Jump to content
Treacys Family and Friends Community
News Ticker
  • plain text ticker
  • This is a custom ticker

All Activity

This stream auto-updates

  1. Past hour
  2. Photo Credit: HUGO MATHY/AFP via Getty Images Sex and the City’s Kristin Davis recalled the time she was mean to co-star Bridget Moynahan on the show’s set and apologized for the same. The former did so in a recent interview with the latter, where they discussed their time on the show. In the romantic comedy drama, Davis played Charlotte York, the best friend of Sarah Jessica Parker’s Carrie Bradshaw. Meanwhile, Moynahan essayed Natasha Naginsky, Carrie’s rival for the affections of Mr. Big, Natasha’s husband, who had a recurring role in the original series and a guest role in its sequel, And Just Like That… Kristin Davis says she wasn’t ‘that nice to’ Bridget Moynahan on Sex and the City set In a recent interview, Kristin Davis apologized to Bridget Moynahan for being mean to her on the Sex and the City set. The Melrose Place alum told Moynahan on the former’s Are You A Charlotte? podcast that she would typically “try to proactively be friendly” with the show’s guest stars, who were primarily men. “Because it is such a scary situation,” she added. Davis said she couldn’t do the same for Moynahan, as the latter’s character, Natasha, was Carrie Bradshaw’s “nemesis” and the former had unintentionally “internalized Charlotte’s worldview.” “I don’t think I was that nice to you,” Davis continued. “I feel really bad about that, Bridget.” Bridget held no resentment toward Davis and accepted the latter’s apology. “It’s OK now, don’t worry,” she said. The Serendipity actress later recalled how she and Davis would cross paths at the gym. She noted she was initially confused by the latter’s kind behavior. Davis responded, “By then, we weren’t in our characters anymore, and I could just be a normal person.” Davis explained she felt “so silly” about the fact that her on-screen persona bled into her off-screen one. “I was less forgiving if you were somebody that I felt like was threatening my friend,” she explained. Davis added that “time and distance” helped her understand how to separate her work and personal life. Moynahan then discussed fans’ opinions of Natasha. The Blue Bloods star stated how they thought she was an obstacle in their shipping of Big and Carrie. “I actually said out loud sometimes, ‘No, she was having an affair with my husband,'” she further stated. “Let’s break this down.” The post Sex and the City’s Kristin Davis Apologizes to Bridget Moynahan for Being Mean on Set appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  3. Today
  4. Photo Credit: Paramount Plus After a promising run, fans are now curious about Reunion Season 2. However, will it even happen? The show aired on BBC One in April 2025 and focused on Daniel Brennan, a character recently released from prison who is trying to understand the story behind his conviction. With season 1 now over, here are the details about Reunion Season 2. Has BBC canceled Reunion or renewed it for Season 2? BBC has neither renewed nor canceled Reunion Season 2. This is because the show was developed as a miniseries. The episodes cover the entire story that the creators wanted to tell. Therefore, it is highly unlikely that the BBC will greenlight another season. However, it should be noted that Reunion performed well with the fans with its unique storyline. The official synopsis of the show reads, “Recently released prisoner Daniel Brennan embodies the struggle of a man caught between two worlds, unable to fully integrate into the hearing world and shunned by his closest friends and the wider deaf community following his heinous crime. Amidst this isolation, Brennan’s only meaningful relationship is with his estranged daughter Carly, whom he has not had any contact with since his arrest over a decade ago.” The process of renewing shows is similar for every production house. They assess viewer ratings and the potential for future storylines. Given that the story has ended, there is a possibility that if renewed, Reunion Season 2 could focus on an entirely new character and develop as an anthology series. Talking to Deadline, the show’s creators discussed the future. They said, “My hope is that Reunion encourages commissioners and production companies to create space for other deaf people to come forward and tell their stories… I’m ready to start that ascent again with Warp Films. I have a couple of new projects in development with them, one of which explores more aspects of the deaf experience.” (via Deadline) This might mean that if not Reunion Season 2, the creator might produce another project similar in theme and tone. In the US, Reunion aired on Showtime. They may collaborate with the BBC to create a new installment after a successful Season 1. All in all, everything depends on an official statement from the creators. The post Has Showtime’s Reunion Season 2 Been Canceled or Renewed? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  5. Photo Credit: CBS via Getty Images Fans of CSI: Crime Scene Investigation have long wondered why rookie investigator Holly Gribbs, played by Chandra West, disappeared from the show so suddenly. Now, in a special 25th-anniversary interview, CSI creator Anthony Zuiker finally spilled the tea on why Holly’s time on the show was cut so short. Anthony Zuiker explains why Chandra West’s Holly Gribbs was killed off on CSI In a conversation with TV Insider, Anthony E. Zuiker revealed that Holly was originally meant to be one of the show’s main characters, but not everyone was on board. There was tension early on about whether Chandra West’s look fit the image of a gritty crime scene investigator. Zuiker recalled an executive even questioning, “Is someone this good-looking really going to be a CSI?” Trying to make it work, the team attempted to “rough up” Holly’s appearance, make her look less polished and more in line with the show’s tone, but it still didn’t sit right with the higher-ups, and they were told to “get rid of her.” So, in the second episode, fittingly titled “Cool Change,” Holly dies from a gunshot wound. Zuiker added, “She was the vehicle for the audience. She was the way into the show. She comes in first day of work, she goes, talks to Grissom, and she eats the grasshopper. She was literally Screenwriting 101, Teleplay 101, ‘Audience, come with me. Let me introduce you to the world.'” He further shared that since he was a “new writer” on TV, he “fell for that trope” and that “it was a good mechanic.” Zuiker continued, “In the end, I felt like if she’s new and the audience is new to forensics, what a great matchup for the audience to play along with her. But she got caught up in the politics of casting, and it worked out for us in the end, but she kind of got a raw deal.” However, Holly’s death opened the door for a new character to join the team. “Sara was born the second Chandra got fired,” Zuiker said, referring to Jorja Fox’s fan-favorite character, Sara Sidle. She quickly became a core part of the CSI universe, spanning many seasons and story arcs. The post CSI Creator Reveals Why Holly Gribbs Died After Only 2 Episodes appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  6. Photo Credit: Apple TV+ Kristen Wiig, despite her stature in the industry, is not a stranger to being starstruck, and that is exactly what happened when she met comedy legend Carol Burnett. Wiig appeared in the newest episode of Amy Poehler’s podcast Good Hang, where she discussed meeting Burnett for the first time and the effect it had on her. Kristen Wiig says she ‘cried’ after meeting her Palm Royale costar Carol Burnett In an appearance on Amy Poehler’s podcast Good Hang, Kristen Wiig discussed her Apple TV+ series, Palm Royale, which will soon debut with a second season. Among other greats of comedy like Ricky Martin, Laura Dern, Josh Lucas, and Allison Janney, the series also features Carol Burnett, a legend of the comedy scene and a Hollywood icon. Kristen Wiig discussed in the podcast how she felt when she met the 92-year-old icon for the first time. “[There’s] so many things I could say about Carol,” Wiig gushed, “When I met her, I just fully cried.” She recalled the incident, “I was not expecting it… Except for when my kids were born and I saw them and I cried, I can’t remember a time when I just, I didn’t think I was gonna cry, and then it just, like, burst out of my eyes. I wasn’t expecting it.” She continued, “I watched her as a kid,…[She’s] so important to us, and the fact that she just did it as a woman, during that time, and so many people said no.” Carol Burnett is by far one of the most successful comedy actors of all time. Her achievements include seven Golden Globe Awards, a Grammy Award, seven Primetime Emmy Awards, twelve People’s Choice Awards, two Peabody Awards, and a Tony Award, among others. Apart from these, she also received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2005, the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor in 2013, and the Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award in 2015. Interestingly, Burnett still remains active in the industry despite her age. She recently appeared in Hacks and will reprise her role in the upcoming season of Palm Royale. The post Kristen Wiig Recalls Bursting Into Tears After Meeting Comedy & Hollywood Icon appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  7. Photo Credit: Paramount Pictures Elisabeth Moss shared that she almost passed on the opportunity to act in Shell due to her surprise pregnancy. During a recent interview, she recalled her conversation with the movie’s director, Max Minghella, who’s also her co-star from The Handmaid’s Tale. Elisabeth Moss called Shell’s director to drop out after learning about her pregnancy During an interview with Parade, The Handmaid’s Tale star recalled finding out that she was pregnant a few months before shooting for Shell began. Moss shared how the conversation went with the movie’s director, Max Minghella. “I had to call. He was one of the first people I told that I was pregnant,” she recalled. “We had to talk about the movie. I had to tell him because I had to be like, ‘I can’t do the movie. I’m so sorry. I don’t know what to tell you, but it’s not going to happen.’ And he said, ‘What do you mean?’ And I was like, ‘Well, I’m pregnant.’” While Moss believed that she was delivering the bad news, Minghella took the news in a positive way. “After, of course, much conversation about that, he said, ‘Well, what do you mean you can’t do the movie?’” the Emmy-winning actress shared. “And I said, ‘What do you mean, can I?’ And he said, ‘Yeah, let’s talk about this.’” The two then reworked the film’s shooting schedule as Moss was in her second trimester at the time. Moss said, “Obviously, I wasn’t my normal body shape. So we had to think, ‘OK, how does that affect the character? Does that affect the story?’” The Invisible Man actress continued to state how her pregnancy helped shape her character, Samantha Lake, in the movie. She said, “It was kind of perfect because, obviously, the movie deals with female image in Hollywood, and female expectations, and how you’re supposed to look as an actress, and what’s considered beauty, and this kind of old-fashioned construct.” She further added, “We didn’t want to make it about weight or body shape or body size. That wasn’t what the shell treatment does. It’s not a weight-loss treatment. We didn’t want to make it that, but it was kind of great because I was able to play a person who was more of a normal size.” The post Elisabeth Moss Almost Didn’t Do Shell Due to Surprise Pregnancy appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  8. Photo Credit: CBS Are you wondering who is leaving and joining the cast of The Young and the Restless this week? The show continues to captivate its audience, featuring fresh plot developments, recognizable characters, and poignant narratives set in Genoa City. As viewers prepare to watch during the week of October 6–10, there is considerable interest regarding which characters may be arriving or departing. This could involve an unexpected return or a startling departure. So, here’s a closer look at who’s leaving or joining The Young and the Restless team this week. Everyone who is leaving and coming to The Young and the Restless’ cast this week Here is a comprehensive list of characters coming in Young & Restless from October 6 to October 10, 2025. Coming: Lauralee Bell (Christine Blair) With Blair joining this week, Christine and Danny (Michael Damian) are about to take a major step forward in their relationship. This week, the longtime couple faces some big decisions about their upcoming wedding, setting the stage for emotional moments and familiar reunions. Tricia Cast (Nina Webster) Christine’s best friend, Nina, is making her way back to the city just in time for the wedding festivities in November. The Daytime Emmy-winning actress, who first appeared in 1986 and was last seen in 2024, returns to support her close friend as wedding bells begin to ring. Michael Damian (Danny Romalotti) Danny has plenty on his plate! This includes not only preparing to marry Christine, but he’ll also have to face a heartfelt reunion with his former singing partner and past flame, Lauren. Expect nostalgia and plenty of sparks as old memories resurface. Cait Fairbanks (Tessa Porter) Tessa returns to town carrying important news for Sharon. After uncovering details about Mariah’s business trip that triggered her emotional struggles, she steps back into the picture with updates that could shift things for them. Jess Walton (Jill Foster Abbott) Jill is back in action, and she’s bound to be in the middle of the soap’s biggest dramas. From receiving jaw-dropping updates from Victor to handling unfinished matters with Nikki, Jill will even catch Jack off guard with an unexpected visit to Jabot. Patty Weaver (Gina Romalotti) Danny’s sister, Gina, is also back on the scene. Additionally, she’ll also be part of the family celebration as her brother Danny prepares to tie the knot. Her appearance promises a dose of classic charm and old-school energy that longtime fans will love. Going: There will be no one leaving The Young and the Restless this week. This means viewers can expect the drama in Genoa City to intensify, with no major departures shaking things up. With familiar faces coming, the storylines are likely to deepen, leading to more emotional twists and character-driven moments. The post Who Is Leaving & Coming to Young & Restless This Week (October 6-10)? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  9. Photo Credit: Netflix Netflix released Monster: The Ed Gein Story on October 3, 2025, which resurfaced several details about a real-life serial killer. The third season of this anthology series centers around Ed Gein, the man who was found guilty of killing two women. The show spanned back to his early days when he was living on a farm with his brother, Henry, who had died in 1944. Fans are confused whether Ed is the one who killed his brother or not. Did Ed Gein kill his brother Henry in real world? No, there is no definitive proof that Ed Gein is the one who killed his brother Henry. However, Monster Season 3 on Netflix portrays something else. Netflix showed that Ed and Henry, while working at the farm, argued about leaving their mother, Augusta, behind. Henry was the one who questioned her behavior and laid it out to Ed. Soon, things escalated, and Ed ended up hitting Henry in the head with a wooden object that accidentally killed him. Later, he set the place on fire to cover up for his crime. However, police reports in real life suggest otherwise. Henry’s death was ruled as asphyxiation caused by inhaling the smoke from the fire, and not blunt force trauma. This means that officially, Ed Gein had nothing to do with his brother Henry’s death. But many loopholes in the story have led fans to question what is right and what is wrong. Various investigators later came forward to reveal that Ed initially claimed not knowing where Henry was at the time the fire was spreading. But when they reached the location, he led them straight to Henry’s body. Another thing to note is the defense, that is, Ed never confessed to killing his brother. During the interrogation that followed for the killings of Mary Hogan and Bernice Worden as well, he did not accept that he had killed Henry, although he confessed to his other murders. (via USA Today) To this date, Henry’s death is considered accidental. But the discrepancies in the story are what make the entire thing doubtful to fans. The post Monster Season 3 Makes Fans Question if Ed Gein Killed His Brother Henry appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  10. Photo Credit: Vinnie Zuffante/Archive Photos via Getty Images Charlie Sheen opened up about feeling “awful” while hanging out with his brother Emilio Estevez‘s Brat Pack during the ‘80s. Although he wasn’t interested in acting jobs, he said that looking at the pack inspired him to become an actor. He stated that he wanted to be “part of all of the perks” that the job came with. Charlie Sheen says it ‘felt awful’ being around Emilio Estevez’s Brat Pack During the Conan O’Brien Needs A Friend podcast, the Hot Shots! actor recalled his life prior to becoming famous. Sheen shared that he used to hang out with his older brother, Emilio Estevez’s, Brat Pack, a group of young actors in the ‘80s. However, he never felt good about it. “It felt awful,” Sheen said. “I felt like I was just taking up the rear. I felt like a valet on certain nights.” Sheen went on to say that despite being “in the mix” and hanging out in VIP lounges with popular celebrities, he never received the same attention from women that others in the group did. “It felt the worst when [they got] all the attention from all the pretty girls, and they would all go home with them, and I would just go home,” Sheen recalled. He referred to his new book The Book of Sheen, and said, “I think there’s a line in the book that my inner bear had been poked, and it lit a fire, and you could see it from the f—— moon.” The Two and a Half Men star continued to share that he wanted to be a “part of all the perks”. “I didn’t give a s— about acting,” Sheen admitted. “I wasn’t looking at that, just like, if I can just get a job that, you know, everybody lines up to go see, then that’s how my nights will end. That kind of was the inspiration.” Sheen recently released his memoir, The Book of Sheen, along with the Netflix documentary aka Charlie Sheen in September. The post Charlie Sheen Recalls Feeling ‘Like a Valet’ Around His Brother’s Brat Pack appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  11. Photo Credit: @Snl | YouTube Former Saturday Night Live (SNL) stars Punkie Johnson and Chloe Troast recently shared their experiences of being fired from the show. They attended the farewell party with the cast at the Riff Raff Club in New York City. In a recent interview, the duo discussed their lives after leaving the series. Here is everything you need to know about the latest interview with the former cast of the longest-running reality show. Punkie Johnson and Chloe Troast talk about life after getting fired from SNL Punkie Johnson and Chloe Troast opened up about their lives after being fired from SNL. In an interview with PEOPLE, Troast shared how the show “fundamentally changed” her life. However, she found it “really hard” adjusting following her time on the comedy series. The 28-year-old stated, “You don’t get a cushion when you fall,”. Moreover, she expressed gratitude towards her family and friends for their support. She continued, “Even before the show, they were the ones that were a guiding light, and so then that’s what I looked to after. And I feel like without that, I don’t know where I would be one year out, to be honest,”. On the other hand, Johnson claimed that SNL “mad put the pressure on you.” The 40-year-old noted, “you can’t leave SNL and then go do the same things you was doing before.” She continued, “It just put the pressure on you because everybody always like, ‘Yo, what’s next? What’s next?” The comedian exclaimed, “So you feel like you have to go do the next big thing.” Johnson added she needed “to understand the difference between, all right, cool, you did something really great. And now it’s okay for you to just go through the motions and just no rush and figure out what’s next for you. It’s okay for you to figure that out.” She described the show as “a different monster, a different beast,” but found the experience worth it. Johnson concluded, “I feel like I could go out in Hollywood and handle anything because I handled every piece of adversity that went on in that building. I don’t think nothing could really break me no more because they honestly really built me up and made me strong mentally.” The post Former SNL Stars Open up About Getting Fired from Live Comedy Series appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  12. Photo Credit: Warner Bros. Pictures Elijah Wood recently shared new insights about The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum and teased the return of familiar faces from Middle-earth. He spoke about the movie’s strong continuity with the original trilogy, its creative team, and the returning cast members involved in the 2027 release. The actor, best known for playing Frodo Baggins, revealed these details during his appearance at Mexico’s DesertCon. Elijah Wood suggests The Hunt for Gollum will have ‘so many people’ from old Lord of the Rings movies Speaking at Mexico’s DesertCon, Wood praised the film’s behind-the-scenes continuity, saying, “It is really getting the creative band back together. The brain trust behind Lord of the Rings, Fran, Peter, Philippa, they are heavily involved.” He added that “the same production designers” are returning and that the film “is going to be shot in New Zealand,” noting it will feature “so many people who are a part of Lord of the Rings.” Directed by Andy Serkis, the movie adapts parts of J.R.R. Tolkien’s appendices. It follows Gandalf’s quest to find Gollum after learning he may have shared secrets about the One Ring with Sauron. Serkis will both direct and play Gollum. Sir Ian McKellen and Elijah Wood will return as Gandalf and Frodo. Warner Bros. moved the release from December 2026 to December 2027, with production starting in early 2026 in New Zealand. Wood’s comments have fueled speculation that more Fellowship members could return. Viggo Mortensen’s Aragorn and Liv Tyler’s Arwen play key roles in the story’s timeline. In Tolkien’s appendices, Aragorn helps Gandalf track Gollum, hinting at Mortensen’s possible return. Addressing rumors of his own return, Orlando Bloom said on the Today Show, “I have not heard a peep, actually. I don’t know. I know it’s focusing on Gollum, so anything’s possible.” He added, “I’d hate to see anyone else play Legolas, you know what I mean? What are they going to do? Are they going to put somebody else in as Legolas?” Bloom previously starred in all six Middle-earth films and earned several awards for his portrayal. Originally reported by Anubhav Chaudhry on SuperHeroHype. The post New Lord of the Rings Movie to Feature Several Cameos per Elijah Wood appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  13. Hello Latino USA Listeners! We’re excited to share a special episode from our friend, Honey German from Gracias, Come Again. Honey sits down with the legendary Maria Hinojosa - an award-winning journalist whose career began in 1993 with one clear mission: to make Latinos visible. From her early days in radio to founding Futuro Media and leading Latino USA, Maria has spent decades amplifying our stories and holding power accountable. Maria opens up about her fight to ensure the current administration doesn’t silence her voice or her initiatives, why she and Futuro Media reject terms like “minority” and “illegal,” and why she’s calling on Latino journalists to take responsibility for how they represent our community in the news. As she reminds us, “Basic due process is being tested on our backs!” But it’s not all heavy they also share laughs about life with her Dominican husband, how she keeps herself fit and grounded, and the passion that continues to drive her work. This episode is both a masterclass in journalism and a powerful reminder of what it means to fight for visibility, dignity, and truth. ✊🏽✨ Listen here and subscribe to Gracias, Come Again with Honey German on the iHeartRadio app or wherever you get your podcasts! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. View the full article
  14. Photo Credit: @GeneralHospitalOfficial/YouTube via ABC General Hospital fans are going wild over the Gio and Brook Lynn storyline. The revelation of Gio being the biological son of Brook Lynn Quartermaine and Dante Falconeri, who gave him up for adoption when Brook was a teenager. The decision left Gio feeling deeply hurt and betrayed by Brook for giving him up. As such, he refused to forgive either of his parents and was angry at both. While their relationship is currently progressing, it is a slow and ongoing process. Now, his reaction has sparked debate among fans, with many hoping he should forgive Brook Lynn. General Hospital fans desperately want Gio to forgive Brook Lynn General Hospital fans are debating whether Gio should forgive Brook Lynn. Gio is unsure about his decision and still feels hurt and betrayed for being given up as a baby. Fans, however, are eager to see him and Brook reconcile. The show’s official fan page on Facebook sparked discussion by asking if Gio should forgive her, and many fans responded, hoping he would eventually do so. The post received a strong reaction from fans, many of whom want to see Gio consider the fact that Brook was a teenager when she gave him up. “I think he will once he has had more time to process and understand. Right now, he still feels betrayed and lied to and rightly so,” one fan wrote. Another said, “Yes, and everything she didn’t know about, he shouldn’t hold it against her. He’s losing out on precious time.” Another commented added it won’t happen quickly as Gio needs time to process, “He will eventually. It’s a process though not gonna happen overnight.” Fans also pointed out they both need each other now more than ever, with one user commenting, “Yes, I think he’s finally realizing that Brook Lynn isn’t the enemy. I wish he’d pick up that violin he rocked he was pretty cool.” While fans want Gio to forgive Brook, he hasn’t done so yet. He seems to be struggling with the emotional impact of the lie, as his life has turned upside down following the revelation of the truth. The post General Hospital Fans Debate if Gio Should Forgive Brook Lynn for Giving Him Up appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  15. Photo Credit: ABC Ronnie’s arrival in town last week turned up the heat in Port Charles. This week, viewers will see several intriguing characters returning to the show, intensifying rivalries and stirring emotions. From long-awaited comebacks to shocking departures and storylines that promise high-stakes drama, here’s who’s joining and leaving General Hospital this week. List of everyone who is joining and leaving General Hospital’s cast from October 6-10 This week on General Hospital, new twists continue to unfold as Spinelli digs deeper into Nathan’s return, while Josslyn comes back to Port Charles. Tensions rise across multiple storylines, secrets begin to surface, and familiar faces reappear, adding emotional depth and unexpected turns. Find out which fan-favorite characters are making appearances on the show this week. Coming Bryce Durfee (WSB Agent Vaughn): Agent Vaughn will make an appearance as Josslyn Jacks (Eden McCoy) returns to Port Charles this week. His arrival adds tension to Josslyn’s storyline and introduces a new layer to her overseas connection. Nazneen Contractor (Justine Turner): Justine Turner will also return this week as Sonny (Maurice Benard) faces the assistant district attorney once again. Expect intense courtroom exchanges and confrontations that could shift ongoing power dynamics. Michael E. Knight (Martin Gray): Attorney Martin Gray will appear in some heated scenes, particularly while dealing with disputes involving Tracy (Jane Elliot). His involvement could influence several unfolding legal and family conflicts. Bradford Anderson (Damian Spinelli): With Nathan West’s (Ryan Paevey) recent return, Spinelli continues to seek answers to his questions. His investigation might expose unexpected truths that connect multiple storylines. Leaving Robert Gossett (Marshall Ashford): After accepting an invitation from a promoter, Marshall will leave town to head back on tour. With several recurring characters returning, General Hospital fans are in for a dramatic week. Be sure to tune in to this week’s episodes to catch every intense moment of the storyline. The post Who Is Leaving & Coming to General Hospital This Week (October 6-10)? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  16. Photo Credit: Netflix Netflix’s Monster: The Ed Gein Story has brought audiences face-to-face with one of the most disturbing killers in American crime history. With that, they have also come to know how this Wisconsin killer has inspired many iconic films and TV shows. So, here’s a look at five movies and TV shows inspired by Ed Gein’s dark legacy. List of 5 movies and TV shows that Ed Gein inspired The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) Tobe Hooper’s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre took heavy inspiration from Ed Gein’s gruesome history. While Leatherface wields a chainsaw — a detail not drawn from real life — his masks made of human skin and the meat hooks used on victims echo Gein’s crimes. The isolated farmhouse, disturbing props, and rural horror setting all mirror the killer’s eerie Wisconsin home. Psycho (1960) Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho revolutionized horror cinema, and its central character, Norman Bates, is rooted in Ed Gein’s psychological makeup. Like Gein, Bates had an obsessive, unhealthy relationship with his mother. After her death, he begins to embody her persona, leading to murder and madness. The film’s claustrophobic motel and the infamous “mother” reveal both draw directly from Gein’s life and crimes. The Silence of the Lambs (1991) The influence of Ed Gein is unmistakable in The Silence of the Lambs. The character Buffalo Bill, who makes women’s suits from the skin of his victims, is a reflection of Gein’s own macabre habits. While Hannibal Lecter provides the film’s intellectual menace, Buffalo Bill embodies the physical horror rooted in Gein’s legacy. Deranged (1974) Deranged is one of the most faithful cinematic interpretations of Ed Gein’s life. The film tells the story of a reclusive man who turns to grave-robbing and murder after his domineering mother’s death. The macabre details — from human-skin furniture to jars of preserved body parts — are recreated with unsettling accuracy. American Horror Story: Asylum (2012) FX’s American Horror Story: Asylum introduced Dr. Oliver Thredson — a chilling composite of Hannibal Lecter, Buffalo Bill, and Ed Gein himself. A respected psychiatrist by day and a murderer by night, Thredson crafts objects from human flesh, echoing Gein’s morbid creativity. The post 5 Movies & TV Shows Inspired by Monster’s Ed Gein appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  17. Photo Credit: Peacock Days of Our Lives fans are eager to know who is leaving or joining the cast lineup for this week. As always, the show is set to deliver another exciting week full of dramatic developments and intriguing moments. So, here’s a list of all the cast shakeups for this week on Days of Our Lives. List of everyone who is joining and leaving Days of Our Lives’ cast from October 6-10 Matthew Ashford as Jack Deveraux Jack arrives in Salem this week to accompany his wife, Jennifer (Melissa Reeves), for her interviews for The Spectator. Reports suggest that he will share much of his screen time with his son, JJ (Casey Moss). Fans speculate that JJ might take this opportunity to open up to his father about the troubling thing Theo (Tyler Joseph Andrews) said. Cary Christopher as Thomas DiMera This week will also see Thomas get significant screen time. Spoilers indicate that he will confront his father, Chad (Billy Flynn), about Rachel (Alice Halsey). Thomas will declare that Cat (AnnaLynne McCord) is his girlfriend and finally come clean about lying that they were just friends. Kennedy Garcia as Felicity Greene Fans will also see more of Felicity this week on Days of Our Lives. According to spoilers, she will share scenes with her sister Cat when they meet up in Horton Town Square. Autumn Gendron as Charlotte DiMera Charlotte will get more screen time this week as well. She will appear during the arrival of her grandparents, Jack and Jennifer, in Salem. Melissa Reeves as Jennifer Rose Horton Deveraux Jennifer arrives in Salem this week, and reports confirm she will share many scenes with Kayla (Mary Beth Evans). She will receive advice from Kayla on a crucial matter. Additionally, Jack and Julie (Susan Seaforth Hayes) will be there to celebrate Jennifer’s 40 years in Salem. Michael Roark as Jeremy Horton After making his Days of Our Lives debut last Friday, actor Michael Roark returns as Jeremy. This week will see the character reunite with his former love interest Stephanie (Abigail Klein). Thaao Penghlis as Tony DiMera This week will see the Kiriakis family confront Tony after the arrival of Xander (Paul Telfer), Philip (John-Paul Lavoisier), and Maggie (Suzanne Rogers) at the DiMera mansion. For now, Days of Our Lives will not witness any major cast departures. The show will continue to maintain a steady lineup, with only a few notable arrivals connected to the ongoing storyline. The post Who Is Leaving & Coming to Days of Our Lives This Week (October 6-10)? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  18. Photo Credit: A24 Dwayne Johnson recently reacted to the disappointing box office debut of The Smashing Machine. The actor addressed the film’s underperformance and reflected on his experience portraying MMA legend Mark Kerr. Dwayne Johnson reacts to The Smashing Machine’s terrible box office debut Dwayne Johnson addressed The Smashing Machine’s poor box office debut in an Instagram post shared on October 6, 2025. The A24 biopic, directed by Benny Safdie, opened to $5.9 million domestically, marking the lowest opening of Johnson’s career so far. Despite the financial setback, Johnson expressed deep gratitude to audiences who watched the film and reflected on his transformative experience portraying UFC legend Mark Kerr. Johnson wrote, “From deep in my grateful bones, thank you to everyone who has watched ‘The Smashing Machine.’ In our storytelling world, you can’t control box office results — but what I realized you can control is your performance, and your commitment to completely disappear and go elsewhere.” He added, “It was my honor to transform in this role for my director Benny Safdie. Thank you brother for believing in me. Truth is this film has changed my life.” The film grossed below the reported projections of $8-15 million. Produced for $50 million, A24’s drama follows Kerr’s career and struggles with opioid addiction. Emily Blunt co-stars as Dawn Staples, Kerr’s wife, in the film, which premiered to critical acclaim at the Venice Film Festival, where Safdie also won Best Director. The Smashing Machine earned approximately $6 million in its domestic opening from 3,345 theaters, with no international revenue reported (via Box Office Mojo). The film made $2.7 million on Friday, $1.84 million on Saturday, and $1.43 million on Sunday, averaging $813 per theater on the first day. It marked one of the weakest box office openings in Dwayne Johnson’s career. The Smashing Machine is now playing in theaters nationwide. The post The Smashing Machine’s Dwayne Johnson on the Movie’s Disappointing Opening Weekend appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  19. Photo Credit: Stephen Shugerman | Getty Images Ken Jacobs, the pioneering voice of American avant-garde cinema known for his decades-long influence on experimental film, has died at the age of 92. His son, director Azazel Jacobs, confirmed that the legendary artist passed away on Sunday in Manhattan from kidney failure. Avant-garde filmmaker Ken Jacobs dies at 92 Over a career spanning more than seven decades, Ken Jacobs reshaped the boundaries of film as an art form. His approach often used found footage and manipulated imagery, which earned him the reputation of being a “titan of American experimental cinema,” as described by Film at Lincoln Center. Reportedly born in Brooklyn, Jacobs began his artistic journey in painting under abstract expressionist Hans Hofmann before venturing into film. The 1960s New York underground scene became his canvas, where he collaborated with fellow avant-garde icon Jack Smith on groundbreaking works like Blonde Cobra (1963) and Little Stabs at Happiness. Jacobs’ first film, Orchard Street (1955), captured the bustling life of Manhattan’s Lower East Side, setting the tone for his lifelong fascination with the textures of city life and human experience. The filmmaker’s contributions extended beyond the screen. Alongside his wife and creative partner, Florence “Flo” Jacobs, he co-founded the Millennium Film Workshop in 1966. It is an institution that empowered generations of independent filmmakers. He also taught cinema at Binghamton University for years, where he helped establish one of the first departments dedicated to avant-garde cinema. Ken Jacobs’ family releases statement Following his death, Azazel Jacobs issued a statement and revealed that his father continued to create until his final days. “He worked on his art every day, completing some final ‘eternalisms’ on the day he went to the hospital,” Azazel said. (via Variety) He also shared that Ken’s wife, Flo, his “collaborator” since 1960, passed away on June 4, adding, “Life without his collaborator and partner…was unimaginable for so many, especially him.” Now, Jacobs’ legacy is carried on by his son, Azazel, and his daughter, artist and musician Nisi Ariana. The post Filmmaker Ken Jacobs Dies at 92, Family Issues Statement appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  20. Now that the season is over, we’ll start seeing several players choose to become minor league free agents. Major League free agents (i.e. players with six-plus years of big league service time) will hit the open market five days after the end of the World Series, but eligible minor leaguers can already start electing free agency. To qualify, these players must have been all outrighted off their team’s 40-man rosters during the 2025 season without being added back. These players also must have multiple career outrights on their resume, and/or at least three years of Major League service time. We’ll offer periodic updates over the coming weeks about many other players hitting the market in this fashion. These free agent decisions are all listed on the official MLB.com or MILB.com transactions pages, for further reference. Catchers David Bañuelos (Orioles) Sandy León (Braves) Ali Sánchez (Red Sox) Infielder Emmanuel Rivera (Orioles) Outfielder Joshua Palacios (White Sox) Pitchers Nabil Crismatt (Diamondbacks) Angel Perdomo (Athletics) Tayler Scott (Astros) Wander Suero (Mets) Bruce Zimmermann (Brewers) View the full article
  21. Photo Credit: @GeneralHospitalOfficial/YouTube via ABC General Hospital fans have seen Drew lash out before, but actor Cameron Mathison says things are about to get even messier. After Monica Quartermaine’s death, Drew’s emotions spiral when he discovers she’s cut him out of her will. According to Mathison, this betrayal is a brutal blow for Drew, one that digs deep into his lifelong tussle with family, rejection, and identity. Cameron Mathison on how Drew will respond to being left out of Monica’s will in General Hospital Drew’s upcoming explosive reaction to Monica’s will isn’t about money; rather, it’s about feeling unwanted. Cameron Mathison told Soap Opera Digest that Drew’s anger is rooted in a lifetime of being cast aside. “Part of the reason that Drew is as lost as he is and is doing a lot of things that he’s doing is because of that lack of sense of family,” he explained. After all, for Drew, Monica wasn’t just another Quartermaine, as she was the Quartermaine who truly embraced him. “She basically adopted him. She called him son, and he called her his mother,” Mathison shared. That’s why her death, especially after their fallout, hits Drew harder than anyone realizes. Not getting the chance to make peace with her only adds to the heartbreak. So, learning he’s been excluded from the will pushes him over the edge. “He really…feels that after not being invited to the memorial, and then being cut out of the will, the Quartermaines never considered him part of the family,” Mathison revealed. “And there’s a lot of pain and…a lot of anger around that — and he’s definitely going to let them know it!” he added. As for whether this loss will make Drew reflect or soften, Mathison says absolutely not. People keep saying, “This is Drew’s chance to come around and finally see the error of his wrong ways,” he quipped. “But..that’s not happening – not as far as I can see, or anytime soon. It’s Drew against the world, and Drew against the Quartermaines, specifically.” In short, General Hospital fans shouldn’t expect Drew’s redemption; rather, revenge is most likely to be served. The post General Hospital’s Cameron Mathison Teases Drew’s Predictable Response to Monica’s Will appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  22. http://blogs.fangraphs.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/USATSI_27263484.jpgEric Hartline-Imagn Images PHILADELPHIA – If the lesson to learn from Game 1 of the NLDS is that nobody’s perfect, the lesson to learn from Game 2 is that some pitchers come close. Blake Snell and Jesús Luzardo delivered the kind of pitchers’ duel to warm the hearts of dyspeptic ex-pros who should have to drop a quarter in the swear jar whenever they start a sentence with, “Back in my day…” Snell allowed only a single hit against four walks and nine strikeouts in six innings of work; Luzardo, after a tricky first inning, recorded 17 straight outs. After watching a blank scoreboard for the first two-thirds of the game, both teams cracked under the strain in the endgame. The two clubs followed this pair of near-perfect pitching performances with a manifestly imperfect bottom of the ninth, as both teams committed blunders in tactics and execution that threw a settled game into chaos. http://blogs.fangraphs.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/chart-7.png The final score: Dodgers 4, Phillies 3. In this heavyweight bout, the Dodgers are one win away from a knockout victory. With one out in the first, Luzardo allowed a single to Mookie Betts, walked Teoscar Hernández, and nearly surrendered an RBI double to Freddie Freeman. But Nick Castellanos, with some effort, tracked it down, and Luzardo was able to escape without damage. Luzardo, more than most pitchers in the league — certainly more than any other good starting pitcher — does his best work with the bases clear. His opponent wOBA climbs 96 points when there’s even one runner on, the eighth-biggest increase out of the 275 pitchers who threw at least 1,000 pitches this season. The bespectacled left-hander underperformed his FIP by more than a run this year, the fifth-biggest discrepancy of any qualified starter this year. That made Luzardo’s six-place finish on our WAR leaderboard a notable curiosity; how could one of the league’s elite strikeout-generating starters, with a better-than-average home run rate, end up with an ERA barely a quarter of a run better than league average? Well, FIP doesn’t take clustering into account, and the real world does, and when things went bad for Luzardo this year, they went really bad. He allowed 80 earned runs in the regular season this year; fully a quarter of those came in a two-start stretch around Memorial Day. Included in that run is an eight-run fourth inning against the Brewers; that single inning accounted for 10% of the scoring off Luzardo all year. It was, therefore, of paramount importance that he keep the bases clear. And after squirming out of that first-inning conundrum, he did. From the first through the end of the sixth, Luzardo set down 17 straight Dodgers. This was the 15th anniversary of Roy Halladay’s playoff no-hitter, an occasion the Phillies commemorated by having Halladay’s son Braeden throw the ceremonial first pitch to Carlos Ruiz. During that no-hitter, Halladay never set down that many consecutive batters. In his penultimate regular-season start, Snell kept the Phillies off the board over seven innings, striking out 12, walking two, and allowing only two hits. He picked up where he left off, holding the Phillies hitless until there were two outs in the bottom of the fifth. This is not a matchup devoid of power. Seven of the 18 starting position players in this game have at least one 30-homer season in their careers. Two others, the Maxes Muncy and Kepler, came off the bench. That includes Kyle Schwarber and Shohei Ohtani, the National League’s two leading home run hitters this season. But from the second through the sixth innings, only two balls came off the bat at more than 90.3 mph, and both went for groundball outs. There was a funny moment in the bottom of the fifth where J.T. Realmuto poked the most routine fly ball you’ve ever seen to right field — it came off the bat at 87.5 mph and traveled only 314 feet — but the crowd jolted to life like it was the hardest-hit ball they’d ever seen. In fairness, by the standards of the day, it was absolutely torched. But here’s the thing about Snell: He doesn’t throw strikes. Out of 219 pitchers who have thrown 200 or more innings out of the rotation in the 2020s, Snell has the second-lowest in-zone rate. Blessed with mid-90s heat from the left side, two good breaking balls, and a terrific changeup, Snell skirts the fringes of the zone and invites opponents to chase. At times, he flails around, but when he’s on, it’s stop-hitting-yourself stuff. One of the keys to this series has been the Dodgers’ ability to suffocate the top three hitters in the Phillies’ order: Trea Turner, Schwarber, and Bryce Harper. Between Game 1 and the first two trips through the order in Game 2, they were a cumulative 1-for-16 with two walks, the lone hit a seeing-eye single from Harper on Saturday night. When these three are rolling, the Phillies can score runs in piles. And it’s clear that they were trying their best — Harper and Schwarber ripped off some space-time-tearing swings early in the game. But in Snell’s six innings of work, he only gave these three hitters one good pitch to hit: A letters-high four-seamer to Turner, the very first pitch he threw all night. By the sixth inning, these guys had mostly figured out the game. Snell threw the Phillies’ first four hitters 20 pitches; only two of them were in the zone. Turner walked with one out, and even though everyone in the park knew what was coming, stole second. Schwarber, who’s having a brutal series, drew a walk of his own. But Harper struck out on six pitches, and Alec Bohm slammed a changeup in the dirt down the line to third — this was one of the two hard-hit grounders in the middle five innings. Miguel Rojas fielded it cleanly with his momentum going toward the bag, but he chose not to throw across the diamond to get Bohm, who runs like a front-end loader. Instead, he raced Turner — literally the fastest player in the league this year, according to Statcast — to the third base bag. It was more exciting than it needed to be, but it ended the inning all the same. Even in the moment, you could tell that the Phillies would be lucky to get another chance this good before the Dodgers’ offense woke up. Sure enough, the first batter Luzardo faced, Teoscar Hernández, rang a single straight up the middle. Freeman followed by dumping a ball into the right field corner, and Castellanos took so long to return the ball to the infield that Freeman — who runs like Bohm, but carrying a heavy parcel in each arm — was able to hustle out a double. In came Orion Kerkering, who, like Matt Strahm the night before, had been given an unfairly difficult task: Get out of a two-on, no-out jam without allowing a run. Like Strahm, he came pretty close. Enrique Hernández opened the scoring with an infield single right at Turner, whose throw to the plate was just fractionally late. A replay review showed as close as play as you’ll find — through highly motivated reasoning, one could argue that Teoscar’s foot wasn’t quite on the plate when Realmuto’s glove hit his leg — but there was no remotely plausible basis for overturning the call. After that, the Dodgers’ offense — held in a constricted, almost constipated state by Luzardo to that point — let loose. Back-to-back two-out singles from Will Smith and Ohtani gave the Dodgers four runs’ worth of breathing room. It came in handy; Kepler, who certainly came to play this week, tripled and scored in the eighth. For a moment, the tying run was on deck, and it got so loud that Emmet Sheehan couldn’t hear his PitchCom. But once again, Schwarber and Harper went down meekly. Entering the bottom of the ninth, this had been a closer game than even a 4-1 score would indicate. The decisive plays in the bottom of the sixth and top of the seventh were decided by, cumulatively, about a dozen pixels on a replay screen. But that wasn’t close enough for Dodgers manager Dave Roberts. In the Phillies’ two wins at Dodger Stadium last month, they scored a single measly run in 5 2/3 innings off bulk reliever Sheehan, who came in after Anthony Banda opened the series. The following night, they didn’t even get a hit off Ohtani in five innings. But the Dodgers bullpen surrendered 13 runs (plus one inherited runner) in eight innings in those two games. That included a ninth-inning meltdown from longtime relief ace Blake Treinen, who went 1-5 with a 9.64 ERA in 12 September appearances. Two nights earlier, Roki Sasaki had beat the crap out of the Phillies, with his splitter so dominant that Jeff Passan wrote a feature about it. Turning a recently injured rookie starter into an everyday closer is a tricky business, but with the off day on Sunday, surely Sasaki would be available. Roberts went with Treinen instead. The Dodgers had three runs to play with; how badly could it go? Bohm led off with a single up the middle. Then Realmuto doubled — the Phillies’ hardest-hit ball of the night — to bring the tying run to the plate. Castellanos, who’d been astonishingly poor on both sides of the ball to this point in the series, paddled a soft liner to left and dodged the tag at second for a two-run double. Out went Treinen, and in came left-hander Alex Vesia, who’d cauterized the Phillies’ eighth-inning rally in Game 1. This put Phillies manager Rob Thomson in a bind. He’d already configured the bottom of his lineup for right-handed pitching, leaving three lefties with big platoon splits — Bryson Stott, Brandon Marsh, and Kepler — lined up for Vesia like empty beer cans on a fence rail. The advantages of having a runner on third with one out being what they are, Thomson ordered Stott to bunt. Oh boy. Thomson has profited greatly during his four-year tenure by being a hands-off manager, which is the right approach for a veteran team that’s been long on power and short on athleticism for most of that time. The Phillies only laid down 16 sacrifices all year, four of them by Johan Rojas, who doesn’t generate much more exit velo when he swings from his heels. Too-clever-by-half bullpen management for Roberts is him playing the hits. Too-clever-by-half small ball is jarringly out of character for Thomson. “Just left on left, trying to tie the score,” Thomson explained after the game. “I liked where our bullpen was at … as compared to theirs. We play for the tie at home.” Pressed on the issue, he continued: “Mookie did a great job of disguising the wheel play. We teach our guys that if you see wheel, just pull it back and slash because you’ve got all kinds of room in the middle. But Mookie broke so late that it was tough for Stotty to pick it up.” No doubt Muncy and Betts executed the wheel play to perfection. Stott’s bunt was hit harder than would’ve been ideal, but I’ve seen worse. But Stott squared and pulled back on the first pitch, and the wheel play was on then too. “You don’t want to hit the ball to first because the first baseman is three inches from you, and you don’t want to hit it to the pitcher,” Stott explained. “The first baseman has an easier play going to third, so you want to bunt it to the third baseman.” Maybe. Vesia, a left-handed pitcher, is coming off the mound to the third-base side, and while I’d bet on Freeman to make the throw to third, Stott could’ve pushed the ball past him as he was charging. Or he could’ve swung away. As much as I disagree with Thomson’s conclusion, I see his logic. Stott has a galactically huge platoon split: 61 wRC+ against lefties, 111 against righties. There’s a reason he didn’t start against Snell, and the odds of him hitting a walkoff homer were vanishingly slim. But Stott puts the ball in play well even against lefties: His strikeout rate is 17.9% and his contact rate is 79.9%. The odds of him advancing Castellanos with a productive out aren’t terrible even if he swings away. Asked about this possibility, Stott toed the party line. “Obviously, we’re in the postseason, and we’re trying to win games, and getting the tying run on third with less than two outs is big,” Stott said. “It opens up a lot of stuff.” A successful bunt probably doesn’t draw too much notice, but Stott got a little too much of it, the Dodgers played it perfectly, and Castellanos took forever to get to third base. When everything settled, the Phillies were down a base and an out, and the Dodgers had room to breathe. Harrison Bader followed with a ringing pinch-hit single, demonstrating why the Phillies had missed him so badly in the starting lineup. He also demonstrated why he couldn’t start, lugging his bum groin up the line like a millstone. This was the only circumstance in which Weston Wilson would pinch-run for Bader with the game on the line. Thomson had to burn Wilson to pinch run — unless one of the Phillies’ starting pitchers ran track in high school, the only other option was backup catcher Rafael Marchán. But that forced Kepler to hit against a lefty, and Vesia got him to ground into a fielder’s choice thanks to some more terrific defense from Freeman. But the Phillies, by now, had finally gotten the tying run to third base with the top of the lineup coming up. Apparently Sasaki was available after all. “He hasn’t gone two out of three much at all… So I didn’t want to just preemptively put him in there,” Roberts said. “I felt good with who we had, with a couple of our highest-leverage relievers. And fortunately he was ready when called upon. I liked him versus Trea, and he got a big out for us.” Sasaki needed two pitches. Splitter inside for ball one, then a 99-mph four-seamer Turner couldn’t get the bat around on. Weak grounder to second. Ballgame. The Phillies have held Ohtani and Betts in check offensively. Their starting pitching has been absolutely outstanding. Their high-leverage relievers — Kerkering, Strahm, and Jhoan Duran — haven’t been perfect, but they’ve been placed in some tough positions. Insofar as they’ve been vulnerable, this is nowhere near the all-out relief meltdowns that sank the Phillies in 2023 and 2024. On Saturday, they put the tying run in scoring position in the eighth inning. On Monday, they put the winning run on base with one out in the ninth. That one fatal weakness the Dodgers have, the one the Phillies exploited so relentlessly in the regular season? It’s still there, and they did as much as they could with it. Dodger “relievers,” as in full-time bullpen arms, have produced an opponent batting line of .571/.571/1.143. They’ve allowed three extra-base hits and only recorded three outs. But Harper and Schwarber — in previous years, the only two Phillies hitters you could count on in October come what may — have done almost nothing. They lost their starting center fielder to injury, made a couple questionable managerial moves, and ended up on the wrong side of a couple bang-bang plays. Against some teams, that’s survivable. But against the Dodgers, the standards are higher. Source View the full article
  23. Photo Credit: @WWE | YouTube As WWE Raw continues its momentum on Netflix, the October 6 episode delivered shocking upsets, faction warfare, and rising tensions ahead of Crown Jewel. With Roman Reigns and CM Punk making headline appearances and matches featuring top women’s and tag-team stars, the night set the stage for what’s next in WWE’s streaming era. Here’s a full list of key WWE Raw results, match winners, and what it means for the Netflix era moving forward. List of Netflix’s WWE Monday Night Raw matches and winners on October 6 Maxxine Dupri vs. Becky Lynch Winner: Maxxine Dupri (via Countout) Maxxine Dupri picked up a surprise win over Becky Lynch by countout. Dupri dominated stretches of the match and nearly got a three-count before Lynch kicked out late. Lynch, distracted while playing to the crowd, failed to beat the count after Dupri rolled into the ring just in time. This marks Maxxine’s biggest win to date and sets her up as a dangerous underdog in the division. Roxanne Perez vs. Lyra Valkyria Winner: Roxanne Perez Roxanne Perez exploited a series of distractions from Bayley and Raquel Rodriguez to secure a Pop Rox for the victory. Valkyria lost focus after mistakenly kicking Rodriguez, opening the door for Perez to strike. Perez’s win positions her as a growing threat among WWE’s new-gen talent. Kairi Sane vs. Iyo Sky Winner: Kairi Sane Kairi Sane defeated Iyo Sky with help from Asuka, who interfered at ringside. Reluctant at first, Kairi landed a top-rope elbow to secure the pin after Iyo attacked Asuka before the match. The post-match moment hints at further tension within WWE’s Japanese faction landscape. AJ Styles, Penta & Dragon Lee vs. The Judgment Day Winners: AJ Styles, Penta & Dragon Lee In a chaotic six-man tag, Penta made a splash teaming with AJ Styles and Dragon Lee to defeat The Judgment Day. Dominik Mysterio fled through the crowd, abandoning his team. Styles addressed John Cena after the match, setting up a showdown at Crown Jewel. This victory gave Styles momentum heading into a marquee match. CM Punk & LA Knight vs. The Usos Winners: CM Punk & LA Knight CM Punk and LA Knight defeated Jimmy and Jey Uso in the main event. After Punk landed a GTS on Jey, Knight tagged himself in to steal the pin, igniting further tension between the two. The post-match friction hints at an unstable alliance heading into Crown Jewel. Roman Reigns also appeared live, accepting Paul Heyman’s challenge for an Australian Street Fight against Bronson Reed. The segment ended in a pull-apart brawl. The post WWE Monday Night Raw Results & Winners on October 6: Who Won? appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  24. Photo Credit: ABC From many fearing they are being zeroed in on for shooting Drew to the Quartermaines discovering that Monica left her biggest assets to someone unexpected, here is a recap and all the spoilers from the General Hospital October 6 episode. Spoilers for what happens on General Hospital today on October 6, 2025 Jason and Britt Argue About Nathan Britt returns to her room above Bobbie’s and finds Jason waiting for her. Jason questions her decision to keep Nathan from seeing their son, James. She explains that she wanted to protect James from the overwhelming situation. Jason tells her to realize that she is a good person. Carly Leans on Jack While Joss Returns Over breakfast at Bobbie’s, Carly confides in Jack about her anxiety over Drew’s shooting. She worries she may have accidentally said something incriminating to Anna. Jack reassures her that he is her alibi and vows to protect her. Just then, Joss arrives. After Carly steps away, Joss and Jack discuss the danger of Britt revealing Joss’s secret activities in Croatia. Britt later stops by and comments on how lovely it is to see Joss again. Tracy Refuses to Apologize to Drew Outside Bobbie’s, Martin informs Tracy that Drew is suing her for assault after she threw him out of the church. Tracy calls the lawsuit frivolous and refuses Martin’s offer to settle with an apology, insisting she is ready to see them in court. Alexis Warns Curtis About the Investigation Curtis stops by Alexis’s home after hearing that new evidence might change the course of the Drew shooting investigation. Alexis suspects the police are closing in on a suspect and advises Curtis to prepare himself. Curtis later confides in his father, Marshall, that the PCPD may have discovered the blackmail material on Portia. Determined to find out, Curtis decides to confront Drew directly. Monica’s Will Reading Stuns the Quartermaines At the Quartermaine mansion, Ned, Olivia, Michael, and Brook Lynn gather for the reading of Monica’s will. Ronnie, Monica’s long-lost sister, also attends and explains that she and Monica reconnected before her death. Alexis confirms she was invited as part of the will. Brook Lynn receives Monica’s pearl necklace, Ned inherits her record collection, and Olivia gets her cookware. Ronnie is given a locket from their childhood. Tracy, however, receives a jar of Lila’s relish — the same item her father left her when he cut her out of his will. She calls it a cruel joke. Jason inherits Alan’s favorite watch. But the biggest surprise comes at the end: Monica leaves her house and remaining estate to Ronnie, leaving everyone speechless. The post General Hospital Spoilers Today Reveal Michael Isn’t Heir of Monica’s Estate in Oct 6 Recap appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  25. Photo Credit: James Devaney | GC Images via Getty Images The audiences at the New York Film Festival were caught off guard when Josh Safdie and Timothée Chalamet took the stage at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall to unveil the world premiere of Marty Supreme. The long-anticipated A24 film, kept tightly under wraps until now, screened as the festival’s secret showing on Monday night with both the director and star in attendance. Marty Supreme has a surprise world premiere at New York Film Festival The film, directed by Safdie and co-written with Ronald Bronstein, stars Chalamet as Marty Mauser, an aspiring 1950s ping-pong champion. Reports indicate the story draws loose inspiration from professional player Marty Reisman. Safdie spoke to the audience before the screening, telling them, “I hate surprises too,” and revealing that he had just completed the film hours earlier. “I finished it at 2 a.m. yesterday… You’re the first audience to see this film,” he said. Chalamet later joined him onstage, sharing his personal connection to the venue and remarking that he went to high school near Alice Tully, calling it “f—ing awesome” to premiere at NYFF. (via Variety) The ensemble includes Gwyneth Paltrow, Odessa A’Zion, Kevin O’Leary, Abel Ferrara, Fran Drescher, and Sandra Bernhard. Earlier, the Iron Man actress, Paltrow, had shared that she plays “the wife of a rival professional who has an affair with Chalamet,” adding, “We have a lot of sex in this movie.” The film reportedly cost $70 million to produce, marking A24’s most expensive project to date. Eli Bush, Anthony Katagas, Timothée Chalamet, and A24 produced Marty Supreme. The premiere comes amid reports that Benny Safdie’s The Smashing Machine is underperforming at the box office despite strong reviews. Josh and Benny Safdie previously co-directed Good Time and Uncut Gems. This year, the New York Film Festival has also featured major premieres, including Noah Baumbach’s Jay Kelly and After the Hunt, directed by Luca Guadagnino. Marty Supreme opens in theaters on Christmas Day. The post Timothée Chalamet’s Movie Marty Supreme Has a Surprise Premiere at NYFF appeared first on ComingSoon.net - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. View the full article
  26. Orioles right-hander Albert Suárez is scheduled for an MRI tomorrow after suffering a season-ending elbow injury, writes Roch Kubatko of MASNsports.com. That should determine whether the 35-year-old is in danger of any kind of surgery. This was a lost year for Suárez, who’d been a surprisingly valuable part of the 2024 pitching staff. The journeyman started 24 of 32 appearances a season ago, working to a 3.70 ERA across 133 2/3 innings. Suárez began this year in long relief. He hurt his shoulder after one appearance and was diagnosed with a rotator cuff strain that cost him the next four months. By the time Suárez returned in September, the Orioles were well out of contention. He made four appearances, working nine innings of two-run ball. Then came the elbow inflammation that knocked him out for the year and raises questions about his future. Suárez is eligible for arbitration for the first time in his career. MLBTR contributor Matt Swartz projects him for a $900K salary. That’s more than reasonable if the Orioles expect him to be healthy next season, but any kind of serious injury could lead them to drop him from the 40-man roster. Suárez is one of 14 Baltimore players who’ll be eligible for arbitration. Ryan Mountcastle has the highest projected salary of the group at $7.8MM. It’d be a surprise if the O’s bring him back for that amount after an injury-plagued season. Mountcastle suffered a Grade 2 hamstring strain at the end of May. That kept him on the injured list beyond the trade deadline. He was healthy for the final six weeks and slashed .255/.293/.393 across 157 plate appearances. He struck out in nearly one third of his trips to the plate. The 28-year-old had also struggled early in the season. He finished the year with a .250/.286/.367 line while hitting seven homers in 89 games. The Orioles used him as a part-time player down the stretch, giving everyday first base work to 23-year-old Coby Mayo. Even if neither Mayo nor rookie catcher/designated hitter Samuel Basallo had a good season, the O’s will probably look for a cheaper veteran bench bat to work behind those younger hitters. Mountcastle acknowledged uncertainty about his future during the final weekend of the regular season (link via Rich Dubroff of Baltimore Baseball). The 2015 third-round pick noted that he “can’t control things that happen” with the team’s decision but praised the coaches and teammates with whom he’s worked over his decade in the organization. Baltimore will probably shop him in trade, but they could have a hard time finding interest at that arbitration salary. A non-tender seems likelier. That would send him to free agency and make him an interesting rebound candidate for clubs on a cheaper one-year deal. Elsewhere in the lineup, the O’s have a question mark in center field. After Cedric Mullins was traded at the deadline, the Orioles played Colton Cowser up the middle. While his small-sample defensive grades were tolerable, his average speed makes him a better fit in right field over a full season. Cowser had a terrible second half at the plate, hitting .178/.263/.340 after the All-Star Break. He missed time with a concussion and played through broken ribs that he suffered in June. The O’s don’t have a ton of in-house alternatives. Dylan Beavers played exclusively in the corner outfield as a rookie. He’s an above-average runner who has some center field experience in the minors, yet he played more right field coming up through the system. Former first-rounder Enrique Bradfield is a no-doubt center fielder who hit well in Double-A, but he batted .179 in 15 games after a late-season promotion to Triple-A Norfolk. He’ll probably begin the year in the minors. Jake Rill of MLB.com suggested this morning that the O’s should look for an external upgrade, ideally one who hits from the right side. Cowser, Beavers, and Bradfield each hit left-handed. Harrison Bader fits that bill in free agency, but he should sign somewhere that offers everyday playing time on at least a strong two-year contract. They could add a fourth/fifth outfielder like Jose Siri on a cheap one-year deal or look for a glove-first complementary type on the trade market. Tyrone Taylor (Mets), Jacob Young (Nationals), Blake Perkins (Brewers) and Dane Myers (Marlins) are a few speculative glove-first possibilities who shouldn’t require a huge prospect return if the O’s go that route. View the full article
  27. Yesterday
  28. A number of teams (and their fanbases) have already turned their attention towards the offseason. Identifying free agent targets is a big part of that prep work, so it’s worth taking a look at the players who’ll be available at each position. Ages listed are for the 2026 season. Previous entries in this series: catcher The Top Guys Pete Alonso (31) Alonso is signed through 2026 but he has an opt-out and has already said that he will use it, so he’ll be back on the open market for a second year in a row. That’s the outcome he and his representatives at the Boras Corporation were hoping for. Last winter, he couldn’t find a satisfactory long-term commitment, so he pivoted to the short-term, opt-out path. The hope with that strategy as that a better platform year and a lack of qualifying offer would lead to a more robust market. The lack of QO is already assured, as a player can only receive one in his career. Alonso also held up his end of the bargain by having a better walk year. His home run total went from 34 to 38. His batting average climbed from .240 to .272 and his on-base percentage from .329 to .347. His strikeout rate dropped as his batted ball data at Statcast improved. That led to a wRC+ jump from 121 to 141. FanGraphs considered him to be worth 3.6 wins above replacement this year, almost double last year’s 2.1 tally. That improvement should help him in free agency but it’s still unknown if a long-term contract will be out there for him. In the past seven years, Freddie Freeman is the only free agent first baseman to get a deal longer than three seasons. There have been some long extensions, including for Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Matt Olson, but those players were still in their 20s. Alonso’s defense has never been strong and has been especially poor in the last two years. Now that he’s about to turn 31 in December, teams may be wary about how he will age into his mid-30s. Concerns aside, Alonso will be one of the best bats available. The Mets seemed genuinely willing to let him depart last winter, so the teams outside of Queens should have a legitimate shot at getting him. Josh Naylor (29) Naylor doesn’t quite have the offensive ceiling as Alonso but he’s pretty solidly above average at the plate. He hit 20 home runs this year, his fourth straight season of getting that number to at least 17. He doesn’t walk a ton but doesn’t strike out either. His 13.7% strikeout rate this year was barely half of the 22.2% league average. His .295/.353/.462 line translated to a 128 wRC+, indicating he was 28% better than the league average hitter overall. That makes four straight seasons for Naylor with a wRC+ between 118 and 128. Like most lefties, he’s better against right-handed pitching, but his splits aren’t extreme. His wRC+ against southpaws has been between 104 and 126 in each of the past three seasons, perfectly acceptable production. He also has other intriguing qualities. The reviews on his glovework are mixed but not awful. He has 12 Outs Above Average at first base in his career. Defensive Runs Saved has him at -5 overall but that includes a -6 grade in 2024 which looks like an outlier. He’s been close to par in every other season of his career. He’s not a burner on the basepaths, with Statcast crediting him with second percentile sprint speed, but he has shown a knack for stealing bases regardless. He swiped six to ten bags in the three prior seasons coming into 2025. This year, he cranked that way up to 30, including a shocking 19 steals after being traded to the Mariners at the deadline. On top of his skills, Naylor’s market should be helped by his relative youth and the fact that he can’t receive a qualifying offer as a player traded midseason. As mentioned in the Alonso section, big league teams haven’t given many long deals to free agent first basemen recently, but Naylor’s reliability and relative youth could help him buck that trend. Ryan O’Hearn (32) A few years ago, O’Hearn looked like a lost cause with the Royals. However, he’s now coming off a strong three-year run as an above-average regular, mostly with the Orioles but also with the Padres after a deadline trade. He hit 17 home runs this year and slashed .281/.366/.437 for a 127 wRC+. Going back to the start of 2023, he has a .277/.343/.445 line and 121 wRC+. Like Naylor, he doesn’t have Alonso’s huge offensive upside but he’s been a consistently strong contributor. Similar to Naylor, he’s a lefty without strong platoon concerns. O’Hearn had a 108 wRC+ against southpaws in 2023. That dipped to 74 last year but he brought it up to 135 this year. Overall, he has a .261/.326/.442 slash and a 116 wRC+ against lefties over the past three years. O’Hearn’s glovework seems acceptable as well. He has four OAA at first base in his career. His -12 DRS total isn’t pretty but most of that came earlier in his career. He was credited with 4 DRS here in 2025. He can also play a corner outfield spot in a pinch. Due to his late breakout, O’Hearn is older than both Alonso and Naylor. That will limit his market to shorter deals but he should be helped by a lack of a QO. Since he was traded midseason, he’s ineligible to receive one. Everyday Players Luis Arráez (29) The book on Arráez is well known at this point. He hardly ever walks but he’s also almost impossible to strike out. There’s not a ton of power but he’s the best contact hitter in the league. His 3.1% strikeout rate this year was easily the best in the majors among qualified hitters. Jacob Wilson came a distant second with a 7.5% rate. However, Arráez’s overall production has been trending down lately. In 2022 and 2023, he had a combined .335/.384/.445 batting line and 131 wRC+. He had a .347 batting average on balls in play but that actually wasn’t too high for him personally. His swing seems perfectly designed to drop singles in between the infield and the outfield, so he has regularly had BABIPs in the .320 to .370 range, even though league average is usually around .290. Over the past two years, he’s dropped down to a combined .303/.337/.392 line and 107 wRC+. The cause of that could be debated. He was playing through a torn thumb ligament last year and only hit four home runs. He’s never been a huge power guy but he’s usually good for eight to ten long balls a year. This year, this thumb has presumably healed and he hit eight homers, but his BABIP dropped to .289. That’s probably not all luck, as his average exit velocity, hard hit rate and barrel rate have all dropped in recent seasons. He’s not a burner on the basepaths and isn’t especially well regarded on defense. He does have 2 DRS at first in his career but his -14 OAA mark is dreadful. His best trait is the ability to put the bat on the ball. He’s still doing that but with lesser results over the past two years. Put it all together and it’s one of the tougher markets to predict, but some team will find a lineup spot for him. Josh Bell (33) Bell is one of the most hot-and-cold bats in the majors, but he always seems to find his way to a solid season in the end. He signed a one-year, $6MM deal with the rebuilding Nationals coming into 2025. His first half was rough but he finished strong. The end result was a .239/.326/.421 line and 109 wRC+ over 533 plate appearances. It’s been a long time since he was an All-Star, but Bell has never been on the injured list for more than a few days. He has appeared in at least 140 games in every full season going back to 2018. He hasn’t been a flashy player for a few years now but has still been solid. In the past three seasons, he hit between 19 and 22 home runs with respectable strikeout and walk rates. His wRC+ finished between 101 and 109 in all three of those campaigns. His defense isn’t great and he hasn’t stolen a base since 2018. But for clubs who want a plug-and-play first baseman/designated hitter who should be in the lineup and contributing from time to time, Bell will be there and won’t be expensive. Rhys Hoskins (33) Hoskins had a strong run with the Phillies as one of the most consistent power hitters in the league. However, his recent career has been more tumultuous. He suffered a torn ACL during spring training in 2023 and missed that entire season. He became a free agent and signed a two-year, $34MM deal with the Brewers, with an opt-out chance halfway through. Both Hoskins and the Brewers were likely hoping for him to rebound after his lost year and then return to free agency. It hasn’t played out that way. His 2024 started strong, but he faded later in the year and finished with a .214/.303/.419 line and 101 wRC+. After that tepid year, he decided not to opt out and returned to the Brewers for 2025. He was a bit better this year on a rate basis, with a .237/.332/.416 line and 109 wRC+. Unfortunately, a thumb sprain put him on the IL in July. While he was out, Andrew Vaughn took his job and ran with it. Hoskins was reinstated from the IL with about three weeks left in the season but hardly played, with Vaughn at first base and Christian Yelich in the DH spot most days. Hoskins was not included on Milwaukee’s NLDS roster. He’ll head into free agency without a lot of juice since his recent seasons haven’t been great, but he’s still been an above-average hitter on the whole. His deal has a mutual option for 2026 but it’s been more than a decade since a mutual option was picked up by both sides. Platoon and Part-Time Bats Wilmer Flores (34) Flores battled knee troubles throughout 2024 and put up awful numbers. He bounced back somewhat in 2025, with production close to league average, though he didn’t get a ton of playing time in the second half as San Francisco’s acquisition of Rafael Devers squeezed Flores into a short-side platoon role with Dominic Smith. A right-handed hitter, Flores has been better against lefties in his career but had reverse splits this year. He finished the season with a .241/.307/.379 line and 95 wRC+. Ty France (31) France had a strong run from 2020 to 2023 but he’s now had two straight years of subpar offense. He signed a one-year deal with the Twins coming into 2025 and got flipped to the Blue Jays as part of the Louis Varland deadline deal. France finished the regular season with a .257/.320/.360 line and 92 wRC+. He finished the season on the IL due to an oblique injury and was left off Toronto’s ALDS roster. Paul Goldschmidt (38) The Yankees signed Goldschmidt to a one-year, $12.5MM deal in the offseason. He got out to a hot start but quickly ran out of gas. He had a .338/.394/.495 line and 148 wRC+ at the end of May but then slashed .226/.277/.333 for a 69 wRC+ the rest of the way. As he struggled, he got bumped into the short side of a platoon, with Ben Rice starting against most righties and Goldschmidt mostly facing lefties. Goldy had a 74 wRC+ against righties this year but a 169 wRC+ against lefties. Based on his track record, he could still get an everyday job somewhere. But considering his age and widening platoon splits, he might fit best as a veteran mentor and lefty masher/bench bat. Carlos Santana (40) Santana has defied the aging curve by remaining a solid player into his late 30s, but 2025 wasn’t his best year. He slashed .219/.308/.325 for a wRC+ of 82. The Guardians released him in late August. He latched on with the Cubs but didn’t play much. Santana consented to an optional assignment late in the year and wasn’t on the club’s playoff roster. He’s still a great defender and the plate discipline is still good, so he could garner interest even as a 40-year-old coming off a rough year at the plate. Dominic Smith (31) Smith spent the first few months of the season with the Yankees on a minor league deal. He opted out of that pact in the summer and signed with the Giants. He finished his season strong with a .284/.333/.417 line and 111 wRC+ in 63 games with San Francisco. Almost all of that production came against righties. The Giants only let him face southpaws 27 times and he had a .200/.259/.280 line in those matchups. Donovan Solano (38) Solano has been a pretty solid big league hitter going back to 2019 but is coming off a down year. He was released by the Mariners in September and briefly latched on with the Rangers. Between those two clubs, he hit .247/.291/.337 for an 82 wRC+. He is capable of playing other positions but only got very brief looks at second and third base this year. Rowdy Tellez (31) Tellez also split his time between the Mariners and Rangers in 2025. He hit a combined .228/.276/.443 for a 101 wRC+. He finished with a bit of momentum, as he slashed .259/.315/.457 with the Rangers down the stretch for a 115 wRC+ with that club. Still, it’s been two straight years with poor plate discipline and overall production around league average. Justin Turner (41) Turner has been staying away from Father Time throughout his late 30s but seems to finally have been caught. He signed a one-year, $6MM deal with the Cubs but hit .219/.288/.314 for a 71 wRC+ this season. He is on the Cubs’ playoff roster but hasn’t played much. His deal has a mutual option for 2026, but that won’t be picked up. LaMonte Wade Jr. (32) Wade had a strong run with the Giants from 2021 to 2024 but just had the worst season of his career. He slashed .167/.271/.254 in 242 plate appearances in 2025. He was designated for assignment by the Giants in June and landed with the Angels, but the latter club released him in early August. He didn’t sign anywhere else in the final two months of the season. Options Salvador Perez (36) Perez is primarily a catcher but has been spending more time at first base in recent years. It’s a fairly moot point for the free agent market, as Kansas City isn’t going to let its captain go. He is a franchise legend and he can be kept around for 2026 via a $13.5MM club option with a $2MM buyout, making it a net $11.5MM decision. Royals general manager J.J. Picollo has already essentially said Perez will be back in next year, so it seems the Royals will either pick up the option or work out a new extension. Photo courtesy of Steven Bigig, Imagn Images View the full article
  1. Load more activity
×
×
  • Create New...