
"Emerald Hill: The Little Nyonya Story" Is Worth Bingeing On Netflix And Cancelling All Your Dates
Okay, gather 'round, because there's a period drama on Netflix that's keeping us at the edge of our seats: "Emerald Hill: The Little Nyonya Story"!
If you were obsessed with Mediacorp's original "The Little Nyonya" (and who wasn't?), then this Singaporean spin-off is your next binge-watch.
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Yahoo
10 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Netflix's 'Quarterback' trailer stars Joe Burrow, Jared Goff and Kirk Cousins ahead of season two release date
Netflix's "Quarterback" series is back, and some big names agreed to take part in the documentary. Joe Burrow, Jared Goff and Kirk Cousins will be the focus of the second season of the program, Netflix revealed in a trailer Monday. The trailer features Burrow talking about the longevity of the great quarterbacks, Goff talking about living up to high expectations after leaving the Los Angeles Rams and Cousins taking about the Atlanta Falcons taking Michael Penix in the NFL Draft. It marks the second appearance on the program by Cousins, who was featured on the first season of the series. At the time, Cousins was still a member of the Minnesota Vikings. The first season of "Quarterback" focused on Cousins leading the Vikings to a first-place finish in the NFC North. Advertisement While Burrow and Goff should provide excellent moments, Cousins may be the most intriguing quarterback featured in season two. After sustaining an Achilles injury during the 2023 season, Cousins joined the Falcons on a four-year, $180 million deal in the offseason. He struggled in his return, throwing 18 touchdowns against an NFL-leading 16 interceptions. That performance got Cousins benched in favor of Penix during the final three games of the regular season. "Quarterback" will presumably cover that entire storyline, and feature never-before-seen footage of Cousins reacting and responding to those developments. Advertisement The first season of "Quarterback" was received well by fans, but Omaha Productions, which produces the series, had trouble finding quarterbacks willing to be filmed for season two of the program. As a result, Omaha Productions pivoted to "Receiver" ahead of the 2024 NFL season. After a year away, Omaha Productions was able to convince Burrow, Cousins and Goff to take the plunge. With the three quarterbacks announced, Netflix also dropped the release date for "Quarterback" on Monday. The program will air July 8 on Netflix. It's unclear how many episodes will make up season two. The first season of "Quarterback" lasted eight episodes.


CNBC
40 minutes ago
- CNBC
Best stocks: Entertainment stocks are unlikely winners this year — One to watch if it can break $120
(This is The Best Stocks in the Market , brought to you by Josh Brown and Sean Russo of Ritholtz Wealth Management.) Josh — Sometimes I'm surprised by what's working in the market. If I had to guess, I probably would not have picked entertainment-related companies to be among the best industry groups in the S & P 500 on a year-to-date basis and neither would you have. And that's despite the fact that we've been writing about Spotify and Netflix here an awful lot. Turns out there's more to the story than just those two tickers, as Sean will reveal. Within that group of names, Disney (DIS) popped onto our list as Wall Street begins to give the company more credit for its 125 million global Disney Plus subscribers, 12% market share in streaming video on demand (SVOD) and almost $3 billion in streaming revenue in the first quarter of this year. We'll show you the chart below, but first some Best Stocks stats: Sector Leaderboard As of 6/23/2025 morning, there are 115 names on The Best Stocks in the Market list Top Sector Ranking: Top Industries: Top 5 Best Stocks by Relative Strength: Sector Spotlight: Entertainment Sean — Within S & Ps classification, companies like Disney , Live Nation , and Roblox all land within the entertainment sector, which interestingly is not in the consumer discretionary sector, but is classified as communications. The lines between media, technology, and communication have blurred. From Netflix's growing streaming platform to Roblox's virtual worlds and Live Nation's global concert footprint, these platforms have become less cyclical. We highlighted this defensive trait in some of these stocks in our first piece for The Best Stocks in the Market. We aren't just seeing less volatility in these stocks — we're seeing growth. Just last week, Roblox hit a new all-time high for concurrent users with 25.8M players utilizing the platform at the same time. Nielsen just put out rankings and data for television inclusive of streaming platforms, and 50% of the top 10 best performing shows (ranked by viewers over a 35 day period) came from Netflix. The entertainment industry has done quite well despite the increased recession risk. Looking at every entertainment-classified stock in the S & P 500 (there are 10), the median year-to-date return is 17.5%. The median return for a stock in the S & P 500 is less than 1%. Ninety percent of the entertainment industry within the S & P 500 is within 10% of a 52 week high, the only stock not within a 52 week high is Warner Brothers (WBD). Only 35% of the S & P 500 is within 10% of 52 week highs. We currently have 7 entertainment industry stocks on our list: Disney, Liberty Media , Live Nation, Netflix, Roblox, Spotify, and Take-Two Interactive . Disney makes the list This is a 5 year price chart for Disney: It has been a struggle for Disney, but the stock just rocketed off its early April lows. If the stock can meaningfully break out above that $120 level, there is a ton of room for the stock to run. Disney is dominating the box office thus far. Three of the top 5 best performing movies this year are Disney releases. Lilo & Stitch is the second best movie grossing $386M, Captain America: Brave New World is 4th taking in $200M, and Thunderbolts is in the 5th spot at $189.5M. This industry has quietly become one of the strongest performers in the S & P 500 this year. With user growth accelerating on platforms like Roblox, dominant streaming engagement from Netflix, and a resurgent box office led by Disney, this group is performing well in what has been a challenging environment for consumer-sensitive names. Risk management: Josh — Let's keep this one simple. The $120 level is resistance. You can see that clearly in the chart below. Each attempt to get above was smacked down as the sellers swamped the buyers. That will happen until it doesn't, and then look out. I'm showing you a longer term chart here because I want you to see the whole consolidation. I'd use the $100 level as my line in the sand. If it gets below there the momentum is dead — that's the market telling you to look for a better set-up. DISCLOSURES: (None) All opinions expressed by the CNBC Pro contributors are solely their opinions and do not reflect the opinions of CNBC, NBC UNIVERSAL, their parent company or affiliates, and may have been previously disseminated by them on television, radio, internet or another medium. THE ABOVE CONTENT IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY . THIS CONTENT IS PROVIDED FOR INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY AND DOES NOT CONSITUTE FINANCIAL, INVESTMENT, TAX OR LEGAL ADVICE OR A RECOMMENDATION TO BUY ANY SECURITY OR OTHER FINANCIAL ASSET. THE CONTENT IS GENERAL IN NATURE AND DOES NOT REFLECT ANY INDIVIDUAL'S UNIQUE PERSONAL CIRCUMSTANCES. THE ABOVE CONTENT MIGHT NOT BE SUITABLE FOR YOUR PARTICULAR CIRCUMSTANCES. BEFORE MAKING ANY FINANCIAL DECISIONS, YOU SHOULD STRONGLY CONSIDER SEEKING ADVICE FROM YOUR OWN FINANCIAL OR INVESTMENT ADVISOR. INVESTING INVOLVES RISK. EXAMPLES OF ANALYSIS CONTAINED IN THIS ARTICLE ARE ONLY EXAMPLES. THE VIEWS AND OPINIONS EXPRESSED ARE THOSE OF THE CONTRIBUTORS AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT THE OFFICIAL POLICY OR POSITION OF RITHOLTZ WEALTH MANAGEMENT, LLC. JOSH BROWN IS THE CEO OF RITHOLTZ WEALTH MANAGEMENT AND MAY MAINTAIN A SECURITY POSITION IN THE SECURITIES DISCUSSED. ASSUMPTIONS MADE WITHIN THE ANALYSIS ARE NOT REFLECTIVE OF THE POSITION OF RITHOLTZ WEALTH MANAGEMENT, LLC" TO THE END OF OR OUR DISCLOSURE. Click here for the full disclaimer.
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Actress Lauren Weedman thought Bell's palsy might end her acting career. Instead, she turned her health crisis into comedy.
It seemed like Lauren Weedman had finally found her rhythm onscreen. A working actress for more than two decades, she landed back-to-back roles on some of TV's biggest hits, including scene-stealing turns in Hacks and Abbott Elementary. Last summer she had just traveled from Los Angeles to New York to appear alongside Kevin Bacon and Julianne Moore in Netflix's Sirens, where she plays chef Patrice, when one trip to the gym in between shooting days changed everything. 'I remember finishing a shoot and going to the gym for cardio. I took a drink of water, and it dribbled out the side of my mouth. I thought maybe there was a hole in the bottle. I tried again. Same thing. Then I got home, showered, looked in the mirror — and there was no denying it,' she tells Yahoo Entertainment. The 56-year-old actress was unexpectedly diagnosed with Bell's palsy, a condition that temporarily paralyzed one side of her face, forcing her to slow down and reassess everything. 'I had a moment where my ego could not fit in my bra,' she joked during a nearly hour-long Zoom conversation last month. 'I was like, I am on all the shows! This is crazy!' Weedman, who is also known for roles in Looking, Euphoria and Arrested Development, had been riding high, only to be thrown off course by the health scare that would reshape how she moved through her life and career. "I was pushing myself, trying to keep everything going — making money, looking a certain way. And then suddenly, it's like I stroked out," she says. "That's what it felt like." Below, the actor and writer opens up about navigating her career with Bell's palsy, her love of acting and why she thinks her best chapter might still be ahead. Can you take me back to when this all started and you were diagnosed with Bell's palsy one year ago? I was in denial about how stress affects your body. I don't like getting into that kind of stuff because it's so boring. You can get into it with me — I mean, it's true! This has been — not the struggle — but Bell's palsy is not like cancer. To talk about it feels like it's not the hugest thing, but it feels like such a big deal to me. It's unnerving. I live in California and was shooting Sirens in New York. I felt like it was worth trying to make it work, to find places to stay out there. I'm a single mom, so I gotta figure out who's gonna be with my [then 14-year-old] kid while I'm gone, and I don't have a ton of support from the ex. There was a little bit of stress in that, that I didn't even think about. But I thought, I'm a theater person. I'm used to being scrappy and figuring it out. I didn't realize how much I was pushing myself. I was 55 then, and I don't think I was accepting how tired I was. I just kept going. What did you do after you first realized something was wrong at the gym? I was talking to a friend on the phone, this guy I'd been seeing. And that was also part of the stress — a relationship that was falling apart. He wasn't really there for me emotionally, and that was hard. So I tell him what's going on, and he says, "Take your blood pressure." It was really high. He goes, "You might need to go to the hospital. It could be a stroke." I had been having headaches too — pain behind my ear. I thought it was sinuses. Apparently, there are no sinuses back there. I went to the ER, and they immediately suspected stroke. But when the doctor saw me, he said it was Bell's palsy. Gave me antivirals, steroids. I told production I'd be fine in three weeks. That was wishful thinking. I wanted to be upfront, not spend time worrying. I've always believed in using the truth in acting. And I thought, this character? It would be fine if she had Bell's palsy. She's not the romantic lead. I don't want to say nobody gives a shit about her, but … She's hilarious! We love smoothie-making Patrice. Thank you. I haven't watched all of it. I got nervous about seeing my face. But I felt like I didn't really matter much to the show. But your character is one that makes the show work. It feels like a true ensemble. That dinner table scene when you and other guest stars are with Julianne Moore, Kevin Bacon — it's one of the most memorable ones. Yes! That's a good example. I was sick that day. Didn't understand what was going on yet ... I had to leave the set often ... it was awful. I'd never been sick like that while working. It was … depressing. Isolating. And I thought about all the people who shoot through cancer, who are shooting through illnesses and they keep going. You don't want to shut down production. And meanwhile, I'm thinking, "I'm going to be on camera. This is all being documented. This might be the end of my [career]." But in some ways, it's been kind of amazing. You turned a crisis into comedy. The scene when you're huddling in the pantry and you say, "My Bell's palsy is back." How did you decide to incorporate that into the character? Was it easy to be that vulnerable on camera? I didn't decide that I wanted to be vulnerable. It just happens by accident. I've always come up through solo theater, which is always about turning my life into art. I've written books; I teach about writing about your life. So I felt very sure that if they would let me use it, it could work. And honestly, I thought the character needed something more. I'm not insulting the writing! But it felt like, OK, I'm the lesbian chef. I've played lesbian chefs multiple times. That's a type for me. So when I suggested incorporating the Bell's palsy ... I wanted to talk to the creator. I had a Zoom call with the showrunner [Molly Smith Metzler] and the director. I wanted them to see my face, to understand what we were dealing with. I explained what I wanted to do, and they were so kind. They were like, "Lauren, you are the opposite of vanity. What you are doing is so strong." And I truly thought — I don't know if I have trust issues or if I just was sick and in a weird space — I was like, they're just saying that because they feel really sorry for me. They're probably looking at me going like, let's be really nice. I couldn't almost accept that they were as kind as they actually were. Molly is over-the-top kind. Like, she's a kindness that I really don't understand. I'm like, are you trying to get into heaven? She's like, "Lauren, this is what creating with females is like. Whatever you have to do — we want to support you in any way. If you feel like you want to take more time, we'll give you time. If you want to be on camera and use it, we'll do that." I said I'll definitely take that one. So it worked out. I just improvised in that scene and did the same thing with Abbott Elementary. We wrote it in too. Hacks is the only one that didn't write it in. They just made it that I was a little drunk! All three of those shows are female-led productions. I'm not trying to throw shade at men here — It's hard not to! Because it really is different. Have you had experiences during this health journey where a set hasn't been so welcoming? The only thing that bummed me out was one experience with a makeup artist. I won't say which show, but … I had this idea — because I'd been watching drag queens tape their faces that maybe I could tape my face to lift the paralyzed side. So I told the makeup artist, "Hey, I'm thinking about taping." She said, "Let's see when you get here." But when she saw me, she was like, Oh my God. I said, "I know ... is there anything we can do?" And she said the tape wouldn't work, you'd see it on camera, it's too much. And she said, "I don't know what to do. Listen, you're sick, all right? You are." It felt honest, actually. She said, "You're going through something pretty big right now. I don't know. There's not much we can do." After she left. A different makeup artist who was there for the day came up to me and said, "Hey, would you like a little bit of makeup?" I started crying. I thought I didn't want to be vain — it's so important to me to like I don't care. I wanted to be above that. But I said yes. She was so nurturing. Later, she told me she was also a healer and massage therapist. I realized that's the kind of energy I needed. Everyone treats me like I'm so tough. But what I needed was someone to say ... I'm sorry this is happening, and she acknowledged that. The other woman had been a little harsh. It really stuck with me. Honestly, the shows have been incredibly supportive. The only thing that still bothers me is when people say, "I didn't even notice it!" I'm like, is that gaslighting of emotion? Because what do you mean you didn't notice it? When you're put in an unexpectedly difficult situation like this, I think it's OK to use it to your advantage if you can. Have you had more opportunities since coming forward with your diagnosis? Not really. The idea is that it'll go away. I lost some jobs because of this. But then I found a way to audition. I didn't end up getting a part in Palm Royale, but I was close — and it was because they cut the role. I've learned how to audition with just one side of my face. I just booked my first job having Bell's palsy where it didn't even come up at all. Is it ? My favorite show of last year. Yes! I'm a guest star. I wish that would shift a bit, but I'm happy for the work. When you look back at your work — , , — is there one role you're especially proud of? No-brainer. I liked Euphoria a lot, because the experience mattered to me. I got to sit and listen to Hunter [Schafer] — she helped write that episode, and it was incredibly personal. I truly felt like I was witnessing the evolution of humanity by listening to her talk about being trans. It was deep. I loved it. But it was only one or two days of shooting. Looking by far is the one I'm proudest of. It's the only show I was a series regular on. Even before I got that status, I loved being part of it. So what are your career goals from here? What would you love to do? I'm always working on my own stuff, but I haven't been able to as much since Bell's palsy. Normally, I'm doing TV stuff here and there, while also writing, performing live shows, painting ... all artsy things. TV used to afford me that. I remember hiking with a friend — she's also an actress — and she said, "Lauren, we're done. If we haven't become known by now, we're just going to stay in this guest star spot. They're not going to cast us as leads." And I was like, "Well, I'm not done." I want to act more. I just keep thinking I'm going to keep acting more. I said something so corny, but I was like, "If you love it, it's gonna love you back." I truly love acting and working. There was this period when I felt embarrassed by not being more successful. I assumed it was because I wasn't attractive enough. Like, I truly was like, I'm not hot, I'm not on-camera hot. I'm not a love interest. I'm the lesbian chef. That resentful period has passed. I'm post-menopause; I'm older. I've gotten way more into acting again. I love working on auditions. If I'm not worried about money — I have a pretty low-key life. I have a rent-controlled apartment, so I don't have a lot of overhead. You don't make a lot of money as a guest star. But that's OK. I really believe I'm gonna keep doing more. I'm glad my story is helping other people ... I keep hearing from people with Bell's palsy now. I get a lot of emails, which is so sweet. It's been bringing so much love.