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Streaming Ratings: ‘You’ Final Season Hits No. 1

The Nielsen streaming charts once again said “Hello, You.” The Netflix thriller starring Penn Badgley returned to the rankings at No. 1 with the release of You’s fifth and final season on April 24. The show gathered 1.67 billion minutes of viewing for the week of April 21-27, a little below the 1.73 billion minutes for the opening of season four in February 2023. You had a comfortable lead over the week’s second-place title, Netflix’s Ransom Canyon (1.29 billion minutes). Star Wars series Andor hit a series high with the debut of its second season, clocking 721 million minutes of watch time on Disney+. Its previous high was 674 million minutes for the week of its season one finale in November 2022. Nielsen says about 65 percent of Andor’s total time (about 469 million minutes) was for the three episodes that premiered April 22, meaning the remaining...

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‘Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning’ Star Hayley Atwell on the Polar Bear and Tortoise That Halted Production

There’s a common sentiment in the Mission: Impossible franchise that accomplishing each movie is just as difficult as the mission on the screen. And Hayley Atwell now knows that firsthand after shooting 2023’s Dead Reckoning and this week’s The Final Reckoning in close succession. Between the pandemic’s impact on the former and the double strikes’ effect on the latter, nothing came easy for Team Mission, as they traveled around the world in order to capture cinema’s most jaw-dropping action sequences in the most breathtaking settings. In Christopher “McQ” McQuarrie’s possible final chapter, Atwell’s world-class thief character, Grace, is now a full-fledged member of the Impossible Missions Force. With the evil AI known as the Entity on the brink of achieving global nuclear annihilation, Grace and co. must journey to the Arctic’s Bering Sea (Svalbard in reality) for an extended second-act sequence, as well as South...

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Avengers: Doomsday’ and ‘Avengers: Secret Wars’ Delay Release Dates From May to December

Marvel Studios’ marquee team of heroes need a bit more time to reassemble. Avengers: Doomsday is pushing back its release date in theaters from May 1, 2026 to Dec. 18, 2026, while Avengers: Secret Wars will now open Dec. 17, 2027 instead of May 7, 2027. Disney, however, isn’t giving up the coveted start-of-summer-slot in 2026 and has set 20th Century’s The Devil Wears Prada 2 to take Doomsday‘s date and open May 1. During a nearly five-and-a-half hour livestream in late March, Marvel Studios began unveiling its cast for Avengers: Doomsday, revealing a mix of Marvel Cinematic Universe mainstays as well as actors from 20th Century Fox’s now-defunct X-Men universe and upcoming stars of Fantastic Four: First Steps. Notable names missing from the roll call included Tom Holland (Spider-Man) and Chris Evans (Captain America), the latter of whom is expected to appear in at least one of the two-part movies. Related Stories Movies 'Lilo & Stitch'...

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TV Ratings: Most Valuable Shows and Top Rookies of the 2024-25 Season

If there was a theme coming out of May’s upfronts, it’s that everyone — from long-standing broadcast networks to new(ish) streaming players — wants a piece of the televised sports business. NBC is going all in on its new NBA contract next season, Netflix and YouTube will have exclusive NFL games, and there is seemingly a sports documentary for every corner of fandom. While live sports are top of mind for everyone and the NFL (still and seemingly forever) rules broadcast ratings, viewers also spent a ton of time in the 2024-25 season with dramas, comedies and unscripted series. Several first-year shows became hits this season (hello, Matlock, High Potential and Adolescence), while returning veterans proved their worth in big ways (looking at you, Reacher). Related Stories TV Streaming Ratings: 'You' Final Season Hits No. 1 Movies Alan Ritchson, Jerry Bruckheimer, 'Minecraft' Writers in Talks to Land Hot Adventure Package at Skydance (Exclusive)   With...

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Kate Mara on Treating ‘Friendship’ Like a Drama, Finally Working With Her Sister and Why She’s Eager to See the New ‘Fantastic Four’

Kate Mara attends the premiere of 'Friendship' during the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 8, 2024. Leon Bennett/Getty Images Kate Mara was unacquainted with Tim Robinson’s brand of comedy when filmmaker Andrew DeYoung offered her the chance to star opposite the maestro of cringe in Friendship. Mara plays Tami Waterman, a loving mother, self-employed florist and cancer survivor who’s dangerously close to becoming Craig Waterman’s (Robinson) walkaway wife. Tami hasn’t been given the attentiveness she deserves from her tone-deaf husband, and the issue is magnified when Craig forms a fast friendship with their new local weatherman neighbor, Austin Carmichael (Paul Rudd).   Craig ultimately jeopardizes his new relationship, first by going too far during a casual boxing match, and then eating a bar of soap as a form of self-punishment in front of Austin and his other friends. This is the kind of...

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Netflix’s ‘Sirens’ Will Leave You With Questions — That’s the Point

Showrunner Molly Smith Metzler chats with THR about rethinking Greek mythology with the series starring Meghann Fahy and Milly Alcock, and why she’s going to be on Reddit to read viewers’ thoughts. By Lexy PerezPlus Icon May 23, 2025   Share on Facebook Share on X Share to Flipboard Send an Email Show additional share options Logo text Molly Smith Metzler is ready to take viewers to an “uncomfortable place.” In her five episode limited series Sirens, starring Meghann Fahy and Milly Alcock and based on her play written during her time at the Juilliard School, Metzler turns Greek mythology on its head by rethinking myths in the perspective of the sirens. “Everything we know about the sirens, we know from the sailors. They are described and cast in this role as murderers, monsters,” she tells The Hollywood Reporter of the mythical creatures, adding that she wanted to know “What’s their side of the story?”...

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Beyond the Bodice Ripper: How Joseph Soniat’s Servitude Series Is Redefining Erotic Fiction for Women—Written by a Man

Beyond the Bodice Ripper: How Joseph Soniat’s Servitude Series Is Redefining Erotic Fiction for Women—Written by a Man In a genre long dominated by female authors and devoured by a largely female audience, it’s rare to see a male voice not only enter the room — but own it. Yet Joseph Soniat, the New Orleans-based author behind the provocative Servitude Series, is doing just that. With more than two dozen titles planned — and three already captivating readers — Soniat isn’t interested in following the fast-and-dirty blueprint of typical erotica. His novels are long-form, immersive works that span 300 to 400 pages, blending emotional complexity with sizzling power dynamics. These are not stories of perfect bodies and polished clichés. These are stories of people — flawed, hungry, aching, real. A Man Writing for Women — and Getting It...

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