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New York Mayoral Race 2025 Decoded: Zohran Mamdani, Eric Adams or Andrew Cuomo - who will win?
New York Mayoral Race 2025 Decoded: Zohran Mamdani, Eric Adams or Andrew Cuomo - who will win?

Time of India

timea day ago

  • Politics
  • Time of India

New York Mayoral Race 2025 Decoded: Zohran Mamdani, Eric Adams or Andrew Cuomo - who will win?

In Daredevil: Born Again , Wilson Fisk—the Kingpin of Crime—doesn't just manipulate the system; he becomes Mayor of New York. Because in the Marvel Universe, the best way to consolidate criminal power isn't through backroom deals—it's by getting elected. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now A comic book storyline? Maybe. But in 2025 New York, fiction and politics are on disturbingly good terms. This is the city where Sinatra sang about making it big, Trump gold-plated his ego, and aliens always seem to start their invasions. So naturally, New York's mayoral race couldn't just be another bland contest of platforms and pamphlets—it had to be a full-blown cinematic crossover event. Daredevil: Born Again | Wilson Fisk becomes Mayor of New York City | Clip 4K The incumbent, Eric Adams, entered 2025 under a federal indictment—only to be miraculously rescued by the Trump Justice Department. Unburdened but politically bruised, Adams bailed on the Democratic primary and now seeks reelection as an independent via two oddly branded ballot lines: Safe Streets, Affordable City and EndAntiSemitism. Think DJ Khaled meets Bloomberg, but with more subpoenas. In the Democratic primary, the drama centres on two men who couldn't be more different if they tried: Andrew Cuomo, the scandal-drenched ex-Governor staging a Nixonian comeback, and Zohran Mamdani, a 33-year-old democratic socialist from Queens endorsed by AOC, Bernie Sanders, the Working Families Party, and anyone who uses the phrase 'neoliberal hellscape' without irony. Trailing them is a whole gallery of political side characters: Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, Comptroller Brad Lander, State Senators Zellnor Myrie and Jessica Ramos, hedge fund crusader Whitney Tilson, integrity lawyer Jim Walden, and the ever-returning vigilante Curtis Sliwa, whose red beret remains the most consistent part of Republican strategy in NYC. Eric Adams – The Survivor Mayor Image credits: Getty Images Adams' first term was less a public service than a multi-season streaming show. Tired of too many ads? go ad free now Crime stats, police drama, migrant shelter chaos, zoning reforms, a revolving cast of commissioners—and all of it interspersed with nightclub appearances and cryptic Instagram captions. Then came the indictment. Then came the acquittal. Now, Adams has reinvented himself as the 'competence candidate,' reminding voters that murders are down, rezonings are up, and hey—at least he's not a felon. But public memory is short and sharp. Most New Yorkers remember the headlines, not the metrics. They remember the vibe. And the vibe was: chaos, ego, and subpoenas. If Adams wins, it'll be a masterclass in narrative control. If he loses, it'll be because even New York eventually gets tired of being gaslit. Andrew Cuomo – The Once and Future Kingpin Image credits: Getty Images Cuomo is back. Not because New Yorkers missed him, but because Cuomo missed being Cuomo. His campaign pitch? 'Experience matters.' His campaign vibe? 'Please forget everything after 2019.' He's armed with union endorsements, a donor Rolodex fat enough to crush a CitiBike, and the smug certainty of a man who believes he built the state and should get a second chance to ruin the city. But every speech, every op-ed, every photo-op brings back the ghosts: the nursing home scandal, the sexual harassment accusations, the press briefings that felt like hostage negotiations. He's polling well among moderates, but even his supporters admit it's less about enthusiasm and more about resignation. Cuomo is the electoral equivalent of a nicotine patch: addictive, unsatisfying, and kind of gross. Zohran Mamdani – The Socialist from Queens Zohran Mamdani (Image credit AP) Where Cuomo evokes the past, Zohran Mamdani is the embodiment of political future-shock. Young, Ugandan-Indian, socialist, multilingual, and unapologetically radical, Mamdani offers New York a campaign that reads like a progressive fever dream: a $30 minimum wage, rent freezes, free public transit, and publicly-owned grocery stores. He's adored by the left, feared by centrists, and targeted by conservatives who struggle to pronounce 'Astoria' without wincing. His campaign ads are multilingual, his rallies are electric, and his vibe is pure disruption. But New York is a city that loves the idea of revolution—as long as it arrives in the back of an Uber. Can a city that claps for social justice actually vote for it? Or will it smile at Mamdani's poetry, then quietly fill in the bubble for Cuomo in the privacy of the booth? Brad Lander – The Wonk Whisperer New York City Comptroller Brad Lander is placed under arrest by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and FBI agents outside federal immigration court on Tuesday, June 17, 2025, in New York. (AP Photo/Olga Fedorova) Brad Lander is the guy who shows up to a protest with anExcel sheet and a legal pad. Brooklyn-born, fiscally responsible, and ideologically moderate by progressive standards, Lander has built a reputation as the man who knows how to make the city run. His pitch is clear: data, ethics, efficiency. His platform includes housing reform, mental health infrastructure, and fiscal transparency. He's the candidate who reads the fine print—probably because he wrote it. But charisma matters. In a race filled with rappers, rogues, and reformed governors, Lander is the competent dad trying to DJ the party. He's quietly gaining steam, especially among voters fatigued by Cuomo and wary of Mamdani. But unless he breaks out of his technocratic shell soon, he risks becoming everyone's second choice—and no one's winner. The Progressive Soup Jessica Ramos began her campaign as a worker-first progressive. Then she endorsed Cuomo, and her credibility evaporated faster than a Midtown apartment deposit. Zellnor Myrie staked his candidacy on housing, calling for one million new units. Admirable. But in a race dominated by Mamdani and Lander, he's the third-most progressive in any room—and that's not a great place to be. Adrienne Adams, drafted as the centrist peacemaker, offers measured leadership and broad endorsements. But her campaign has struggled to cut through. In a year where the political circus is running full tilt, being sensible might just be the fastest way to be forgotten. Everyone wants to be the 'anti-Cuomo.' No one has figured out how to consolidate the vote. The result? Progressive fragmentation that makes a circular firing squad look efficient. The Independents, the Billionaires, and the Ballot Hobbyists Whitney Tilson is a charter school–loving hedge funder whose platform is basically 'Run NYC like a spreadsheet.' He's rich, loud, and terminally LinkedIn. Then there's Jim Walden, a Bloombergian technocrat suing to be called an 'independent' on the ballot, armed with powerpoints, white papers, and approximately five enthusiastic voters. These guys won't win. But they will fill panels, clutter debates, and write Medium posts explaining why they should have. Curtis Sliwa – The Red-Beret Rerun And finally: Curtis Sliwa, the vigilante. The red-bereted Ghost of Giuliani Past. Every few years he emerges like a Republican cicada—loud, angry, and allergic to nuance. He's running on a platform of crime, more crime, fewer migrants, and feral cats as pest control. He won't win. But if enough Democrats split the vote, he might finish second. Stranger things have happened. After all, this is the city where rats get pizza and mayors get indicted. Perception vs. Performance – The Real Contest This election isn't about what candidates have done. It's about what voters remember. And more importantly, what they feel. Adams has genuine achievements—but he feels like a nightclub manager with subpoena fatigue. Cuomo has experience—but his scandals still scream louder than his surrogates. Mamdani offers ideas—but he also scares the donor class. Lander is solid—but not sexy. And Sliwa is… available. The media knows it. Every headline is a meme. Every endorsement is a subtweet. Even the New York Times threw in the towel and endorsed no one—New York's journalistic version of saying, 'We're out of ideas. Good luck, Gotham.' Final Notes from Gotham New York's 2025 mayoral race isn't ideological—it's mythological. It's about redemption arcs, origin stories, surprise villains, and broken heroes. It's a city where Wilson Fisk becoming mayor wasn't a warning—it was a prophecy. Will voters choose the devil they know (Cuomo)? The devil they fired (Adams)? The socialist the Right fears (Mamdani)? Or the nerd in glasses who actually has a plan (Lander)? One thing is certain: whoever wins, they won't just inherit New York—they'll inherit its neuroses, contradictions, and the sacred duty of being yelled at in five languages before 10 AM.

Top TV series to watch on Disney+ for £1.99, including Grey's Anatomy and Netflix rival
Top TV series to watch on Disney+ for £1.99, including Grey's Anatomy and Netflix rival

Daily Record

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

Top TV series to watch on Disney+ for £1.99, including Grey's Anatomy and Netflix rival

Disney+ has brought back its cheapest streaming deal for 2022, making it the cheapest major streaming site - and there's plenty of series to watch on the platform The weekend is upon us and for those eager to unwind on the settee with a binge-worthy series, there's plenty to choose from. Disney+ is grabbing headlines with the return of one of its most cost-effective deals, as prices plummet to £1.99. The offer scraps the usual £4.99 per month cost of the Standard with Ads plan for £1.99 a month. This makes it the cheapest major streaming site, beating Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Apple TV+ tariffs. Customers will need to sign up for the subscription to secure the £1.99 price, but there's no obligatory contract and users can cancel after each 30-day period. The deal is up for grabs until 30 June, and it lasts for four months before reverting to the previous £4.99 rate, as The Mirror reports. With a jam-packed telly schedule for the summer, including the live-action Snow White and Marvel's Ironheart, there's loads to view. As a team brimming with series enthusiasts, we've got a few recommendations from the new Welcome to Wrexham season, reality dramas The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, or decade classics like Grey's Anatomy. Narin's top picks - Daredevil: Born Again and Welcome to Wrexham Daredevil: Born Again might be the best telly series I've watched this year so far. Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio reprise their roles as Daredevil and Kingpin as the two old foes clash once again, with both men attempting to balance their public personas and secret lives deeply entwined with New York's crime-infested underworld. The outcome is a programme that takes the best of the already-excellent Netflix series (including some fan favourite comebacks) and surprisingly makes it even darker and more brutal - what would Walt say? As a self-confessed comic book enthusiast, I admit that Marvel fatigue has been a reality for some time now, with much of their content proving to be a miss rather than a hit for me. Daredevil: Born Again (and indeed also Thunderbolts which will be arriving on the streaming giant soon) are a welcome and much-needed return to quality and definitely a must-watch. Welcome to Wrexham season four is currently streaming on Disney+ and this £1.99 deal lets you watch the exciting finale of the celebrity-led club's season week by week. In the brief four years since Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney purchased Wrexham AFC for £2 million, the club's fortunes have dramatically changed, transforming it into a £150m+ powerhouse in football. This programme provides an excellent behind-the-scenes glimpse at that rise, led by both men along with a cast of supporting characters, including the team's foul-mouthed yet brilliant manager Phil Parkinson and Executive Director Humphrey Ker. Don't let the football sidetrack you, though - at its heart, this is as much a show about the community and people who live around Wrexham as the on-pitch antics and all the better for it. If you prefer your reality TV to be uplifting rather than fraught with tension, then this is your next ideal binge watch. Phoebe's top pick - Grey's Anatomy My mum has always sworn by Grey's Anatomy, having watched it religiously since its debut in the mid-2000s. So, when it became available on Disney+, I decided to give it a try and see what all the fuss was about. I registered and immediately started binge-watching the captivating series. I can joyfully declare that Grey's Anatomy has secured a spot in my all-time favourite TV shows. It's brimming with emotion and passion, and features a host of characters I absolutely love. The show's creator, Shonda Rhimes, has me chuckling one moment and sobbing uncontrollably the next. With 21 series and over 400 episodes to be watched, it's guaranteed to keep households amused for months. Harriet's top pick - The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives If you're a fan of drama, gossip, affairs and the social media frenzy, then I'd highly recommend The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. The second series of this reality show has recently landed on Disney+ following a gripping first series - and I've never been more engrossed in a programme. I'd say you need to be a fan of shows like Keeping Up with Kardashians and The Real Housewives to appreciate this one. The series trails a group of MumTok influencers and their Mormon community as they manoeuvre through growing social presence and scandals. Jake's top pick - Andor Series 2 I've been a massive Star Wars enthusiast since my childhood, but had nearly abandoned the franchise after some of its recent offerings left me suffering from Jedi fatigue. That was until the new series of Andor reeled me back in completely. Despite not being overly impressed by the first series, I found myself utterly captivated by the eponymous rebel spy's latest mission, so much so that I binged the entire thing over a single weekend. It may not feature any lightsabers or Jedi, but what it does provide firmly establishes its place as one of the finest Star Wars titles there is and without question, the best episodic instalment yet. There simply aren't enough superlatives to describe the series; it's exquisitely filmed, each performance is Emmy-worthy and the high-stakes of Andor's mission result in incredibly gripping viewing – particularly in the latter half of the series. Rewatching Rogue One – which takes place immediately after the Andor finale – entirely alters the viewer's perspective on the story, enhancing an already fantastic film. Jada's top pick - Abbotts Elementary Quinta Brunson has been on my radar since her 'he got money' videos went viral during my teenage years. I've followed her career through the Buzzfeed era and when I discovered that her award-winning show would be available to stream on Disney+ I knew it was time to subscribe. Abbott Elementary centres around a public school in Philadelphia where the odds are stacked against everyone. It's consistently hilarious and I'd love to be a fly on the wall in their writer's room. Quinta portrays Janine Teagues, a bubbly second-grade teacher brimming with enthusiasm to make a positive impact. There's a romantic tension brewing between Janine and Gregory, portrayed by Everybody Hates Chris star Tyler James Williams, that had me cheering for them throughout as they clumsily navigate their feelings. It's undoubtedly the best mockumentary sitcom I've ever seen, my only complaint is that episodes are released later in the UK than the US - so I made sure to catch up with the season finale when I visited the states earlier this year. Something Disney+ doesn't offer and Eve's favourite 1883 is, without question, one of the finest TV series I have watched to date. I'm quite eclectic when it comes to the shows I watch. I'm a big fan of Gilmore Girls and Ginny and Georgia (both on Netflix) as well as the thrilling, edge-of-your-seat, relatively brutal mob-family spectacle Mobland (Amazon Prime), Ted Lesso (Apple TV), The Last of Us (NOW) and New Girl (Disney+). Each of which bring very different things to the table. But when 1883 was recommended to me, aside from knowing the bare bones of its description, I had no idea what to expect. A prequel to the highly acclaimed Yellowstone (a show still on my watch-list), 1883 is an American Western drama miniseries which traces the origin story of the Dutton family to the Yellowstone ranch. The show follows the five Dutton family members in post-Civil War America as they escape poverty in Texas and embark on a long, gruelling journey through the Great Plains in search of a better future in Montana. According to IMDB, the show's synopsis is: "The post-Civil War generation of the Dutton family travels to Texas, and joins a wagon train undertaking the arduous journey west to Oregon, before settling in Montana to establish what would eventually become the Yellowstone Ranch." Delving into the lives of ranchhands and cowboys, as well as the history, struggles, and conflicts faced by Native Americans during this era, it's an action-packed and emotionally charged story that had me captivated. This 10-part series boasts an impressive cast, including notable figures from film and country music such as Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Sam Elliott, with guest appearances by Billy Bob Thornton and Tom Hanks. Its sequel, 1923, features Helen Mirren and Harrison Ford, and is also an exceptional watch on Paramount+.

‘Loki and Daredevil would have a fun match-up!' Tom Hiddleston eyes Marvel collab with Charlie Cox
‘Loki and Daredevil would have a fun match-up!' Tom Hiddleston eyes Marvel collab with Charlie Cox

Perth Now

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

‘Loki and Daredevil would have a fun match-up!' Tom Hiddleston eyes Marvel collab with Charlie Cox

Tom Hiddleston wants to work with Charlie Cox in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The 44-year-old actor has portrayed Loki since 2011's Thor and is set to return as the God of Mischief in Avengers: Doomsday, and Hiddleston has now revealed he wants to join forces with the Daredevil: Born Again star, 42, in a future MCU project. When Buzzfeed Celeb asked Hiddleston which Marvel actor he'd most like to collaborate with in the superhero franchise, he said: 'I've worked with a lot of them now, and that's been a great joy. It's hard to pick one, because they're all such extraordinary actors. 'I'd like to work with Daredevil. Charlie Cox is a dear friend of mine. I think Loki and Daredevil would have a fun match-up. 'Charlie and I were in a play together on Broadway on Halloween, and I dressed up as Daredevil and he dressed up as Loki. It was really fun!' As well as Hiddleston's Loki, Avengers: Doomsday will see the return of Chris Hemsworth as Thor, Paul Rudd as Ant-Man, Pedro Pascal as Mr. Fantastic, Vanessa Kirby as The Invisible Woman, Joseph Quinn as The Human Torch and Ebon Moss-Bachrach as The Thing. The 2026 blockbuster will introduce former Iron Man star Robert Downey Jr. as Marvel's new big bad, Doctor Doom. While Avengers: Doomsday will include swathes of fan-favourite characters, Cox previously insisted he wouldn't appear in the film. During Marvel's livestream for Avengers: Doomsday in March, the studio revealed returning cast members by showing chairs with their names on the back, though Cox's name did not appear. Following Cox's absence from the announcement livestream, he told Screen Rant: 'It's not there, is it? 'Listen, the way that information gets to us is the same way that it gets to everyone else normally. At least historically, that's been the case. 'Someone sent me the link. I looked for my name. It's not there. So, maybe one day.' Before the livestream, it had been theorised that the Devil of Hell's Kitchen would be included in Avengers: Doomsday, with speculation growing around Christmas last year when Cox was spotted working out at DFRNT Health and Fitness in Western Australia. The gym owners had posted an image of Cox and his wife Sam in the health club with the caption: 'Charlie is currently training for his role in the upcoming Avengers movie', though the actor later revealed he had been training for the second season of Daredevil: Born Again - not for the blockbuster. The actor called his bosses to insist he didn't tell anyone he would be suiting up as Daredevil in Avengers: Doomsday, and admitted he felt 'terrible' when the speculation began. Cox told Entertainment Weekly: 'I was there for Christmas with my family. And on the last day, they asked if they could take a picture with me, which we did. 'I had said to them, 'I'm getting ready to play Daredevil', because I am! I'm getting ready to play Daredevil in season two of Daredevil: Born Again. 'Sometimes people who aren't really in the [entertainment] world, they don't understand the terminology or whatever, but for some reason they posted that and they put, 'Getting ready for his role in the Avengers', which is not true. 'I felt terrible. I had to call my bosses and say, 'I didn't say that,' obviously. Why would I say that? Why would I make something like that up?'

Disney+ series our team is bingeing as £1.99 deal comes back
Disney+ series our team is bingeing as £1.99 deal comes back

Daily Mirror

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mirror

Disney+ series our team is bingeing as £1.99 deal comes back

Disney+ is back with a mega-cheap £1.99 streaming offer - these are the series our team is loving The weekend is here and for those keen to relax on the sofa with a bingeable series, there's lots on offer. Disney+ is making headlines for the return of one of its most affordable deals, as prices drop to £1.99. The deal ditches the usual £4.99 per month price of the Standard with Ads plan for a much cheaper £1.99 rate. It makes it the cheapest major streaming site, less than Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Apple TV+ tariffs. Shoppers will have to sign up for the subscription to get the £1.99 price, but there is no required contract and users can leave after each 30-day window. The deal is available to snap up by June 30, and it lasts for four months before rising to the previous £4.99 rate. With a packed TV guide for the summer, including the live-action Snow White and Marvel's Ironheart, there's plenty to watch. As a team filled with series lovers, we've got a handful of recommendations from the new Welcome to Wrexham season, reality dramas The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, or decade classics like Grey's Anatomy. Narin's favourites - Daredevil: Born Again and Welcome to Wrexham Daredevil: Born Again might be the best TV series I've watched this year so far. Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio reprise their roles as Daredevil and Kingpin as the two old adversaries clash once more, with both men trying to juggle their public personas and secret lives inextricably linked with New York's crime-ridden underbelly. The result is a show that takes the best of the already-brilliant Netflix run (including some fan favourite returns) and surprisingly makes it even darker and more brutal - what would Walt say? As a proud comic book geek I freely confess that Marvel fatigue has been a thing for a while now, with much of their output proving a miss rather than a hit for me. Daredevil: Born Again (and actually also Thunderbolts which will be coming to the streaming giant in due course) are a pleasing and much-needed return to quality and definitely a must-see. Welcome to Wrexham season four is streaming now on Disney+ and this £1.99 deal allows you to watch the thrilling climax of the celeb-led club's season week by week. In the four short years since A-listers Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney bought Wrexham AFC for £2 million the club's fortunes have transformed, taking it into a £150m+ force in football. This show offers a great behind-the-scenes look at that ascendance, led by both men alongside a cast of supporting characters, including the team's sweary yet brilliant manager Phil Parkinson and Executive Director Humphrey Ker. Don't let the football distract you, though - at its core, this is as much a show about the community and people who live around Wrexham as the on-pitch shenanigans and all the better for it. If you like your reality TV heartwarming rather than angsty then this is your next perfect binge watch. Harriet's favourite - The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives If drama, gossip, affairs and the craze of social media is your thing then I'd highlighy recommend The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. Season 2 of the reality series has recently hit Disney+ after a gripping first season - and I've never been more hooked on a series. Yes, you have to enjoy shows like Keeping Up with Kardashians and The Real Housewives to love this. The series follows a group of MomTok influencers and their Mormon community as they navigate growing social presence and scandals. Jake's favourite - Andor Season 2 I've been a huge Star Wars fan since I was a little kid, but had almost given up on the franchise after some of its recent output left me with Jedi fatigue. That was until the new season of Andor pulled me well and truly back in. After admittedly not being blown away by the first season, I was completely gripped by the eponymous rebel spy's latest mission, so much so that I binged the whole thing in one weekend. It may not feature any lightsabers or Jedi, but what it does offer cements its position as one of the greatest Star Wars titles there is and without doubt, the best episodic instalment yet. There simply aren't enough superlatives to describe the series; it's beautifully shot, each performance is Emmy-worthy and the high-stakes of Andor's mission result in incredibly intense viewing – especially in the latter half of the series. Going back to watch Rogue One – which is set immediately after the Andor finale – completely changes the viewer's perspective on the story, making a great film even better. Jada's favourite - Abbotts Elementary Quinta Brunson has been on my radar since she first went viral for her 'he got money' videos when I was a teenager, with her enthusiastically telling anyone who would listen that her cinema date was rich since he bought a large popcorn. I've watched her through the Buzzfeed years and when I heard that her award-winning show was going to be available to stream on Disney+ I knew it was time to get a subscription. Abbott Elementary is about a public school in Philadelphia where the odds aren't really in anyone's favour. It's so consistently funny that I'd love to be a fly on the wall of their writer's room. Quinta plays Janine Teagues, a perky second-grade teacher with so much enthusiasm to make a positive difference. The cast are all hilarious in their own right, Ava the principal (played by Janelle James), who bribed her way into a job has to be one of the standout characters and over the seasons she seems a little more vulnerable even if she remains obnoxiously tone deaf. There's romantic tension with Janine and Gregory, played by Everybody Hates Chris star Tyler James Williams, that had me routing for them the whole way through as they awkwardly navigate their feelings. It's easily the best mockumentary sitcom I've ever seen, my only gripe is the episodes are released later in the UK than the US - so I made sure to catch up to the season finale when I visited the states earlier this year. Eve's favourite is something Disney+ doesn't offer 1883 is, without a doubt, one of the best TV series I have watched to date. I'm a bit of an all-rounder when it comes to the shows I watch. I'm a sucker for Gilmore Girls and Ginny & Georgia (both on Netflix) as well as the hit, edge-of-your-seat, relatively brutal mob-family extravaganza Mobland (Amazon Prime), Ted Lesso (Apple TV), The Last of Us (NOW) and New Girl (Disney+). All of which bring very different things to the table. But when I was recommended 1883, aside from knowing the bare bones of its description, I had no idea what to expect. A prequel to the highly regarded Yellowstone (a show still on my watch-list), 1883 is an American Western drama miniseries which follows the origin story of the Dutton family to the Yellowstone ranch. The show sees the five Dutton family members in post-Civil War America flee poverty in Texas and embark on a long, arduous journey through the Great Plains in the hope of a better future in Montana. A description of the show on IMDB reads: 'The post-Civil War generation of the Dutton family travels to Texas, and joins a wagon train undertaking the arduous journey west to Oregon, before settling in Montana to establish what would eventually become the Yellowstone Ranch.' Exploring the use and roles ranchhands/cowboys as well as the history, challenges and conflicts faced by the Indiginous Americans during this period, it's an action-packed, heart-wrenching story that had me hooked. The 10-part series features some pretty big names in the world of film as country music such as Tim McGraw, Faith Hill, Sam Elliott and even has cameos from Billy Bob Thornton and Tom Hanks. Its sequel, 1923, stars Helen Mirren and Harrison Ford - also an incredible watch on Paramount+ Phoebe's favourite - Grey's Anatomy Grey's Anatomy is my mum's favourite TV show of all time. She has been a loyal viewer since the first series aired in the mid-2000s, so when it was announced that the American medical drama would be available on Disney+, I wanted to see what all the fuss was about. I signed up and began binge-watching the gripping show right away. I can happily say Grey's Anatomy has earned a place in my top TV shows of all-time. It's full of heart and passion, and a bunch of characters I adore. The show's creator Shonda Rhimes has me laughing out loud one minute and ugly crying the next. With there being 21 series and over 400 episodes waiting to be watched, it's sure to keep households entertained for months.

Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'
Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Vincent D'Onofrio teases ‘Daredevil: Born Again' Season 2 is ‘even more complex and more dangerous'

It took time for Daredevil: Born Again to figure out what kind of show it wanted to be. Stars Charlie Cox and Vincent D'Onofrio started reprising their roles as Matt Murdock/Daredevil and Wilson Fisk/Kingpin in 2021, with respective cameos in other Marvel Cinematic Universe projects like Spider-Man: No Way Home and Hawkeye. That meant working within the tones of those stories, but when the two characters finally reunited, their actors knew they needed to return to the flavor of the previous Daredevil series (which originally streamed on Netflix before moving to Disney+). 'Our jobs as actors are to service the story,' D'Onofrio tells Gold Derby during a brief break from filming Season 2 of Daredevil: Born Again. 'It's my job to match the tone of whatever they're doing, because otherwise it'll look odd. So each time I played him, we got closer to the darker aspect, which I think really suits him — like, Echo got a little more gritty [than Hawkeye]. And so then we were going to do a show that was even less dark, but we realized early on that this wasn't working, that it had to be more like the original show.' More from GoldDerby Everything to know about HBO's 'Harry Potter' TV series - including the cast and controversy Grammys EP Ben Winston on the risks of producing live TV: 'I always never know quite why we do it' 'Ballerina' stumbles at the box office while 'Lilo & Stitch' surfs to another $32.5M D'Onofrio continues, 'so about six episodes in of the first season, we stopped and rethought things, and so now we're doing the show that we always wanted to do. We kept the idea that it was a shared show with two leads, which is different than the Netflix show, but I think it's interesting.' D'Onofrio is right that both Fisk and Murdock each feel like protagonists of their own story in Daredevil: Born Again, and one of the show's most interesting elements is that they hardly ever interact. Cox and D'Onofrio only shared the screen a couple times in Season 1, and each time they did (such as their Heat-worthy diner conversation in the premiere episode, or the climactic moment when Murdock unexpectedly took a bullet for Fisk) there were explosive consequences. According to D'Onofrio, viewers should expect that trend to continue into Season 2. Disney/Marvel 'We're sticking to the plan where the more you put these guys together, the less interesting it is,' D'Onofrio says, echoing what Cox has also told us. 'But there are a couple of, to say the least, very intense moments between the two of them in the second season.' D'Onofrio continues, 'It's sparse, but it's intense as hell. And there's a lot for fans to look forward to in the second season because it's, how can I put this? What we're doing in the second season, when we pair up Daredevil and Fisk in scenes, is even more complex and more dangerous than they've seen before. Some of the scenes that we're having in the second season, there's been nothing like them before.' Season 1 of Daredevil: Born Again ended with both Murdock and Fisk reclaiming their roles (and signature costumes) as Daredevil and Kingpin, despite what they told each other in that diner. They've each got supporters, in the form of Daredevil's ragtag group of righteous prosecutors, fugitive vigilantes, and fearless reporters lining up against Mayor Fisk's anti-vigilante task force. This is a change from the original Daredevil series, which reset its plotlines every season. Though D'Onofrio is wary about letting spoilers out of the bag too soon, he confirms that Season 2 will build from there. 'We pick up where we left off, and things are just getting increasingly intense,' D'Onofrio says. 'At the end of the first season, he's declared martial law, and that doesn't go away. That gets even more intense, and there's a feeling of a resistance being formed with Charlie's side of the show. Aspects of that continue through the second season in very intense ways. So I really can't say much more than that, but the story continues to move forward.' The prospect of a supervillain like Kingpin successfully becoming mayor of New York City is frankly believable at a time when Donald Trump can get re-elected president after being impeached twice and Eric Adams, the real-life mayor of New York, can retain his office after being indicted by the FBI. But Fisk's power doesn't just come from his office. Why do the violent cops on his task force follow him so loyally? 'It's very clear that it's harder to be good than it is to be bad, and that makes us who we are as people,' D'Onofrio says. 'Are we willing to struggle to keep our morality? I think a lot of us are, but unfortunately, there are people that don't want to work so hard. They just want what they want, and they don't want to work for it. They just want to steal it. So I think that's what's happening. I think that his henchmen on the task force are following suit. Fisk wants to stretch his reach and they want to follow because it's easy.' But if the characters want things the easy way, the actors don't. After the creative reboot on Daredevil: Born Again got everyone in the cast and crew on the same page, they've all gone full steam ahead. 'It is a very hard show to do because you've got two very interesting main characters that live in the light and in the dark, and that's a tough script to write,' D'Onofrio says. 'So we're doing everything we need to do to struggle through them, get them right, and keep trying to do the best we can do. We're all working our butts off, the whole crew and all the actors.' D'Onofrio continues, 'We're also super lucky. We have such an amazing cast of supporting actors. I've made a career out of being a supporting actor, and it's so nice to see these young people who are supporting in our cast be such good actors and really brave and trying to do all kinds of things to make our stories more interesting. It just seems to be gelling out really well. It's quite a crew.' Season 1 of Daredevil: Born Again is streaming now on Disney+. Best of GoldDerby Marlon Wayans on laughing through tragedy in 'Good Grief' and why social media has made comedy 'toxic' Minha Kim 'confronted all new emotions that I had never anticipated' in Season 2 of 'Pachinko' 'Étoile': Exclusive 4-part conversation with creators, star Luke Kirby, cinematographer, and choreographer Click here to read the full article.

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