nomination.

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    Morgan Fairchild wearing a leopard slip.

    Actress Morgan Fairchild poses for a portrait in Los Angeles, circa 1995. (Harry Langdon/Getty Images)

    Fairchild admitted she still has “no clue” why she was targeted at the time.

    “I don’t know why they picked me instead of another blonde or someone else on the show,” she said. 

    Morgan Fairchild leaning against a smiling Matthew Perry.

    Morgan Fairchild played Matthew Perry’s character’s mother on “Friends.” (NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images)

    “I have no clue why they didn’t like me, but I’m grateful. It gave me the cover back — and it’s not a bad title to have. Otherwise, I’d have just been Morgan Fairchild from ‘Flamingo Road.’ But when they tried to censor me, it backfired. They made me a bigger deal and gave me what’s now considered a classic magazine cover.”

    Morgan Fairchild wearing all red with her sister wearing all black in the 1980s.

    Morgan Fairchild and her sister Cathryn Hartt attend the “I Love New York” celebration on Sept. 30, 1982, in New York City. (Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)

    When asked how she felt about being labeled a sex symbol, Fairchild replied, “There are a lot of worse things to be called than a sex symbol.”

    “But it still surprises me,” she said. “I wasn’t expecting it, but there are far worse things to be labeled.”

    Morgan Fairchild smiling

    Morgan Fairchild told Fox News Digital she didn’t mind being recognized as a sex symbol during the 1980s. (Paul Archuleta/Getty Images)

    In the 1980s, Fairchild became one of Hollywood’s earliest and most visible advocates during the AIDS crisis. She said it was her choice to speak out when many others stayed silent out of fear of being blacklisted in Hollywood. It was a decision that nearly cost her career.

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    Susan Lucci, Susan St. James, Rock Hudson and Morgan Fairchild posing together in the 1980s.

    From left: Susan Lucci, Susan St. James, Rock Hudson and Morgan Fairchild, circa 1984. Hudson died on Oct. 2, 1985, from complications related to AIDS. He was 59. (Dam Scull/PHOTOlink)

    “I know it cost me work,” she said. “I’ve been told it cost me work by people who were in casting rooms. I’ve been told I was too controversial because of my stance on AIDS. People didn’t want me around their kids. People didn’t want me to eat at their place. They didn’t want me in their homes. But I lost friends. I couldn’t sit back and stay silent.”

    “But here was the sweet thing,” she said. “The first time I visited a hospice, I asked myself, ‘What do I say to these guys who are dying? What can I say that’s comforting?’ 

    Morgan Fairchild creating a heart symbol with her hands at the red carpet.

    Morgan Fairchild attends the Farrah Fawcett Foundation 2025 Tex-Mex Fiesta at The Rustic on Oct. 30, 2025, in Dallas. (Omar Vega/Getty Images for Farrah Fawcett Foundation)

    “I walked in, and three guys came over and said, ‘We want your eye makeup tricks.’ I did it to cheer them up — and I know I lost work because of that. But those are the choices you make. You decide what matters more: playing it safe or trying to help. And I’ll always try to help.”

    And she would do it again, Fairchild insisted.

    “I’m grateful for where my life choices have taken me,” she added.

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  • Sara Ramirez Pays Tribute to Eric Dane, Shares His Support for Trans Costar

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    Sara Ramirez celebrated the life of their late Grey’s Anatomy costar Eric Dane by sharing how he once selflessly supported a guest star on the medical drama.

    On Saturday, February 21, Ramirez, 50, became the latest Grey’s Anatomy cast member to pay tribute to Dane, who died at age 53 on Thursday, February 19, following a battle with the neurodegenerative disease ALS.

    Ramirez posted a “broken heart emoji” via Instagram and shared a video from trans activist and actress Alexandra Billings, who played Donna Gibson in the classic Grey’s Anatomy season 3 episode “Where the Boys Are.” The powerful episode dealt with Dr. Mark Sloan (Dane) supporting Donna when she was diagnosed with breast cancer while in the midst of transitioning.

    In a 15-minute tribute, Billings recalled the way Dane showed her empathy on set and fought for her when her lengthy monologue was supposed to be cut. Per Billings, she shared with Dane how her real-life doctor would “touch my knee or he would hold me” while she was going through the process of transitioning in the 1980s.


    Related: Eric Dane Died on 20th Anniversary of His 1st ‘Grey’s Anatomy’ Episode

    Eric Dane died on the 20th anniversary of his first appearance on Grey’s Anatomy. Dane’s loved ones confirmed his death in a statement on Thursday, February 19, following his battle with ALS, noting that the actor “spent his final days surrounded by dear friends, his devoted wife and his two beautiful daughters, Billie and Georgia, […]

    “[The doctor] would let me know he saw me, no matter what we were talking about,” explained.

    After sharing that memory, Dane held Billings’ hand during their scene to emulate the real support she’d received. Later, the director and writer informed Billings that they would have to cut her inspiring monologue for time reasons.

    “[Eric] turns to me and he says very quietly, he says, ‘What are the five most important things you say in that monologue?’ … And I told him! I don’t remember what they were, but I told him one of them was about my wife, a line about my wife. And he said, ‘Say that and we’ll do a little improvisation,’” she remembered. “And he turned to the boom mic [operator] and he said, ‘What do you think?’ And from the back, you hear like little Muppets, ‘Yes, that’s a great idea!’ So they were all for it. And that’s what you see in the episode.”

    Billings said that “it changed everything for me” when Dane fought for her character Donna to have that moment of catharsis.

    “There was no reason in the world for him to do that. It didn’t have anything to do with him,” she said. “Time is money, especially in television. Eric Dane was one of the kindest, most empathetic humans I think I’ve ever worked with. I think that I could count on one hand the amount of times where I’ve left a set … and gone, ‘I can’t believe.’ Or, ‘That was extraordinary.’ And that was one of those times. Eric Dane showed everyone on that set what a true ally looks like. It’s not just talk.”

    TCDGRA2EC080 Sara Ramirez Pays Tribute to Eric Dane Shares His Support for Trans Costar Alexandra Billings

    Eric Dane in “Grey’s Anatomy.”
    Adam Larkey / ABC / Courtesy Everett Collection

    As she fought back tears, Billings went on, “An ally is present even when there’s danger in them being present. And that’s what Eric Dane did. I didn’t know him. I really didn’t know him but I absolutely knew him. And he will be missed. And I’m going to say something I didn’t get a chance to say to him: Thank you, Eric. Thank you. From all of us.”

    Earlier this week, Patrick Dempsey admitted it was “hard to put into words” what his Grey’s Anatomy costar Dane’s death meant.

    “He was the funniest man — he was such a joy to work with, and I want to just remember him in that spirit, because any time he was on set, he brought so much fun to it,” Dempsey recalled. “He had a great sense of humor. He was easy to work with. We got along instantly. First scene was him, you know, in all his glory, coming out of the bathroom with the towel on looking amazing, making you feel completely out of shape and insignificant.”

    “We hit it off because it was never really any competition,” he added. “There was just this wonderful mutual respect, he’s wickedly intelligent, and I’m always going to remember those moments of fun that we had together and celebrate the joy that he did bring to people’s lives, and the real loss is for us who don’t have them anymore.”

    Dane’s family announced on Thursday that he’d died nearly a year after going public with his ALS diagnosis. Per the Mayo Clinic, ALS is a nervous system disease that weakens nerve cells in both the brain and spinal cord and leads to a progressive loss of muscle control.

    “[Eric] will be deeply missed, and lovingly remembered always,” his rep said. “Eric adored his fans and is forever grateful for the outpouring of love and support he’s received. The family has asked for privacy as they navigate this impossible time.”

    Dane was survived by two daughters, Billie and Georgia, from his marriage to Rebecca Gayheart. A GoFundMe was set up to support his daughters on Friday, February 21, and has already raised more than $274,000 towards a $500,000 goal.

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    Justin Harp

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  • Dennis Quaid slams extreme left shift in Hollywood: ‘What used to be, you can’t be anymore’

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    Dennis Quaid is commenting on how much politics have changed in recent years.

    During an appearance on “The Greg Laurie Show,” the 71-year-old actor shared where he stands politically and how much the landscape has changed over time.

    “The Things have gone so extremely, so far left right now,” Laurie said during his conversation with Quaid. “I saw a podcast — it was Bill Maher and Dana Carvey, and I’m forgetting the other guy’s name — but anyway, I think it was Dana Carvey said, ‘I’ve told my friends in Hollywood I’m a Clinton Democrat, and some of them are calling me a Nazi now.’”

    Quaid said that “you can’t do that,” and compared being a Clinton Democrat to being “a neo-con, on the right side or whatever. What used to be, you can’t be anymore.”

    Quaid said there is no longer a middle ground when it comes to politics. (Daniele Venturelli/Getty Images)

    ROBERT DAVI CLAIMS HOLLYWOOD BLACKLIST PERSISTS OVER TRUMP SUPPORT

    The actor then described himself as a “common-sense independent,” although he said he tends to “lean more conservative in my head.”

    “I’m just for common sense, is really what I am,” Quaid said.

    Later in the podcast, Laurie asked Quaid about spending time with President Donald Trump.

    He called Trump “very surprisingly approachable and very funny, and really genuine. He wouldn’t be president if he wasn’t genuine, because the people who voted for him, they know that he has their best interest at heart.”

    Dennis Quaid in a black shirt looking at camera

    Quaid had high praise for Trump during the podcast. (Diana King for The Washington Post via Getty Images)

    Quaid has always spoken about how proud he is to be American, telling Fox News Digital in July 2024 that he “was born in the greatest country ever to be on the Earth.”

    “When you look at it, as flawed as it is, it’s better than everything else that has come before. And, you know, I really believe in the wisdom of the American people as a whole,” he said. “We just need to get our act together and start, you know, believing in ourselves again, because I believe that the president reflects the people.”

    Quaid had the opportunity to portray his “favorite president” on screen when he starred as Ronald Reagan in the 2024 movie, “Reagan,” honoring the nation’s 40th president.

    Dennis Quaid at the movie guide awards

    Quaid previously called America “the greatest country ever.” (Frazer Harrison/Getty Images)

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    When speaking with Fox News Digital in a separate interview in July 2024, the “Parent Trap” star shared that he nearly turned down the starring role in the film out of “fear.”

    “Reagan was my favorite president personally, and he was also such a recognizable figure around the world, sort of like Muhammad Ali,” he said. “Everybody knew what he looked like, sounded like, and so that was a pretty scary proposition.”

    He explained that he feared judgment from others and “feeling unworthy” of stepping into Reagan’s shoes, adding that he didn’t want it to seem as if he was doing “an impersonation of him.”

    It wasn’t until he visited Reagan’s ranch in Southern California and got a sense of the man he was behind the scenes when he decided to take the role.

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    Dennis Quaid wears a plaid shirt as Ronald Reagan with wife Nancy Reagan

    Quaid portrayed 40th President Ronald Reagan in the 2024 biopic “Reagan.” (ShowBiz Direct)

    He noticed “three remote controls like back in the ’80s when you had to use three remote controls to get the TV to work.”

    “Then, a note from Nancy, you know, on how to do it,” he said of working the remote controls. “Also just the land itself. You could see that it was him that did all the work there. You could feel it. And that’s when, after that, I said ‘Yes, I’ll do this,’ because I found a way in.

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  • ‘Oh My God, They’re Ruining the Show’

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    From the day it premiered, Twin Peaks had a problem. Audiences wanted to know who killed Laura Palmer; David Lynch and Mark Frost weren’t interested in telling them who killed Laura Palmer. When they agreed to reveal the killer, the network was apparently vindicated. Some 17 million viewers tuned in — the highest ratings the show had achieved since the season-two premiere.

    But now that the murder mystery had been resolved, the show had a new, even more vexing problem: If it wasn’t about solving the murder of Laura Palmer, what was Twin Peaks about? Even Bob Iger concedes he may have been too hasty. “Looking back on it now, I’m not convinced I was right,” he said. “Deep down, I felt David was frustrating the audience, but it may well be that my demands for an answer to the question of who killed Laura Palmer threw the show into another kind of narrative disarray.” Mark Frost agrees. “We paid a big price for it. You know, that was something that contributed as much as anything to the momentum falling apart.” David Lynch was even blunter. “That killed Twin Peaks,” he said. “Totally dead. Over. Finished.”

    The problem, of course, was that Twin Peaks wasn’t finished. It was in the middle of its second season, and the story would continue, one way or another, for at least 13 more episodes. “Especially network television— when you’re dealing with 22 episodes, and the production monster’s chasing you, you don’t really have any other choice,” says Mark Frost. “I don’t think it had been fully figured out,” says Scott Frost. “Production is like jumping out of a plane. And you have a parachute, but it’s actually not attached to you yet.”

    The resolution of Laura Palmer’s murder isn’t so much a period at the end of a sentence as it is an ellipsis: Leland may be dead, but BOB is still out there, hunting for another host. Or, to put it another way: With the central mystery resolved, the show’s writers had unprecedented freedom to redefine what Twin Peaks could be. “I don’t know if there was a master plan there at all. We got so good at resolving things we thought up that we were kind of fearless about what we put in,” says writer Robert Engels. “That was one of the things that was fun about the show — that we had the sense that we could pretty much do or try anything,” says writer Harley Peyton. “There were times when that took us down weird avenues, but there were times when it took us in absolutely the right direction. I think we took some wrong turns along the way, but that, to me, is part of the process, and part of making something under sort of insane circumstances.”

    There’s a palpable sense of desperation as Twin Peaks — just one episode removed from Leland’s death — manufactures another, flimsier reason for Cooper to stick around town. Targeted (correctly) by the FBI’s internal affairs division for his extralegal undercover mission at One Eyed Jack’s and (incorrectly) for stealing a large amount of cocaine, Cooper is suspended from the FBI and forced to hand over his badge and gun. Twin Peaks had already flirted with turning Cooper, a consummate outsider, into a Twin Peaks insider. (At the very least, it was hard to imagine him saying good-bye, forever, to the Double R’s coffee and cherry pie.) But Cooper’s dismissal from the FBI, even temporarily, altered the show’s fundamental building blocks in a way that proved challenging to reverse. So much care had been put into crafting the show’s look and feel: What happened when you upended it? “We were doomed the day that Agent Cooper turned in his black suit for lumberjack flannel,” says editor-director Duwayne Dunham.

    Twin Peaks had always managed to juggle its darkest moments with its silliest, but the show’s unique tone was becoming harder and harder to balance. “If we made mistakes along the way, one of them was maybe falling in love with comedy a little too much,” says Peyton. “This is the thing you always have to be careful of as a writer: Are you entertaining yourself, or are you entertaining the audience? We were certainly entertaining ourselves, and the hope was that we would entertain the audience as well.”

    No sustained analysis of season two would be complete without a brief survey of some of the show’s wackier story lines. Nadine Hurley waking from a coma with the strength of a superhero and the mind of a teenager? “I was a big comic book fan, so I brought in Nadine’s superpowers, which I thought was hilarious. That’s on me,” says Peyton. The emergence of Lana Milford (Robyn Lively), a black widow who seduces both of the elderly Milford brothers while turning every other man in Twin Peaks — even, uncharacteristically, Cooper — into a drooling idiot? “That was meant to have a supernatural aspect, but that supernatural aspect never actually comes in, so it’s just unresolved,” says Peyton. Ben Horne, trying to reverse the Civil War while delusionally believing himself to be Robert E. Lee? “That idea came about at the same time Ken Burns’s [The] Civil War miniseries happened. Had that miniseries not come out, I doubt that story ever would have gone into the series,” says writer Scott Frost.

    And then there’s what Peyton acknowledges as “the most grievous thing I ever did in the Twin Peaks universe”: James Hurley’s brief, stand-alone detour into a film noir after he crosses paths with a femme fatale named Evelyn Marsh. “James is just such a wonderful actor, and he had this wonderful vibe that sort of made him a perfect fit for that kind of story, which is why we wanted to do it in the first place,” says Peyton.

    At this point in the story, James’s love life has gone full Peyton Place. “The only thing I really, really wish they would have done is kept James with Donna,” says actor James Marshall. “When Laura died, the reality of their attraction came around. And when they got together, they should’ve stayed together. They could help each other through their grief, and you actually see two people heal while everything else is going crazy. Instead: Evelyn Marsh.”

    “The most grievous thing I ever did in the Twin Peaks universe.”
    Photo: ABC

    In a rare subplot that takes place entirely outside Twin Peaks, James — on a sullen solo motorcycle trip after Maddy is murdered — suddenly wanders into a James M. Cain novel. Twin Peaks had nodded at classic noir tropes before; Neff, the insurance agent who alerted Catherine Martell to a shady policy in the show’s first season, was named in tribute to the protagonist of Cain’s 1943 crime classic Double Indemnity. This particular subplot owes Cain an obvious debt and stretches across five episodes, as the married Marsh picks up James at a bar, hires him as a mechanic, sleeps with him, and frames him for killing her husband before having a change of heart and letting him go.

    It is as paint-by-numbers as a noir story can get, and those responsible for translating it to the small screen were just as dubious of the story line as the audience. “You hadn’t seen a character like Evelyn in Twin Peaks. She felt like she came from, I don’t know, Dynasty or something,” says Dunham, who directed one of the episodes in which the Evelyn Marsh subplot unfolds. “I regret that I didn’t do a better job with it. But it just didn’t fit. It was completely wrong, and it was wrong for James. James — that character — would not be attracted to that. James was one of the Bookhouse Boys.” Marshall agrees. “I think there were a lot of actors on the show who were reputable, seasoned actors — who’ve been around a long time — doing exactly what I was scared to do: going to production and fighting for their parts,” he says.

    “So much happened on the show where I didn’t know if my character was coming or going,” said Lara Flynn Boyle. “I called [David Lynch] every day, like, ‘Oh my God, they’re ruining the show.’ He got sick of hearing from me,” says Sherilyn Fenn. “This costumer, in the second season, said, ‘Oh, I’ve got 20 hula skirts.’ And I was like … ‘Do you think Twin Peaks is just this random, let’s-be-weird-to-be-weird? Because it isn’t. It never was.’”

    “It just was getting weird for weird’s sake,” agrees Dunham. “My thing is: That’s not an accurate understanding of David’s work. It’s not just weird for weird’s sake. There’s a purpose and a reason. That’s why, in David’s hands, he can make that stuff work.”

    The problem reached its nadir in “Episode 21,” the first (and only) episode directed by Uli Edel. As the director of the acclaimed, noirish drama Last Exit to Brooklyn, Edel had earned a reputation as a talent to watch. But his abrasive style clashed with the cast, who were justifiably confident, by then, that they knew what they were doing. During the filming of one scene, “Uli said, ‘You’re just furniture to me, man. Just go where I tell you,’” says Michael Horse. “So I go to the crew and said, ‘This guy, Uli, is he good?’ And they said, ‘Yeah, he’s really good.’ And I went to Uli and said, ‘Hey, man, you can say that to me. But if this isn’t Emmy-quality shit, I’ll come to your house and kick your ass.’”

    Horse’s conflict with Edel was a representative example of the cast’s larger sense that Twin Peaks had been handed to some unfit caretakers while Frost and Lynch were busy elsewhere. “I hope I’m not making anybody mad, but they claimed David and Mark were totally on top of the Twin Peaks stuff — that they were giving yeses and noes and overseeing everything in every detail. But I know that, working with David, it was a way different show. So I just don’t believe that,” says Marshall. “I do think that it had an effect on the show. How could it not? You could be the most talented person on earth. You’re not going to be able to imitate David Lynch.”

    It’s true that the Leland reveal in “Episode 14” was Lynch’s last directing credit until the season-two finale. But while there are Twin Peaks fans who believe season two’s missteps were due to Lynch’s absence, it was Mark Frost who spent some time away from the show during its perceived dip in quality. Just as Lynch spent a chunk of Twin Peaks’s first season directing Wild at Heart, Frost took a leave of absence from season two to direct Storyville, a moody, James Spader–starring political thriller. “His absence made things complicated. Certainly for my relationship with David,” says Peyton.

    By this point, Peyton and Engels — long established as two of Twin Peaks’s most reliable writers — had been given producer credits and taken on some duties that, today, would fall under the umbrella of “showrunning.” When Frost went to New Orleans to shoot Storyville, he left Peyton in charge. “It’s not like I had to somehow convene a writers’ room and figure out what we’re going to do next. We know what every episode is going to be, and Mark was talking to me every day,” says Peyton. “But one night — at, like, almost midnight — my phone rings, and it’s Todd Holland. And Todd is freaking out because he just got off the phone with David Lynch, who gave him a raft of script notes that were going to impact his shooting the following morning. Now, I’m already a little irritated, so I say, ‘Look. Ignore David’s notes. He has no business calling you up at 11 o’clock at night with script notes. Just shoot your day and let it be.’ He’s very thankful, and I feel I’ve done my job.”

    “My phone rings the next day. And David yelled at me for ten minutes. And I’m telling you: Ten minutes is a long time to have someone yell at you. His temper … you didn’t see it very often, but I saw it, and he was fucking furious, yelling at the top of his lungs: How dare I? What the fuck am I doing? Who the fuck do I think I am? The phone call, obviously, did not end well. And my relationship with David — whatever relationship I had — that was the end of our relationship.”

    The disagreements among creatives at the top of the show were further complicated by the actors, who continued to use their own power to try to shape the stories written for their characters. “There were some political things that were starting to happen, and I just got out of the way for the whole thing,” says Marshall. “There were several other actors on the show who were vying for different things, and it was like … I didn’t want to be involved in that.”

    Most significant was the scrapping of a plotline that had been simmering since the beginning of season one: the flirtation between Cooper and Audrey Horne. “As far as I remember, we all believed that they were a couple or going to be a couple,” said Tina Rathborne, who directed one of season one’s many sexually charged scenes between Audrey and Cooper. “Audrey’s seduction of Coop seems part of the dual lesson that Coop is learning. He’s learning about his more innocent side, and he’s learning about his darker side, that he’s willing to be seduced by this young girl. This young, somewhat raunchy girl. But he’s also willing to defend his higher side.”

    In season one, Cooper’s so-called “higher side” seemed to win out. When he found Audrey waiting for him, naked, in his bed at the Great Northern, he let her down by gently explaining that what she really needed was a friend. But owing to Kyle MacLachlan and Fenn’s undeniable onscreen chemistry, the writers kept looping Cooper and Audrey back together. Audrey goes undercover at One Eyed Jack’s to help the man she calls “my special agent”; Cooper risks his career to rescue her. When Audrey meets Denise Bryson and feels threatened by the presence of Cooper’s female FBI peer, she marks her territory by planting a kiss on his lips.

    If the writers didn’t want the audience to be invested in a romance between Cooper and Audrey, they were doing a very, very bad job backing away from the story. That’s because they had every intention of doubling down on what had obviously emerged as the show’s most potent will they/won’t they. “David took me to dinner and basically asked me if I was in love with Kyle,” says Fenn. “And I burst out laughing. Not even slightly! He’s a great guy, he’s a nice person, but that’s it. I didn’t have any feelings that way. At all. The truth is that as human beings, he and I didn’t have that kind of chemistry. But those characters, for some really weird reason, did.” Peyton adds, “We were going to do a — ‘romance’ may be the wrong word, but certainly an exploration of the relationship between Audrey and Cooper. That didn’t happen, and it didn’t happen because Kyle refused.”

    For years, the official story has been that MacLachlan rejected the plotline because he didn’t believe Cooper would get involved with a high-schooler. There’s a solid plot justification for that argument; Cooper did, after all, gently reject Audrey for the same reason back in season one. But whatever the merits of that argument, there’s no question that offscreen dynamics were also in play. At the time, MacLachlan was dating Lara Flynn Boyle, whose push for Donna’s unconvincing bad-girl makeover in season two was judged, by some, to have been a response to Fenn getting more attention for her coquettish performance.

    “I still remember talking with Mark [Frost],” says Peyton. “Mark was saying, ‘No, we’re going to draw a line in the sand. We can’t do this. We planned this pretty carefully, and it’s going to upend our second season.’ Then Kyle went into Mark’s office with David. I remember waiting and waiting and waiting. And then he came out and said, ‘No, we’re not doing it.’ And that was because David was the one who was basically saying, ‘We’re going to go with what the actors prefer.’ The thing about David that I learned over time is that he will sort of do anything for the actors. And because he’ll do anything for them, they will do anything for him.”

    Whatever the underlying reasons for it, even those who were frustrated by MacLachlan’s justification now concede it was better that the Cooper-Audrey plotline didn’t move forward. “It’s hard to say, because nowadays, I would say, ‘No, we can’t do that, because he’s in a position of power and she’s much younger.’ All the things Kyle was saying. It’s easy to say he did it because of Lara Flynn Boyle. But who knows why?” says Peyton. “I mean … he did end up with a love interest who was the same age [as Audrey]. And she was from a convent, for crying out loud.”

    Cooper’s formerly cloistered paramour was Annie Blackburn (Heather Graham), a half-sister of Norma Jennings whose sudden arrival in Twin Peaks was written to fill in the gap where the Cooper-Audrey romance would have been, and actor Heather Graham knew what she was walking into. Prior to being cast, Graham had already made her way into the outskirts of Lynchland by co-starring, opposite Benicio del Toro, in a Calvin Klein commercial Lynch directed. But playing a woman capable of instantly bewitching Dale Cooper would be an entirely different challenge, and Graham met Lynch at his home to discuss the character — after he showed off another ongoing project. “He was doing some kind of experiment where he was putting meat into this kind of art piece and letting ants crawl on it,” says Graham.

    Graham recalls Lynch describing Annie as “a finely tuned machine. Like a Ferrari or a sports car that’s very amazing — but that it can be easily thrown off-balance, if something goes wrong.” Peyton had a blunter appraisal: “Sad to say, Annie was — at least when the character was initially conceived — a damsel in distress. And not a great deal more than that,” he says.

    “When we said, ‘Okay, well, who’s going to sweep Audrey off her feet?’ [Harley Peyton] said, ‘Well, it should be a singing cowboy.’”
    Photo: ABC

    Audrey, for her part, got a new love interest of her own — though not before the show teased a flirtation between Audrey and Bobby, who was briefly positioned as Ben Horne’s new right-hand man. “I don’t know if they were definitely going to go with it. I thought they were definitely going to go with it, and we had those moments,” said Dana Ashbrook. “I think it was either a MacGuffin, or a change of someone’s mind, or I don’t know. It was so on the fly, always, the story.” In the end, Bobby stayed true to Shelly — though not before Gordon Cole planted a kiss on her — and Audrey got her own new love interest in John Justice Wheeler, a dashing young businessman-pilot played by Billy Zane. “It was Harley who came up with [John Justice Wheeler],” says Mark Frost. “When we said, ‘Okay, well, who’s going to sweep Audrey off her feet?’ he said, ‘Well, it should be a singing cowboy.’”

    Wheeler does, in fact, throw on a cowboy hat, take Audrey on a picnic, and serenade her with a rendition of the cowboy folk standard “Bury Me Not on the Lone Prairie.” Fenn herself was unconvinced. “He’s a really nice guy. But the first time I met him was at 6 in the morning. And he goes, ‘What would you do if I leaned over the table and kissed you?’ And I go, ‘I’d have a problem with that.’” Still, Wheeler’s routine is enough, apparently, to knock Audrey’s crush on Cooper out of her brain entirely; the episode’s script describes her as “warm and certain” as she reassures Wheeler that she doesn’t have feelings for anyone else.

    With Cooper and Audrey splintering off into their own separate love stories — and much of the other main cast engaged in their own semi-stand-alone arcs — Twin Peaks needed both a villain and an event to justify weaving everything back together. If there was anything that bound Twin Peaks’s many threads in the back half of the second season, it was the simmering threat of Cooper’s insane former partner Windom Earle, revealed early in season two as having escaped custody hell-bent on revenge. Though it wasn’t clear at the time, Earle’s clash with Cooper would become Twin Peaks’s most significant arc following the resolution of Laura’s murder. “That was supposed to be short-lived,” says Engels. “I talked those guys into hiring [Kenneth Welsh]. He was a friend of mine, and they just loved him, so that character became bigger.”

    After escaping a mental institution and stalking Cooper to Twin Peaks, Earle engages Cooper in a grotesque version of the daily chess game they played when they were partners. Whenever Earle takes a piece, he commits an equivalent murder; the loss of a pawn, for example, leads to the murder of a drifter with no direct connection to the larger narrative.

    Once Cooper realizes the game Earle is playing, he’s savvy enough to build a strategy not aimed at winning the game, but at protecting the pieces remaining on his side of the board. Still: You’d think he’d be smart enough to realize that protecting his queen is paramount — especially since he’s simultaneously falling in love with Annie, whose innocence and lack of worldliness makes her an especially ripe target. And you’d definitely think he’d be smart enough to recognize the danger when the Giant literally appears in front of him, waving his arms and mouthing the word no, after Annie suggests she’ll enter the Miss Twin Peaks pageant. But when Cooper falls in love, it seems, his deductive powers vanish; just a few episodes earlier, he flirts with Annie at the Double R, then walks right by the not-especially-well-disguised Windom Earle.

    If there was anything that bound Twin Peaks’s many threads in the back half of the second season, it was the simmering threat of Cooper’s insane former partner Windom Earle, played by Kenneth Welsh.
    Photo: ABC

    All these plotlines converge in the penultimate episode of Twin Peaks, which also turns out to be the last gasp of the comedy-focused storytelling that had come to the forefront of the first season. The Miss Twin Peaks pageant was designed, among other things, to bring the increasingly scattered group of characters back together: Donna Hayward, Shelly Johnson, Lucy Moran, Nadine Hurley, Lana Milford, and Annie Blackburn all compete, and Norma Jennings, Doc Hayward, Pete Martell, and Dick Tremayne all play a role in judging the pageant. Though she had been targeted by Windom Earle alongside Donna and Shelly just a few episodes earlier, Audrey is noticeably absent for much of the competition. “I called David right away and said, ‘I’m not doing it,’” says Fenn. “No fucking way. Audrey was there, but I didn’t, like, parade up and down a fucking catwalk in a bathing suit.”

    Goofy as it is, the levity feels welcome before Twin Peaks takes its final plunge into the darkness. Lana Milford does something called “contortionistic jazz exotica,” and Lucy Moran does a dance that ends in the splits, which led to actress Kimmy Robertson needing to reassure people that there was no damage to the baby. (Robertson, for the record, was not actually pregnant.) But when Annie Blackburn is crowned Miss Twin Peaks — after a speech that leans heavily on the words of Chief Seattle, a leader of Washington’s Suquamish and Duwamish tribes — Earle, who has infiltrated the Miss Twin Peaks pageant disguised as the Log Lady, makes his move. A queen has been crowned; he’s ready to claim her.

    It’s a strong cliffhanger for the season finale, but that’s not how it originally aired. By this point, ABC’s scheduling of Twin Peaks had become erratic, with lengthy hiatuses in December and January — a problem further exacerbated when the show was preempted by coverage of the Gulf War. After the memorably bizarre cliffhanger of “Episode 23” — which concluded with Josie Packard, revealed as the mysterious shooter who shot Cooper in the season-one finale, somehow trapped in a drawer pull in a Great Northern Hotel room — ABC put the show on hiatus. That troubling sign prompted a fan campaign called COOP, or Citizens Opposed to the Offing of Peaks, to place hundreds of phone calls and send thousands of letters and packages, some containing logs or doughnuts, to ABC. David Lynch goosed the campaign further in a February appearance on Late Night With David Letterman, where the host gamely posted Bob Iger’s mailing address. (“I love annoying these network weasels,” said Letterman.)

    ABC relented, and Twin Peaks returned on Thursday, March 28 — an escape, at last, from the wasteland of Saturday night. But the reprieve was short-lived. Less than a month later, on April 18, 1991, “Episode 27” aired — a return to form that ended, promisingly, with BOB reemerging from the Black Lodge. But anyone intrigued by that cliffhanger was forced to wait nearly two months, to June 10, when the network unceremoniously dumped the final two episodes as a double feature. Though Twin Peaks hadn’t been formally canceled, everyone involved knew the writing was on the wall. “As a phenomenon,” Mark Frost conceded a month before the season-two finale aired, “the show is over.”

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    Scott Meslow

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  • Eric Dane’s Most Memorable Roles: A Career to Rewatch

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    Many remember Dane as Dr. Mark Sloan, the instantly recognizable “McSteamy” of Grey’s Anatomy. But his career extended far beyond one nickname or one towel scene. Over two decades, Dane appeared in action thrillers, superhero films, prestige cable dramas, and romantic comedies, displaying a versatility that surprised viewers who only knew him from television.

    Grey’s Anatomy

    Dane joined Grey’s Anatomy as a guest star in 2006 and became a series regular by Season 3. That infamous towel scene, when Mark Sloan emerged from the shower, became a cultural moment, dubbed a “watercooler moment” by the show itself.

    But Dane’s performance was more than eye candy. Mark Sloan’s journey from a self-absorbed womanizer to a devoted father figure and Lexie Grey’s true love offered Dane an emotional arc rich with complexity. Over six seasons, he balanced charm, arrogance, vulnerability, and heartbreak in a way that made Mark Sloan a fully realized character. Dane left the show in 2012, ending one chapter of his career while setting the stage for new challenges.

    Euphoria

    As Cal Jacobs in Euphoria, Dane delivered one of his most intense performances. Cal is a closeted father whose repressed desires turn into predatory behavior. Dane’s portrayal required the ability to evoke both sympathy and discomfort, showing a man broken by shame who also harms others.

    Acting alongside Zendaya, Hunter Schafer, and Jacob Elordi, Dane’s work stood out in a series famous for its raw approach to trauma. He continued filming Season 3 even after his ALS diagnosis, with those episodes scheduled to premiere on April 12, 2026. Knowing his real-life circumstances adds an additional layer of admiration for his dedication and courage.

    The Last Ship

    After leaving Grey’s Anatomy, Dane took his first leading role in TNT’s The Last Ship, produced by Michael Bay. He played Navy Commander Tom Chandler, tasked with saving humanity after a global pandemic wipes out 80% of the population.

    The series, which ran from 2014 to 2018, combined action, leadership, and high-stakes drama. Dane carried the show with authority, portraying Chandler as both strong and human, capable of doubt, fear, and hope. Unlike other roles that emphasized his looks, here he anchored a show with gravitas, proving his range as an actor. In hindsight, the show’s pandemic storyline has a new resonance, highlighting the intensity of Dane’s performance.

    X-Men: The Last Stand

    Dane appeared briefly as Jamie Madrox, also known as Multiple Man, in Brett Ratner’s 2006 X-Men sequel. Playing a mutant who creates duplicates of himself, Dane was a henchman for Ian McKellen’s Magneto during the film’s climactic battle.

    Though small, the role demonstrates Dane’s willingness to embrace comic book and genre projects early in his career. It’s a reminder that he could navigate both serious drama and playful, imaginative worlds with ease.

    Marley & Me

    In Marley & Me (2008), Dane played Sebastian Tunney, a polished colleague who receives the more glamorous assignments while Owen Wilson’s character is left with mundane work.

    While the film focuses on John and Jennifer Grogan’s family life with a mischievous Labrador, Dane’s presence adds charm and subtle humor. He never overshadows the leads but enhances the dynamic, proving his ability to support and complement a story rather than dominate it.

    Burlesque

    In the 2010 musical Burlesque, Dane played Marcus, a wealthy developer threatening to buy and demolish the titular club. Starring Cher and Christina Aguilera, the film is flamboyant and campy, and Dane leans fully into the role of the slick villain.

    The movie required him to play a foil without undermining its over-the-top tone. He brought a grounded presence to a world of glittering costumes and big musical numbers, balancing charisma with menace.

    Bad Boys: Ride or Die

    His co-star Martin Lawrence reflected on working with Dane after his death, writing on Instagram: “My condolences go out to the family of @realericdane 🙏🏾 I can tell you firsthand — solid brotha, true professional, and brought that presence every single time. Much love! #ericdane #badboysfamilyforlife.” Knowing Dane was already experiencing early symptoms of ALS adds depth to his appearance in the film, showing his professionalism and commitment.

    Notable Mentions

    While Eric Dane is best remembered for roles like Mark Sloan in Grey’s Anatomy and Cal Jacobs in Euphoria, his career included many other projects that showcase his versatility. These performances may be less well-known but are worth revisiting.

    In television, Dane appeared in the mini-series Kabul (2025), a tense drama exploring conflict and human resilience, and Borderline (2025), where he played a complex character navigating moral gray areas.

    His film roles spanned genres and tones. In One Fast Move (2024) and Dangerous Waters (2023), he embraced action and suspense, proving again that he could carry high-stakes roles. In character-driven stories like Americana (2023), Little Dixie (2023), and American Carnage (2022), Dane delivered layered performances that balanced charm and emotional depth.

    Earlier in his career, Dane also appeared in The Ravine (2021) and the 2006 romantic comedy Wedding Wars alongside Jon Stamos, showing a lighter, approachable side to his work. Beyond these, Dane appeared in numerous supporting roles across television and film, consistently adding presence, nuance, and credibility to every project he joined.

    These roles serve as a reminder that while certain characters became iconic, Eric Dane’s career was built on steady dedication, range, and a willingness to take on a wide variety of stories.

    Final Performances and Legacy

    Dane’s final projects included Amazon’s Countdown (June 2025) and a guest role in NBC’s Brilliant Minds (November 2025), where he played a firefighter living with ALS. His portrayal of a character confronting the same disease he faced in real life was described by co-stars as “heartbreaking” and “brave.”

    In a 2025 interview with The Washington Post, Dane said, “I don’t really have a dog in the fight when it comes to worrying about what people think about me. This is more of a: ‘How can I help? How can I be of some service?’” He added, “If I’m going out, I’m gonna go out helping somebody.”

    Dane’s career was defined by range, courage, and dedication. From hospital hallways to high seas, from comic book battles to intimate family dramas, he left a lasting impression that goes far beyond one nickname. Rewatching his work now is both a tribute and a reminder of the talent, heart, and resilience Eric Dane brought to every role.

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  • Eric Dane, Star of Grey’s Anatomy and Euphoria, Dead at 53

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    Actor Eric Dane announced in April of 2025 that he had been diagnosed with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, which is also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. “I’m fighting as much as I can,” he said a few months later, shortly after finishing work on the third season of Euphoria, on which he played Cal Jacobs, the father to Jacob Elordi‘s Nate Jacobs. But ALS is an unrelenting and merciless degenerative disease, for which there is no cure. And on February 19, the 53-year-old actor died, after final days spent with friends and family.

    “With heavy hearts, we share that Eric Dane passed on Thursday afternoon following a courageous battle with ALS,” Dane’s family has said via a statement shared with media. “He spent his final days surrounded by dear friends, his devoted wife, and his two beautiful daughters, Billie and Georgia, who were the center of his world. Throughout his journey with ALS, Eric became a passionate advocate for awareness and research, determined to make a difference for others facing the same fight.”

    Dane was born on November 9, 1972, in San Francisco, California. He fell in love with acting as a youth, after he was cast in a high school production of All My Sons. He moved to Los Angeles after graduation to seek his fortune as an actor, but it took a while for Hollywood to catch on to his easy grin and athletic charm. Eventually, he started winning small roles in the TV shows of the day: Married… with Children, Saved by the Bell, and Roseanne.

    His big break was a recurring role in short-lived Y2K medical drama Gideon’s Crossing, followed soon thereafter by a central role in the later seasons of supernatural series Charmed. That combination of roles cemented Dane as the go-to for a certain type of sturdy and appealing television role, but it was his role as Dr. Mark Sloan beginning in the second season of Grey’s Anatomy that made Dane a household name—that, as well as his 2004 marriage to actor Rebecca Gayheart. Dane left the show six years later, in 2012, but reruns and syndication kept his lab-coated figure in the public eye long after that.

    While he worked consistently in the years since, it was his role on Euphoria that opened a new chapter in Dane’s career. As closeted Cal Jacobs, the seemingly perfect family man living a double life, Dane received some of the best reviews of his career. As Variety‘s Daniel D’Addario wrote in 2022, “Dane is simply spectacular” in the role, citing a Jacobs-centered episode as “a high-water mark for an exceptional series.”

    “I don’t know what it’s like to be Cal, but I know what it’s like to live a double life,” Dane told Vanity Fair in 2022. “I’ve had my own experience with drug and alcohol abuse. That’s a double life.

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    Eve Batey

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  • ‘Cross’ Season 2 episodes list: release schedule, complete episode guide

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    “Cross” Season 2 is currently in full flow over on Prime Video.

    It’s definitely worth watching as well, even more than the first season. The crime thriller television series has an impressive 93% approval rating on review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, compared with “Cross” Season 1’s still reasonable 76%.

    In “Cross,” Aldis Hodge stars as Alex Cross, a Washington, D.C. police detective and forensic psychologist. Together with his partner, Detective John Sampson (Isaiah Mustafa), he’s tasked with taking down some of America’s most dangerous killers.

    Prime Video’s much-talked about TV show, based on the popular Alex Cross novel series written by James Patterson, premiered on Amazon Prime Video on Nov. 14, 2024. Its ratings led Prime Video to commission a second: that eight-episode second season premiered Feb. 11, 2026.

    Where to watch ‘Cross’ Season 2

    “Cross” Season 2 is exclusive to Prime Video, requiring a subscription to the platform in order to watch.

    ‘Cross’ Season 2 Release Date

    “Cross” Season 2 premiered with its first three episodes on Feb. 11, 2026.

    ‘Cross’ Season 2 Episodes List

    Here are the eight episodes of “Cross” Season 2 and when they air.

    • Episode 1 – “Harrow”
      Wednesday, Feb.11, 2026
    • Episode 2 – “Scatter”
      Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026
    • Episode 3 – “Feed”
      Wednesday, Feb. 11, 2026
    • Episode 4 – “Episode #2.4”
      Wednesday, Feb. 18, 2026
    • Episode 5 – “Episode #2.5”
      Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026
    • Episode 6 – “Episode #2.6”
      Wednesday, March 4, 2026
    • Episode 7 – “Episode #2.7”
      Wednesday, March 11th, 2026
    • Episode 8 – “Episode #2.8”
      Wednesday, March 18th, 2026

    ‘Cross’ Season 2 Episode Stream Times – Release Schedule by Time Zone

    Here is when new episodes of “Cross” Season 2 start streaming across all US time zones.

    • Pacific Time (PT): Wednesday, 12:00 a.m.
    • Mountain Time (MT): Wednesday, 1:00 a.m.
    • Central Time (CT): Wednesday, 2:00 a.m.
    • Eastern Time (ET): Wednesday, 3:00 a.m.
    • Atlantic Time (AT): Wednesday, 4:00 a.m.
    • Newfoundland Time (NT): Wednesday, 4:30 a.m. 

    ‘Cross’ Season 2 Cast

    Aldis Hodge stars as Alex Cross in “Cross” Season 2, alongside Isaiah Mustafa as Detective John Sampson.

    Here’s the full cast list for “Cross” Season 2:

    • Aldis Hodge as Alex Cross, a Washington, D.C. police detective and forensic psychologist
    • Isaiah Mustafa as Detective John Sampson, Alex’s Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department partner
    • Juanita Jennings as Regina “Nana Mama” Cross, Alex’s grandmother
    • Alona Tal as Kayla Craig, an FBI agent who helps Alex while secretly involved with Detective Sampson
    • Samantha Walkes as Elle Monteiro, Alex’s love interest and executive director of a nonprofit organization
    • Caleb Elijah as Damon Cross, Alex’s son
    • Melody Hurd as Janelle “Jannie” Cross, Alex’s daughter
    • Jennifer Wigmore as Chief April Anderson, Chief of Police, Washington, D.C. Metro Police Department
    • Ryan Eggold as Ed Ramsey , a powerful and wealthy man in Washington, D.C. with secrets
    • Eloise Mumford as Shannon Witmer, a woman Ed meets through a dating app
    • Jeanine Mason as Rebecca, a woman targeting billionaires tied to human trafficking
    • Wes Chatham as Donnie, Rebecca’s partner in crime
    • Johnny Ray Gill as Bobby Trey, a former cop who now works for Ed
    • Matthew Lillard as Lance Durand, billionaire CEO of Crestbrook Industries
    • Matt Baram as Detective Bill Hardy
    • Mercedes de la Zerda as Detective Amielynn Vega
    • Stacie Greenwell as Detective Shawna De Lackner
    • Dwain Murphy as Detective Akbar
    • Siobhan Murphy as Tania Hightower, a journalist covering the murder investigations
    • Jason Rogel as Chris Wu
    • Chaunteé Schuler Irving as Maria Cross, Alex’s deceased wife
    • Sharon Taylor as Lieutenant Oracene Massey, Alex’s direct superior
    • Karen Robinson as Miss Nancy
    • Michelle C. Bonilla as Clare

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  • ‘Big Bang Theory’ actor secretly pays medical bills for struggling families

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    Kunal Nayyar lives in a constant state of gratitude.

    The “Big Bang Theory” actor – who portrayed Raj Koothrappali throughout the sitcom’s 12-season run – revealed a favorite pastime as he reflected on his own financial freedom.

    “Money … has given me greater freedom and the greatest gift is the ability to give back, to change people’s lives,” he said in a December interview with “The i Paper.”

    KATEY SAGAL’S SON, ‘TELL ME LIES’ STAR JACKSON WHITE, PRAISES MOM FOR ‘GETTING HER S— TOGETHER’

    Kunal Nayyar portrayed Raj Koothrappali throughout the 12-season run of “The Big Bang Theory.” (Sonja Flemming)

    In addition to funding university scholarships for young people from disadvantaged backgrounds with his “Christmas Karma” director Gurinder Chadha, the television star gives back to families in need.

    “We also support animal charities because we love dogs,” Nayyar said. 

    “But what I really love to do is go on GoFundMe at night and just pay random families’ medical bills. That’s my masked vigilante thing!” 

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    He added, “So, no, money doesn’t feel like a burden. It feels like a grace from the universe.”

    Kunal Nayyar walks red carpet

    Kunal Nayyar attends the photocall for Netflix’s “Spaceman” at The Egyptian Theatre Hollywood on February 26, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.  (JC Olivera)

    Nayyar also knows the value of community and the importance of helping others.

    “Right now people are not happy, because we are all expecting someone else to be kind,” he told the outlet. “We are expecting a president or a politician, some leader, to come and bring us world peace.” 

    He added, “But there is no world peace if your neighbour comes to your door wanting some sugar for their tea, and you lock it against them and say ‘get away’.”

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    Nayyar has a hard stance when it comes to politics: grace above all else.

    “People experience racism and sexism, all kinds of isms in this life, because of how narrow-minded people are,” he said. “For me, whenever I face hardship, I try to approach it with compassion and understanding, because I don’t believe you can change someone’s mind by beating them in the mouth.”

    This photo provided by CBS shows Melissa Rauch, from left, Simon Helberg, Johnny Galecki, Kaley Cuoco, Jim Parsons, Mayim Bialik and Kunal Nayyar in a scene from the series finale of "The Big Bang Theory." "Game of Thrones," "Veep" and "The Big Bang Theory," three major series that wrapped last season, will find out with Tuesday's nominations if they have one more chance at Emmy gold. (Michael Yarish/CBS via AP)

    Simon Helberg, Johnny Galecki, Kaley Cuoco, Jim Parsons, Mayim Bialik and Kunal Nayyar starred on the CBS sitcom. (Michael Yarish/CBS via AP)

    He added, “I think that, with grace, you can help heal their inner child. Whatever is screaming out inside of them, you can hold that and say: I am here with you.”

    During the peak of “Big Bang Theory” fame, Nayyar pulled in roughly $1 million per episode. At one point, he was one of the highest paid actors on television, according to Fortune

    While the “Spaceman” star amassed significant wealth and is worth a reported $45 million, he still faces challenging times. A one-word mantra provides Nayyar clarity.

    Kunal Nayyar wears black suit

    Kunal Nayyar attends the World Premiere of “Christmas Karma” at The Curzon Mayfair on November 12, 2025 in London, England.  (Dave Bennett)

    “Sometimes, if I find myself really banging my head against something, and it’s just one of those days where everything’s going wrong, I just tell myself surrender,” he said. “Take a breath. Take a pause. Let’s just see what happens.”

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    He added, “Our minds work in such a way where on a difficult day, it keeps going to the worst-case scenario. 

    “So in those moments, you have to really just look at your mind and say, stop. Take a breath. Surrender to this moment and let’s see what happens.”

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