House of the Dragon is coming back this summer for its third season of intrigue and fantasy warfare. The new trailer is here and the ScreenCrush crew has the full breakdown.
We’ll catch you back up on the events of Season 2 and the Targaryen civil war that is now underway. We’ll also explain how this all connects to Game of Thrones, how the House of the Dragon show differs from George R.R. Martin’s Fire & Blood book that served as the source material for this show, and the importance of the Battle of the Gullet, one of the most crucial turning points in the entire history of the Westeros.
First off: If you missed it, here is the actual Season 3 trailer:
If you liked that video on the secrets in House of the Dragon’s new trailer, check out more of our videos below including our full Game of Thrones recap up to A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, our breakdown of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Episode 5, and our breakdown of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Episode 1. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. House of the Dragon Season 3 premieres on HBO and HBO Max in June of 2026.
TV Shows We Used to Love That Are Cringe Now
We can’t say why we liked these shows, but we can certainly say why we can’t watch them now.
We know that Avengers: Doomsdayis going to feature Robert Downey Jr.’s Doctor Doom. It’s kind of right there in the title. You wouldn’t call the movie Doomsday and then have Earth’s Mightiest Heroes square off with Paste-Pot Pete. And the Doom storyline should continue into Doomsday’s sequel, Avengers: Secret Wars.
But what about after that? What other villains are left to feature in major roles in the Marvel Cinematic Universe? And is it possible that the next Marvel villain after Doctor Doom … could be Kang?
It’s unlikely, but it’s not impossible. And in our latest Marvel video, we’ll explore the possibility of a Kang return and discuss the other big theories about the future of Marvel villainy. Watch the full ScreenCrush staff discussion below:
If you liked that video on the Avengers’ future villains and the possible return of Kang (could it happen?), check out more of our videos below, including one on the X-Men’s role in Avengers: Doomsday, one on the full season of Wonder Man and all of its secrets and Easter eggs, and one on the secret cast members in Avengers: Doomsday. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday, is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
The fourth Avengers: Doomsdayteaser is here. (Here in this case means any theater showing Avatar: Fire and Ash.) After Steve Rogers, Thor, and the X-Men, the latest features a major Marvel crossover: Between the forces of Wakanda (including Letitia Wright’s Black Panther and Winston Duke’s M’Baku) and the Fantastic Four (namely Ebon Moss-Bachrach’s Thing). Plus Tenoch Huerta Mejia’s Namor is there as well.
So what brings these huge Marvel characters together? What are they talking about? What’s their Marvel comics history, and what does it mean for the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe? In our latest Avengers: Doomsday breakdown video, we’ll discuss the latest teaser and all the theories around it. We’ll give you all the info we’ve got about Doctor Doom’s plans for the Avengers’ kids, exactly what universe’s Wakanda and Fantastic Four we’re looking at, and how all of this might also connect to Shang-Chi and his Ten Rings.
If you liked that video on the fourth teaser for Avengers: Doomsday and Doctor Doom’s master plan, check out more of our videos below, including one on the third teaser for Avengers: Doomsday, our full breakdown of the Avengers: Doomsday X-Men teaser, and our full breakdown of the Avengers: Doomsday Thor teaser and what it means for the MCU’s future. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday, is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
After Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro’s capture, social media users rapidly shared videos showing Venezuelans celebrating.
But many of these videos predated his arrest by the U.S. military. One in particular — from conspiracy theorist Alex Jones — stood out, receiving 2 million views as of Jan. 5.
“Millions of Venezuelans flooded the streets of Caracas and other major cities in celebration of the ouster of Communist dictator Nicholas Maduro,” Jones posted Jan. 3 on X along with a video showing hordes of people gathered outside, chanting and waving the Venezuelan flag.
The same video was shared July 30, 2024, on X and Instagram. It shows people protesting election officials’ declaration that Maduro had won the country’s presidential election. Venezuelan politician Tomás Guanipa also shared the footage in a 2024 Instagram post in which he called on the National Electoral Council to publish the presidential election results. A Dominican Republic news outlet also reported on the footage.
Maduro and wife Cilia Flores were both forcibly taken into U.S. custody Jan. 3 and made their first appearance in U.S. federal court Jan. 5, facing charges related to cocaine trafficking. Maduro and Flores each pleaded not guilty.
In some parts of the world, Venezuelan expatriates celebrated Maduro’s ousting. He led an authoritarian regime for 13 years and declared victory after a 2024 election that international observers described as fraudulent. The country’s opposition candidate, Edmundo González Urrutia, received about 70% of the vote.
However, anti-Maduro sentiments were muted in Venezuela’s streets following the U.S. raid and capture, reporting from the country shows. Maduro’s inner-circle, including his vice president, who has now been sworn in as Venezuela’s interim president, appeared to remain in leadership roles, raising citizens’ concerns about possible retaliation. Fortune reported that the streets of Caracas were largely quiet in the days following the U.S. attack that led to Maduro’s capture, save Maduro supporters who publicly condemned his arrest. The Associated Press shared footage of a quiet Caracas after the U.S. operation.
Jones wasn’t alone in sharing outdated or out of context video as proof Maduro’s capture had sparked widespread celebration inside Venezuela.
President Donald Trump shareda video Jan. 5 of Venezuelans gathering with the caption, “Trump just showed every liberal Democrat what a real No Kings celebration is supposed to look like.” But the footage was first shared in 2024 and showed people in El Vigía, Venezuela, cheering Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado’s movement.
YouTuber Nick Shirley posted a video on X Jan. 3 that he also said showed celebrations in Venezuela. But the Miami Herald and other local news outlets said the scene was filmed Jan. 3 in Doral, Florida.
And a widely shared Jan. 3 X post showed video of someone tearing a Maduro poster from a Venezuela billboard. But that scene was captured in July 2024 in an Aragua, Venezuela, protest against election fraud, according to a Venezuelan news outlet.
Our ruling
Jones said a video showed “millions of Venezuelans flooded the streets of Caracas” to celebrate Maduro’s capture.
The footage dates back to 2024 when citizens protested election officials’ declaration that Maduro had won the country’s presidential election. News coverage shows Venezuelan streets were largely quiet following U.S. attacks in Caracas.
The following video contains spoilers for the end of Stranger Things. Actually, it would be kind of funny to release a spoiler-free breakdown of the series finale of a TV show. Every single shot is blurred out and every line of dialogue is censored and it’s just 25 incomprehensible minutes. That would break the YouTube algorithm for sure.
Welcome to 2026! It’s a lot like 2025, but even worse.
But at least Stranger Things went out in grand fashion, with a massive series finale that answered a lot of our questions, closed many storylines …. but still left room for an upcoming spinoff series that we already know is coming to Netflix in the near future.
What’s the spinoff going to be about? How did “The Rightside Up” tie a bow around Stranger Things’ five-season arcs for all its heroes? What were the Easter eggs you missed? In our latest Stranger Things video, we’ll break it all down for you. Watch it below:
If you liked that video on the grand finale of Stranger Things and what it means for the upcoming spinoff show, check out more of our videos below, including one on all the Easter eggs and secrets in the second batch of episodes from the final season of Stranger Things, one on all the Easter eggs and secrets in the first batch of episodes from the final season of Stranger Things, and one recapping all of Stranger Things from Season 1 through 4. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. Stranger Things Season 5 is now on Netflix. In fact, the entire series from start to finish can now be binged if you want to go really deep into the Upside Down.
Forgotten Animated Disney Movies That Deserve Another Look
From groundbreaking CGI animated movies to lesser-known traditionally hand-drawn gems, here are 11 Disney movies that deserve to be rediscovered.
The following post contains spoilers for the third Avengers: Doomsday trailer. Can you spoil a trailer? Debatable. But we’re warning you anyway.
The first Avengers: Doomsdayteaser reintroduced Steve Rogers. The second focused on Thor and his daughter, Love. The third … is all about the X-Men.
While it mostly features Patrick Stewart’s Professor X and Ian McKellen’s Magneto, the part that really has our attention is the stuff with Cyclops, played by James Marsden, and finally wearing his classic Jim Lee X-Men costume in live-action for the very first time. The trailer shows Cyclops screaming in rage, unleashing a massive optic blast, surrounded by the ruins of the X-Mansion. Look closely and you’ll even see the legs of a massive Sentinel robot.
There’s only one thing that could get this character this mad — and it basically confirms everything we suspect about the plot of Avengers: Doomsday. Our latest Marvel breakdown video goes through the X-Men Doomsday teaser, and explains how it reveals Doctor Doom’s master plan and connects the entire Marvel multiverse. Watch it below:
If you liked that video on on the third teaser for Avengers: Doomsday, check out more of our videos below, including our full breakdown of the Avengers: Doomsday X-Men teaser, our full breakdown of the Avengers: Doomsday Thor teaser, and one on the first teaser for Avengers: Doomsday and what it means for the MCU’s future. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
The following post contains spoilers for the first Avengers: Doomsday trailer. Can you spoil a trailer? Debatable. But we’re warning you anyway.
The first teaser for Avengers: Doomsday is playing in theaters starting today; you can see it in front of screenings of Avatar: Fire and Ash. As of this writing, it’s not available online — but ScreenCrush has seen it and we are here to give you a full breakdown of what this teaser contains and what that means for the film and the future of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
Most importantly: The teaser is all about Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers, who “retired” from superheroism at the end of Avengers: Endgame, but is the only Marvel hero onscreen in this Doomsday teaser. (The teaser even ends with the phrase “Steve Rogers Will Return in Avengers: Doomsday.”) It also shows Steve’s Endgame costume, and it also reveals Evans holding a baby — apparently the child of Steve Rogers and Peggy Carter.
Want to know whether Steve has ever had a baby in the comics? Want to know what Marvel animated film starred a child of Captain America? Watch our full Doomsday teaser breakdown below:
If you liked that video on the first teaser for Avengers: Doomsday and what it means for the MCU’s future, check out more of our videos below, including one on all the clues about Avengers: Doomsday in Avengers: Endgame, one on the latest theory about Spider-Man: Brand New Day’s villain, and one on the latest rumors about the Avengers: Doomsday trailer. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
After Superman, the next movie in the new DC Universe is Supergirl. This version of the classic DC character, played by Milly Alcock, is based on a very specific comics storyline, Supergirl: Woman of Tomorrow by writer Tom King and artist Bilquis Evely. If you know that book, you know this story. If you don’t, well, you are in for some really fun surprises.
But there’s a lot more to Supergirl’s history than just that one story, and a lot of it is reflected in the first trailer for the new film. In our latest DC video, we’ll tell you everything you need to know about Supergirl, and we’ll point out all the DC Easter eggs, hidden references, and little details you might have missed in the Supergirl trailer. Did you catch the reference to the original Christopher Reeve Superman? We did.
If you liked that video on all of the cool DC Easter eggs in the trailer for the new Supergirl film, check out more of our videos below, including one on why versus movies are bad, our video interview with DC’s James Gunn (!), and one on the Season 2 finale of Peacemaker and how it sets up the future of the new DC Universe. Plus, there’s tons more over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. DC’s Supergirl is scheduled to open in theaters on June 26, 2026.
’80s Foods We Wish They Still Made
If you grew up in the 1980s, you surely have fond memories of these popular (now discontinued) snacks.
We know that Spider-Man: Brand New Daytakes place in the New York City we saw in the first season of Daredevil: Born Again. We also know that Jon Bernthal’s Punisher will appear in the film, along with Mark Ruffalo’s Hulk. What we don’t know yet is who the main villain of the film will be — but some clues about the cast, and some early photos from the set give us some very big hints about their identity.
In our latest Marvel Cinematic Universe video, we’ll lay out our latest theory about Spider-Man: Brand New Day’s villain, and explain how it connects to Daredevil: Born Again, the She-Hulk TV series and, most importantly, the Tom Hardy Venom movies.
If you liked that video on the latest theory about Spider-Man: Brand New Day’s villain, check out more of our videos below, including one on the latest rumors about the Avengers: Doomsday trailer, one on all of the clues that Tony Stark was always Doctor Doom in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, and our breakdown of the one scene that made the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe work. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026. Spider-Man: Brand: New Day is scheduled to open in theaters on July 31, 2026.
Screenshot of a video published by Santiago de Cuba Catholic Priest Leandro NaungHung (right) showing the needs of his congregation in the aftermath of Hurricane Melissa.
Leandro NaungHung, You Tube.
After Hurricane Melissa ravaged eastern Cuba last month and left thousands stranded without a home, a number of church groups, private business owners, activists, artists and social media influencers have been traveling to some of the worst-hit areas, recording powerful accounts of the state of abandonment and destitution that make up everyday life in the country’s remote rural areas.
One after another, photos and videos coming out of eastern Cuba show undernourished, men, women and children dressed in rags, often with no shoes and living in makeshift homes. The images reveal not simply the destruction caused by the powerful storm, but the calamitous effects of the economic crisis gripping the country.
“I have nothing to feed my child. He has anemia, he is sick,” Rosa del Carmen Lopez, a resident of Chavaleta, a rural village in Mayarí, in the province of Holguín says in a video shared by Cuban journalist José Luis Tan Estrada. As she complains about what the hurricane did to her home, the camera shows a one-room shack with no bathroom or kitchen, no windows, the sunlight filtering through the gaps in the wooden roof and walls. Clothes are piled on the floor and on a bed she said she had to borrow. As her toddler cries, she said he has scabies because she has no water or soap to wash him with. They will soon need to leave the shack, which is not hers, she said.
“What am I supposed to do?” she asks. “Sleep with this child on the road? I have nothing because they don’t want to help me,” she said, referring to local authorities and a social worker she said she reached out for help with no success.
A video shared by the Cuban Observatory of Human Rights, a Spain-based non-governmental organization, shows a family with a child with special needs living in similar precarious conditions, in a hut that lost its roof to the storm. The boy’s mother said she receives 2,500 Cuban pesos monthly — about $5 — in government assistance, not enough to cover his medications.
“During the delivery of aid in the provinces affected by the hurricane, we have found families living in truly inhumane conditions,” the Observatory said. “This is not about the effects of the hurricane, but about decades of impoverishment and neglect by the state.”
The organization recently published a survey estimating that 89% of Cuba’s population lives in extreme poverty.
“When we say that 89% of Cuban households live in extreme poverty, it is not just a headline or another statistic; it is the lived reality for millions of Cubans,” the Observatory said.
Long before Melissa hit the island, Cubans across the country have been sharing videos highlighting their deteriorating living conditions.
There are images of residents in the city of Matanzas collecting water from a hole in the street because they said they lack a regular water supply. Many other photos show Havana streets covered in garbage.
There are photos of a group of children sleeping on the street near a luxury hotel in Havana that created such an uproar that authorities responded — not by addressing the levels of homelessness and poverty, as many people on social media suggested, but by charging the parents with neglect.
Bárbara García Jiménez, a Havana resident, says she has not received treatment for her genetic disease in several years. “Here, if you don’t have money, you have nothing,” she told the Miami Herald. Courtesy.
And there’s Barbara García Jiménez showing in a video the tumors covering her body and how she lives with her two children in a decrepit house with the roof on the brink of collapse. In a low voice without looking at the camera, she asks viewers for help “within your means.” Two massive tumors hanging from her buttocks suggest she has not gotten medical attention.
In a video call from Havana, García Jiménez, 36, said she has had no treatment for her genetic condition, neurofibromatosis, in 12 years.
“Here, if you don’t have money, you have nothing,” she said. “Nothing happens if you don’t know someone. At the good hospitals, if you don’t have someone to guide you, you can’t do anything. You go, and they tell you they can’t treat you because they don’t have the resources. “
She lives with her two sons and her grandmother, who all have the same illness. She said she receives 2,600 pesos, about $6, in social assistance.
“That’s not even enough for me to buy a package of chicken, or the medicines I need,” she said. “I made the video because I am in pain. I don’t feel well, and I have no help.”
Alarming poverty levels
The authors of the recent book “The Real Impact of Sanctions on Cuba and Venezuela,” published by Sergio Arboleda University in Colombia, note that policies that began after Fidel Castro handed power to his brother Raúl in 2006, such as the reduction in government assistance and the lack of investment on healthcare and education, have increased inequality, poverty and mortality on the island.
Under the government of Miguel Díaz-Canel, living conditions on the island have sharply worsened. That’s due in part to external factors — including the COVID-19 pandemic, the decrease in subsidies from Venezuela and tightened U.S. sanctions — as well as the chronic inefficiency of a socialist planned economy “that has failed everywhere,” along with poorly designed monetary policies that have fueled skyrocket inflation, prominent Cuban-American economist Carmelo Mesa-Lago wrote in the book.
Central to the crisis is “the inability of the Cuban economy to finance its imports of goods with its own exports due to the fall in domestic production,” he added.
Mesa-Lago, professor emeritus at the University of Pittsburgh, provided an astounding figure in the book: Since the U.S. embargo began in 1961, Cuba has received about $238 billion in Soviet and Venezuelan subsidies, debt forgiveness and money sent from abroad to families in Cuba.
That’s almost 1.8 times the amount of assistance the U.S. provided Western Europe after World War II as part of the massive Marshall Plan, he wrote, and vastly greater than the $20 billion the U.S. gave to Latin America during the two decades the Alliance for Progress launched by President John F. Kennedy was in place.
And still, he added, “Cuba is currently experiencing the worst economic, political and social crisis in its history.”
The Cuban military conglomerate GAESA, which controls large segments of the economy, has played a significant role in the impoverishment of the population, stashing as much as $18 billion in secret bank accounts and directing the country’s foreign currency revenue away from social spending and investments on agriculture and other key areas to build hotels for tourists, reporting by the Miami Herald shows.
As a result, the country’s poorly maintained infrastructure is crumbling all at once, and authorities struggle to provide basic public services. The electrical grid has collapsed several times since last year, and hours-long daily blackout are the new normal.
“We don’t have enough fuel for electricity generation, water supply, hygiene control and proper food distribution,” Díaz-Canel acknowledged in October, blaming “the war without bombs we are facing,” a reference to the U.S. embargo.
He has recently insisted his government’s policies have not made the country a failed state. The proof, he said, is that no one died because of the hurricane thanks to the government’s evacuation orders.
Then, in an unscripted moment during his tour of some of the affected areas, he revealed his government’s inability to provide immediate help to those in need. A woman in the town of Cauto Embarcadero, where many lost their homes and belongings because of the flooding, told him: “We don’t have beds nor mattresses.” A visibly annoyed Díaz-Canel snapped at her: “And I just told you that I don’t have any to give you.”
He then added that she needed to wait for donations.
But the government has been slow delivering donations made by foreign governments and the United Nations, especially to the most remote areas in eastern Cuba, where members of an artists’ group called La Familia Cubana and others have been delivering aid donated by Cubans in Havana and Miami.
https://www.facebook.com/reel/2226181714533249
Videos published by those delivering aid from the Catholic Church, the private sector or concerned citizens show some of the poorest people affected by the storm have been sleeping among the rubble inside their destroyed homes, with nowhere to go. Tents usually provided in disaster relief efforts in other countries are conspicuously absent from the images.
In a series of videos posted by Santiago de Cuba priest Leandro Naung Hung, chronicling his visits to small rural villages to distribute aid after the hurricane, there is also little sign of any help other than what he is able to provide: spaghetti, canned food, a few nails to a resident whose shack was hit by a tree during the storm.
Indeed, his videos show few signs of the government’s presence, or of modern life, for that matter, as residents of small communities in Santiago de Cuba provice – El Desierto, San José, Gran Piedra – live without running water, kitchens or toilets in makeshift homes and huts that have not changed much from those Fidel Castro denounced in the 1950s as one of the reasons for his revolution.
A bony old woman living in a hovel that lost its tin roof in the San José community told the priest the hurricane caught her “sleeping.”
“We ate early and went to bed to wait for it,” she said. She told him the government gave her some tiles in 2008 for the roof, then Hurricane Sandy in 2012 destroyed everything.
“From then on, we haven’t been able to rebuild,” she said.
Cuba is ‘bankrupt’
Just days before Hurricane Melissa wrecked eastern Cuba, damaging over 90,000 homes, destroying roads and bringing down the electrical grid and telecommunications, a group of economists gathering in Miami had warned that the island’s economy had hit rock bottom.
Experts gathered at the annual conference of the Association for the Study of the Cuban Economy at Florida International University presented figures based on official data that illustrate the economic collapse: between 2019 and 2024, the island’s gross domestic product decreased by 11%, agriculture declined by 57% and trade by almost 30%.
“The Cuban economy is bankrupt… and the Cuban authorities are taking measures that do not favor a change in these trends,” said Omar Everleny Pérez, an economist based in Cuba.
The island’s economic collapse is best illustrated by sugar production figures. Cuba, once known for being the main sugar producer in the world, is now forced to import it.
The latest sugar harvest, which began in 2024, produced less than 150,000 tons — the worst in more than 100 years, even smaller than when Cubans fighting the Spanish were burning sugarcane fields during the war for independence in the 19th century. Since 2019, sugar production has collapsed 87%, according to figures based on official data compiled by Pérez.
Crops of Cuban cuisine staples like rice are at a minimum. In 2023, the last figure available, Cuba produced just 57,766 tons of rice, down from over 700,000 in 2003. State companies produced only 42,000 tons of milk in 2023, less than during the “Special Period,” the economic crisis during the 1990s caused by the downfall of the Soviet empire.
The collapse of agricultural production has led to the end of one of the symbols of Castro’s revolution: Food ration cards. “The cards still exist, but you can’t get any products,” Pérez said.
The end of food subsidies have hit pensioners and those dependent on the country’s welfare system the hardest. The government recently raised state monthly pensions to a maximum of 4,000 pesos, about $8.60, at a time when a carton of eggs sells for as much as 3,000 pesos in Havana, according to the National Statistics Office of Cuba.
In 2021 the price of a carton of eggs was 400 pesos, one of the signs that inflation has skyrocketed.
The consumer price index, a measure of inflation, has grown 487% over its 2010 value. That means, for example, that a family of two would need 51,798 pesos monthly, equivalent to $105, to cover food, transportation, clothing, personal care and internet expenses, according to a very conservative estimate presented by Pérez. The average monthly salary of a state worker is 6,685 pesos — about $14 — Cuba’s National Statistics Office said last week.
The crisis has been brewing for years, but the government has resisted any significant reforms out of fear of losing political control.
There was consensus among the economists gathered at FIU that the government needs to urgently enact much needed and overly delayed market-oriented reforms, even if they disagree on how far to go in a transition to capitalism.
And yet, the words “reform” or “change” do not appear in the 92 pages of the “Government program to correct distortions and reboot the economy,” a voluminous plan with more than 700 goals that Cuban authorities published ahead of Hurricane Melissa.
The words “to propose” — more plans, more new measures, more updated policies —appear 55 times in the document that reads at times as a rushed to-do-list written by a government bureaucrat. And yet, there is little actually new in the proposals, many of which have been already floated by the country’s prime minister, Manuel Marrero, including more austerity measures and cutting back the welfare system. Absent in the document is any revamp of the country’s laws to expand the private sector and attract foreign investment, or a sense of urgency to meet some of the population’s most pressing needs.
As is customary, the plan will now undergo several rounds of discussions.
Those affected by Melissa, however, need help immediately.
While delivering aid sent by his followers to those in need in Holguín, Norge Ernesto Díaz Blak, an influencer known as Noly Blak who has long documented extreme poverty in that eastern province, stopped to speak to a distressed, emaciated young mother with four children he found on the street in Cacocún. Her home was destroyed by the hurricane, she told him.
“What do you need?” he is heard asking in a video he posted on his social media account.
“I don’t want anything for me,” she replied. “What I need is food for my children.”
Nora Gámez Torres is the Cuba/U.S.-Latin American policy reporter for el Nuevo Herald and the Miami Herald. She studied journalism and media and communications in Havana and London. She holds a Ph.D. in sociology from City, University of London. Her work has won awards by the Florida Society of News Editors and the Society for Professional Journalists.//Nora Gámez Torres estudió periodismo y comunicación en La Habana y Londres. Tiene un doctorado en sociología y desde el 2014 cubre temas cubanos para el Nuevo Herald y el Miami Herald. También reporta sobre la política de Estados Unidos hacia América Latina. Su trabajo ha sido reconocido con premios de Florida Society of News Editors y Society for Profesional Journalists.
According to the latest rumors, we should finally see the first trailer for Avengers: Doomsdayin front of next month’s Avatar: Fire and Ash. But what is going to be in that trailer?
There are a lot of rumors about that as well. Are there upwards of 30 different cuts of the trailer out there? Could there be variants (even female variants) of Doctor Doom? Will Jonathan Majors return as Kang? Will Hugh Jackman show up to tease the return of Wolverine? Will dogs and cats finally live together, inciting mass hysteria?
Marvel fans: Take a breath. It’s gonna be all right. In our latest MCU video, we separate the fact from the fiction in all the rumors swirling around the Avengers: Doomsday trailer, and what they mean for the future of the movie and Marvel as a whole. Watch it below…
If you liked that video on all the latest rumors about the Avengers: Doomsday trailer, check out more of our videos below, including one on all of the clues that Tony Stark was always Doctor Doom in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, our breakdown of the one scene that made the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe work, and one on all of Marvel’s teases of their upcoming TV slate from New York Comic-Con. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
Freddy Vs. Jason. Alien vs. Predator. Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice. Even Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man. On paper, these movies sound great. If one classic character or monster is good, then two squaring off in a winner-take-all rumble should be epic. What more could you possibly want out of a grand cinematic spectacle than that?
A lot, as it turns out. Which raises a question: How come so many of these movies stink?
That’s the subject of our latest video, where we look at what all of these versus movies have in common, and why so many of them are bad. Once we pinpoint the problem, we’ll try to figure out if there’s any way to fix these things — or explain why they should just stop once and for all. Watch our full versus movie breakdown below:
If you liked that video on why versus movies are bad, check out more of our videos below, including our video interview with DC’s James Gunn (!), one on the Season 2 finale of Peacemaker and how it sets up the future of the new DC Universe, and one on the single most important scene in all of Batman mythology. Plus, there’s tons more over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The entire run of Peacemaker Seasons 1 and 2 are currently available to stream on HBO Max.
’80s Foods We Wish They Still Made
If you grew up in the 1980s, you surely have fond memories of these popular (now discontinued) snacks.
Hurricane Melissa grew to a Category 5 hurricane Oct. 27 as it neared Jamaica, but videos that social media users claim show the storm making landfall are deceiving — it wasn’t on shore yet when the videos were posted.
An Oct. 26 TikTok video shows footage of intense flooding, wind and property damage, and, occasionally, people screaming in English in the background.
“Hurricane Melissa Category 5 hits Jamaica with 160 mph winds right now,” says text on the video, which had 1.8 million views as of the afternoon of Oct. 27.
Other users on TikTok and Threads also shared the video.
The Associated Press reported that Melissa could be the strongest hurricane Jamaica has experienced in decades. One advisory said the hurricane had maximum sustained winds of 160 miles per hour, as the TikTok says, but the footage in the post was taken from previous disaster events.
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Video shows 2018 storm in Maratea, Italy
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The first clip shows high waves topping a safety wall and moving inland, but this footage isn’t from Jamaica. When doing a reverse image search, PolitiFact found the video is from a 2018 storm in the small town of Maratea, Italy. We found a newscast and a report about the storm from the Italian news outlet Potenza News24 City. Getty Images also published the same footage in 2018 about Maratea.
Video showing red vehicles isn’t from Jamaica
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The second clip in the TikTok that shows strong winds and two red vehicles also isn’t from Jamaica. The footage appeared in another misleading video shared in August and supposedly from Cheyenne, Wyoming. However, the earliest version of the clip online is from a June 21 TikTok post that says it was from Hurricane Erick in Ometepec, Mexico.
Video shows storm in Veracruz, Mexico
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The clip where a palm tree falls on a gray SUV wasn’t in Jamaica either. PolitiFact found the same video shared on Facebook in May with a Spanish subtitle saying it was because of a storm in the Universidad Tecnológica del Centro de Veracruz in Veracruz, Mexico. A TikTok user also shared the footage in May, saying it was in the same Veracruz university in Mexico.
Video shows a storm in Oklahoma
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The footage that shows high winds and an SUV getting hit by leaves was originally shared June 5 on Facebook by Mike Morgan, Oklahoma’s News 4’s (KFOR-TV) chief meteorologist. Morgan said this was a “weaker tornado” that hit Garvin County.
Videos shows footage of 2018 Hurricane Michael
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The clip of strong winds and rain blowing through what looks like the entrance to a parking garage is from 2018. Dan Robinson, a storm chaser, filmed the clip during Hurricane Michael in Panama City, Florida.
Video shows storm in Moncalieri, Italy
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The video that shows high winds hitting a street and a white SUV parked under a roof dates back to an August 2024 Facebook post. The caption says in Italian that it is from a storm in Moncalieri, Italy, according to Google Translate.
Video shows flooded streets in Palermo, Italy
(Screengrab from TikTok post.)
The last clip of cars driving through flooded streets also isn’t from Jamaica. One of the cars has a European Union license plate, and a reverse image search found the footage is from flooded streets in the city of Palermo, Italy, after heavy rains in June. An Italian news report shows the same video.
We rate the claim that this video shows Hurricane Melissa hitting Jamaica on Oct. 26 False.
It ain’t just mean old clown. This creature has a far more complicated backstory, one you might not know if you haven’t read Stephen King’s novel, or might not remember if you haven’t seen the It films in a while.
If so, we’re here to help. Our first Easter egg breakdown for the new series It: Welcome to Derry, will point out all the hidden details and little Stephen King references you might have missed in the pilot — which is appropriately titled “The Pilot.” Not only is this the pilot episode of the show, but it introduces us to Welcome to Derry’s main character, Leroy Hanlon who works as a pilot. Plus, we’ll discuss the show’s connections to The Music Man, and which characters and locations in the show are from the It movies and even from other Stephen King novels like The Shining.
If you liked that video on all the Easter eggs in the series premiere of It: Welcome to Derry, check out more of our videos below, including one on how every single Stephen King movie (and story) is connected in one universe, one on every Easter egg and secret in the Castle Rock TV show, and a ton of Stephen King movie trivia you might not know. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. It: Welcome to Derry premieres weekly on HBO and HBO Max.
Every Marvel Cinematic Universe Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best
It started with Iron Man and it’s continued and expanded ever since. It’s the Marvel Cinematic Universe, with 37 movies and counting. But what’s the best and the worst? We ranked them all.
Every Stephen King story is connected in the same fictional universe (or multiverse if you want to get technical about it). But that also means that every Stephen King film adaptation is also connected, even when they are made by different filmmakers, or released by separate companies, or even if there are multiple versions of the stories in multiple films.
Don’t believe us? Check out our latest Stephen King video ahead of the series premiere of the new King TV show It: Welcome to Derry. We’ll break down exactly how every Stephen King movie — from The Shining to The Shawshank Redemption to Stand By Me — all link up via a web of characters, locations, monsters, and powers. We’ll even discuss that Dark Tower movie starring Idris Elba. It may be kind of awful, but it’s also awfully important to how these Stephen King stories are united.
If you liked that video on how every single Stephen King movie (and story) is connected in one universe, check out more of our videos below, including one on every Easter egg and secret in the Castle Rock TV show, a ton of Stephen King movie trivia you might not know, and our comparison of The Long Walk movie and book, and how they differ. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. It: Welcome to Derry premieres on HBO Max on October 26.
Every Marvel Cinematic Universe Movie, Ranked From Worst to Best
It started with Iron Man and it’s continued and expanded ever since. It’s the Marvel Cinematic Universe, with 37 movies and counting. But what’s the best and the worst? We ranked them all.
Darkseid is not coming to the new DC Universe any time soon.
That’s according to James Gunn himself, who is interviewed on the latest episode of the ScreenCrush Crossover Universe podcast. And the dude would know; he’s the co-CEO of DC Studios after all.
“Using Darkseid as the big bad right now is not necessarily the thing,” Gunn told us. As for why, he explained “For a lot of reasons: Because Zack [Snyder] did it so cool in his way. And because [of] Thanos in Marvel.”
We also grilled James Gunn about the multiverse, the end of Season 2 of Peacemaker, how it will set up the next batch of stories in the DC Universe, what he likes about the Salvation Run comics, and what he is bringing to his version of the story. He also spilled the beans about the upcoming Mr. Miracle TV show — the pilot episode is written and sitting on Gunn’s desk, waiting to be read.
If you liked that video interview with DC’s James Gunn (!), check out more of our videos below, including one on the Season 2 finale of Peacemaker and how it sets up the future of the new DC Universe, one on the single most important scene in all of Batman mythology, and one on all of the Easter eggs in the season premiere of Peacemaker. Plus, there’s tons more over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The entire run of Peacemaker Seasons 1 and 2 are currently available to stream on HBO Max.
’80s Foods We Wish They Still Made
If you grew up in the 1980s, you surely have fond memories of these popular (now discontinued) snacks.
You know how when Kevin Feige and the Russo brothers announced that Robert Downey Jr. was playing Doctor Doom, they said Downy was the only guy who could play Doctor Doom in the Marvel Cinematic Universe? What did they mean by that? That could have just been a compliment to an actor who was so fundamental to the success of the MCU. But that also could have been a hint that for the story they were going to tell, Doctor Doom had to look exactly like Tony Stark, or maybe even that Tony Stark was Doctor Doom all along.
That’s the subject of our latest Marvel video. It’s all about something you might have heard of: The Tony Stark Adoption Theory. In the video below, we’ll explain what the theory is and how it could work within the already established continuity of the MCU, including events seen in Captain America: Civil War and Avengers: Endgame. Once you know where to look for the clues, they’re definitely there — and they could make things very interesting when Doctor Doom debuts in the upcoming Avengers: Doomsday.
If you liked that video on all of the clues that Tony Stark was always Doctor Doom in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, check out more of our videos below, including our breakdown of the one scene that made the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe work, one on all of Marvel’s teases of their upcoming TV slate from New York Comic-Con, and one on the MCU characters that might get erased or reset during Avengers: Secret Wars. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
The Marvel Cinematic Universe really shouldn’t work. It’s too big and too complicated with too many different moving parts that need to be kept in the air at all times. In order to make it work you need a cinematic juggler as good as Kevin Feige to keep all the pieces where they need to be — and you need very important scenes that, especially in the MCU’s beginning, helped to ground the reality of this heightened world.
In our latest Marvel video, we take a look at one of those scenes — maybe the single most important scene in the 15+ history of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It comes from 2012’s The Avengers, and it was the moment that brought everything that the MCU could be together for the very first time. See the scene, and learn why it was so vitally important to everything Marvel has done ever since, below:
If you liked that breakdown of the one scene that made the entire Marvel Cinematic Universe work, check out more of our videos below, including one on all of Marvel’s teases of their upcoming TV slate from New York Comic-Con, one on the MCU characters that might get erased or reset during Avengers: Secret Wars, and one on the untold story of Doctor Doom and Kang. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
The ScreenCrush team was in the room for all these teasers, some of which have yet to appear online. So we’ll tell you what we saw — including the return of Ultron and the MCU debuts of Paladin and Speed from the Young Avengers — and what it all means for the future of the MCU. Plus, we’ll discuss what they showed from Daredevil: Born Again Season 2 and the little slip Charlie Cox might have made that suggests he is going to appear in Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
If you liked that breakdown of all of Marvel’s teases of their upcoming TV slate from New York Comic-Con, check out more of our videos below, including one on the MCU characters that might get erased or reset during Avengers: Secret Wars, one on the untold story of Doctor Doom and Kang, and one on the latest plot details about Avengers: Doomsday. Plus, there’s tons more videos over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The next big Marvel multiverse movie, Avengers: Doomsday , is scheduled to open in theaters on December 18, 2026.
The following post contains SPOILERS for the end of Peacemaker Season 2. Why anyone would want to read a finale breakdown for a TV show without spoilers, thus necessitating a spoiler warning, we will never know. Nonetheless, there it is.
Now that PeacemakerSeason 2 is done, we’ve got a much better idea about where this show — and all of the DC Universe — is headed. The new DCU now has its own version of Checkmate, which is a huge group in the history of DC Comics. And we’ve also got some hints about Lex Luthor and his exo-suit, which is seemingly coming to live-action for the first time very soon. (Can’t wait to see that green and purple armor.)
In our latest DC video, we break down the big Peacemaker finale. We’ll show you all the Easter eggs you missed — like the minor characters from Peacemaker who popped up in small roles and the shoutout to Monty Python and the Holy Grail — and speculate about how this all directly leads into the Superman sequel, Man of Tomorrow.
If you liked that video on the Season 2 finale of Peacemaker and how it sets up the future of the new DC Universe, check out more of our videos below, including one on the single most important scene in all of Batman mythology, one on all of the Easter eggs in the season premiere of Peacemaker, and one on Superman’s early launch on digital and what it means for the future of movie theaters. Plus, there’s tons more over at ScreenCrush’s YouTube channel. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes. The entire run of Peacemaker Seasons 1 and 2 are currently available to stream on HBO Max.
’80s Foods We Wish They Still Made
If you grew up in the 1980s, you surely have fond memories of these popular (now discontinued) snacks.