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Parents Flying With 2-Month-Old Have a Plan—but Not Everyone Agrees
Parents Flying With 2-Month-Old Have a Plan—but Not Everyone Agrees

Newsweek

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Newsweek

Parents Flying With 2-Month-Old Have a Plan—but Not Everyone Agrees

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. What the parents of a 2-month-old girl did for fellow passengers during a recent flight has sparked an online debate. Olivia Ross (@olivianicole808), an art teacher and photographer from Kansas City, Missouri, was flying from Charlotte back home when she witnessed a small but touching act of kindness that left a big impression. Ross had noticed the plane was packed with children, likely due to the end of the school year and families heading off on summer vacations. As she settled into her seat, she was surprised by the unexpected gesture from the family sitting in front of her, whose baby girl, Hazel, was just two months old. "Hazel's family was seated in front of me and they were kind and courteous from the moment they stepped on the plane. I didn't notice anything out of the ordinary until her dad started handing out little plastic bags to the people seated around them! It seemed like a special moment, so I pulled out my phone camera! I love a goodie bag so I was excited when he offered one to me," Ross told Newsweek. A split image showing the gifts that Hazel's parents gave out to fellow plane passengers. A split image showing the gifts that Hazel's parents gave out to fellow plane passengers. @olivianicole808/@olivianicole808 Her post of her short-haul flight experience garnered 603,600 likes and 4.5 million views on TikTok. The goodie bag contained Oreos, mints, hand wipes, earplugs, and antibacterial wipes—along with a heartfelt note, which read: "Hello! My name is Hazel and this is my first time flying on an airplane. I'm only 2 months old, so...I may be good. I may be bad. Sorry if I make you mad! Hazel." Ross said the gesture clearly took time and care to prepare. She noticed the thoughtful note and knew Hazel's mom had put a lot of effort into making the bags. Although there were a few noisy moments from other children on the 2 hour and 20 minutes flight, Hazel was "an angel," sleeping through almost the entire trip. Ross also made sure to check in with Hazel's mom, Brooke, before posting photos of the gesture online. After Ross shared her experience, the internet responded passionately, with many users chiming in on whether parents should go to such lengths. "Parents should NOT have to do this," said one TikTok user named Lily. Another disagreed: "Every parent should do this." Others echoed a range of opinions. "It's thoughtful, but unnecessary. People should be able to coexist on a plane with a baby. We were all once annoying children and hundreds of people had to put up with it," one person commented. "People that complain about babies on a plane need to fly private every time," another added. "The comments saying it's unnecessary for the parents to be considerate of others is so crazy to me," one user said. "Parents SHOULD do this! If they are decent, not self centered human beings. Whoever says otherwise should not have kids," said another. "Listen, babies on flights are annoying but just deal with it. This gesture is nice but not necessary—like, come on, we're grown adults. I think we can handle a little annoyance in our lives," another viewer wrote. Do you have any viral videos or pictures that you want to share? We want to see the best ones! Send them in to life@ and they could appear on our site.

‘This brought tears to my eyes' – Ireland AM star Muireann praises ‘brave' guest as she details horrific assault on air
‘This brought tears to my eyes' – Ireland AM star Muireann praises ‘brave' guest as she details horrific assault on air

The Irish Sun

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

‘This brought tears to my eyes' – Ireland AM star Muireann praises ‘brave' guest as she details horrific assault on air

MUIREANN O'Connell has praised a brave Ireland AM guest after she detailed her horrific assault during a tear-jerking interview. Hazel Behan, who accused Advertisement 3 Muireann and Tommy spoke to Hazel Behan on air on Tuesday's show Credit: VMTV 3 Hazel detailed the horrific sexual assault she experienced 21 years ago Credit: VMTV 3 Muireann and Tommy were emotional during the interview Credit: VMTV The Dubliner, then aged just 20, was tied up, whipped and raped repeatedly for up to five hours by a knife-wielding intruder who broke into her apartment while she was working as a holiday rep in Brueckner's expected release from his current conviction comes a month before Hazel explained, on air, how she had walked home by herself after arguing with her then-boyfriend and fell asleep in her bed. She was then woken up to a masked man dressed in all black, who was carrying a knife, standing over her. Advertisement read more on hazel behan The 41-year-old said: "I just instantly froze. I couldn't quite get myself together." Muireann replied: "How could you? I'm really sorry. You were doing a job that so many of us have done. I've only walked home from nights when you work in Greece or Portugal or Spain." Hazel went on to say: "And I didn't walk down the main street or miles by myself. Not that it would make any odds, but I literally walked across the road. "He told me not to scream. I think there's this innate thing in us that you'll fight back if you feel that you have a chance to win. But I knew instantly that I didn't. I knew I just wouldn't have had a chance against this person. Advertisement read more on the irish sun Exclusive Breaking Warning "So I complied really and he was very methodical. He knew exactly what he was there for. He knew exactly what way he wanted me to be positioned to be in certain shots, because he set up a video camera and recorded everything that happened." Hazel said the "only time" she refused to do something he asked was when he wanted her to go into the bathroom. Police put me through horrific treatment after Portugal rape ordeal, I deserve answers & apology, says Hazel Behan She explained: "I just had this idea that if he brought me into the bathroom, that that was it. "So he positioned me in a kneeled position over a small little bench sofa thing in the room and placed my head. I was head down on the bench. Advertisement "I know how dramatic it sounds but when you think of somebody standing over you all in black with a mask and a knife and positions it in a certain way - I just honestly thought he was going to just take my head off. I really did. But he didn't, obviously. And he got a sheet from my bed and covered me with the sheet. "Essentially, he packed up everything, stepped out backwards into his shoes. And I didn't know he had gone because the reflection of the light from inside the room on the window of the dark, I couldn't see outside. But he had, thankfully, and I managed to get out of the room." Muireann replied: "I mean, incredible. You went down to a reception in the hotel. The police were called. They take you up to the room. There was no English interpreters. Your experience with the Portuguese police sounded horrific, to say the least." Advertisement In her case, she alleges that Portuguese police failed to seize the blood-stained bed sheets and broken false nails from the struggle with her attacker, which plainly contained important forensic evidence. When asked what she hopes to "achieve" by doing this, she replied: "I'd love to be able to wave a magic wand and just see people in mandated positions, police, legislators, justice system to just do better by particularly women and children, but for everybody. "And I think sexual assault, any form of gender based violence affects us all. If you're lucky enough not to be on the receiving end of it, the likelihood is that you will know somebody who is. "The last thing that you would want is your daughter... you don't want to be my dad, my mother, who sent me off at 20, safe in the knowledge that I was gone off to make all these memories and have the summer of my 21st birthday. Advertisement "And the gasp that came out my dad's breath is something.. when I told him on the phone, what had happened to me is something that has laid heavy on my world and his. "So now, as a parent, I can't change what happened to me - there's no going back, there's no rewriting it. But heaven forbid something would happen to my girls. I would like for them to be treated with the very, very basics, just with some dignity." A short segment of the emotional interview was posted on Ireland AM's Instagram page. Muireann re-shared the video and said: "To hear Hazel talk about her rape... to be eloquent about something so horrific, terrifying and dehumanising is quite simply astonishing. Advertisement "Thank you for talking to us Hazel." Ireland AM viewers flooded the comment section with support and praise for Hazel. Hilda wrote: "You are incredible, brave and strong. I'm so sorry this happened to you and that you were treated so badly in the aftermath." Martha said: "This brought tears to my eyes... horrific for this to even happen, and to still have no justice is just so wrong. I hope justice comes soon. Well done on sharing your story and for fighting all the way. Best wishes to you." Advertisement Niamh wrote: "Your strength in telling your story has brought tears to my eyes. Wishing you get justice for the horror that was inflicted upon you."

The healer and the shrink
The healer and the shrink

Newsroom

time4 days ago

  • Health
  • Newsroom

The healer and the shrink

Grace was 11 when she started hearing voices and seeing visions. She heard a man's voice telling her to harm herself and had repeated visions of a man watching her. She'd begun suffering flashbacks, nightmares and disturbed sleep after watching her father assault her mother nine months early. A chapter from the recently published book Ngā Kūaha: Voices and Visions in Māori Healing and Psychiatry tells the story of Grace's healing session at Health Pasifika, a community mental health service in Porirua. The session was attended by Grace, her mother Hazel, her two siblings, her grandmother Mele and her family pastor Paula, as well as Māori healer, Wiremu NiaNia, and a Western-trained psychiatrist, Allister Bush. Each part of the chapter is told from a different person's point of view. Allister Bush: Our session began when Grace's mother Hazel said, 'When Grace made her way back to bed, past my room, I could see that she had been crying. I called out to her, 'What's up, love?' She wouldn't look at me. Finally she burst out, 'I can hear this voice. It's a man's voice. It won't leave me alone. It told me when I die it has the funeral planned for me. It has the casket and pillow all ready. It said that I'm not allowed to tell you because you won't believe me.' 'The next night it happened again. This time, Grace was in the shower. She came sprinting out of the bathroom wrapped in her towel and said, 'I heard that voice again. It told me to use the shower hose to hang myself.'' Even though I'd heard Hazel's story when we had our first assessment meeting eight weeks earlier, I still felt moved by it. We'd invited Grace to tell some of the story, but she'd said she preferred her mother to speak about it. Wiremu, who was meeting the family for the first time, urged Hazel to continue. 'After that, Grace stayed in my room for a few nights. That weekend she attended a church camp. Two nights after her return she was in her room and heard the voice once more. This time all it said was, 'Hi Grace'. 'We were all praying for her. Grace wasn't herself. She would go into little trances. Every night I always see my kids to bed and kiss them goodnight. Then I clean the house up, shower, and go back and kiss them again once they are asleep. During that time, whenever I would return to Grace's room I felt like something was there. Something was in her room, looking at me, not wanting me to go in there by her. It didn't feel good. I would just walk into her room like, 'Hell no, this is my house, that is my baby!' I would go in there and I would pray for her. 'During this time, I spoke a lot with our pastor, Paula. One weekend she arranged for some elders from our church to come round to our house. We had a prayer meeting that lasted a couple of hours. After that the voice didn't come back for a while. Grace seemed a bit better in herself. I thought, 'Okay, we are slowly getting our girl back.' 'A week or two later, her teacher phoned me and said, 'Grace had a bit of an incident today. After lunch she had been to the toilet and on her return I could see that she was visibly shaken so I had taken her to one side and asked her what was wrong. She said that while she was in the toilet she heard the voice again.'' Wiremu interrupted to ask if the voice was male or female, and Hazel clarified that it was male. 'Within a few nights, something changed. I was doing some baking in the kitchen. Grace got up out of bed to go to the toilet and shortly after she rushed out and came running to me in tears and exclaimed, 'Mum, it's a man! He's standing there in the bathroom.' I went to have a look. There was nothing I could see but now I was thinking, okay, I think I know what this is. It was looking more and more like a spiritual problem. I was feeling increasingly angry about this intrusive stubborn thing harassing my daughter. Several moments later she screamed again, 'Mum, he's standing there by the Christmas tree!' Again I was holding her and praying for her. 'During this time, I was thinking a lot about what Grace told me about her experience,' continued Hazel. 'She said the voice sounded husky, like a smoker's voice. But she wasn't sure if the voice was connected to the man she saw because his face didn't look like he was speaking. She told me the man she saw had a dark complexion, spiky black hair and was wearing a black mask. His eyes and mouth looked red. 'The following night Grace was off to have a shower and screamed: 'Aaagh! He's here again!' When I got back in there she was trying to cover herself up with the shower curtain. 'Honest to God, Mum, he's standing there staring at me! Shall I talk to him? Shall I ask him what he wants?' My response was, 'No, no you don't need to talk to it.' I turned the shower off, wrapped Grace in a towel and we went out to the living room.' Hazel phoned her landlord to tell him what had happened, and he offered to come round that evening to pray for them. Hazel felt uncomfortable as her landlord walked through the house, but when he reached the bathroom he asked Grace if she'd like to say anything. To Hazel's surprise, she said she would. Hazel says, 'Stepping into the bathroom, she closed her eyes and spoke in the most courageous, powerful voice I have ever heard from her. 'In the name of Jesus, get out! With all my heart, in Jesus's name, I demand that you leave!' What she said snapped me out of whatever I was feeling. Suddenly I could speak again. I sat there and agreed with her. 'Yes Lord, you have authority over my house; you are the centre of my house.' 'As soon as he had finished praying, I ushered him out of the house immediately. I locked the door and straight away I burst out crying. I didn't trust what he had done in our house. Once I had some time to calm myself, I led the girls around the house and we prayed for each room; we asked for Jesus's protection over every wall he had touched. 'Since that night, Grace has not seen or heard anything untoward. She still asks me to come and sit in the bathroom while she has a shower, but she is starting to get more confident with that.' Wiremu spoke up. 'In order for us to make sense of what is happening for Grace, I often talk about a process of elimination to help determine what is going on,' he explained. 'As Christians, we have a tendency to assume that everything that we don't understand is demonic. And sometimes our world views as Indigenous people, for me as Māori, and for you as Samoan, Tokelau and Cook Island, have been stigmatised as part of that. In my work I deal with the spirit. 'There is a saying in Māori, 'I hangaia tātou ki te Atua, te hīkoi tātou, te hīkoi tāngata,' which means that first and foremost we are spiritual beings experiencing a human existence. I look to the spiritual side first. And you have all looked after that side. There is enough faith here to move a maunga (mountain) to the other side of town. With all the prayers at your home, with your pastor and in your church, you have taken care of that. So I am thinking, what's going on that helps this thing, this gremlin, to keep coming back?' Wiremu said it was important to consider family relationships as well as the spiritual side. 'I hear what you are saying,' said Grace's grandmother Mele. She looked at Hazel. 'There is another thing. Are you okay if I talk about that?' Hazel met her gaze and nodded. Mele took a slow breath and continued. 'Grace's parents had a pretty bad break-up. Just before they broke up, one night the girls witnessed their Dad beating up their mother very badly. There had been heated arguments before, but that was the first time they had seen anything like that. I know Grace was deeply affected by this. They all were.' I hadn't briefed Wiremu on this assault before the session, but it had been a focus in our initial child psychiatry family assessment meeting. Grace had difficulties sleeping and had nightmares about the assault, which had happened nine months earlier. Anything that reminded her of the assault would trigger vivid and frightening memories, which would leave her feeling very shaken up. She had refused to see her father since and had been struggling to focus at school; everyone agreed she wasn't herself. In our initial meeting, I'd concluded Grace had enough symptoms to justify a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder and had explained some possible approaches. I decided to raise these approaches again with Grace. 'When we last met, Grace, you were having flashbacks, as you called them, relating to that day when your Dad hurt your Mum,' I said. 'One approach I talked about that could help resolve that traumatic experience was the eye movement therapy called EMDR [Eye Movement Desensitisation Reprocessing]. That would be addressing the trauma from the psychological side. However, Wiremu, I think you are suggesting some kind of spiritual way of addressing the impact of this trauma on the family. Am I right?' 'Yes,' replied Wiremu. 'Another part of my mahi (work) involves working with Māori whānau when there has been family violence. I always ensure that men I'm working with understand that from a Māori point of view, women are a most precious taonga (something treasured) for our whānau, and need to be treated with utmost respect. I can't speak for Samoan, Tokelau or Cook Island cultures, but in te ao Māori (the Māori world), women are sometimes referred to as the whare tangata. Whare tangata literally means the house of people. It is out of women that our offspring grow. 'Alongside this, it follows that if we give respect to each other, then each person's space is sacred. So I have to respect that space. Where there has been violence, then that constitutes a breach of that relationship. Such a violation could render someone in the whānau vulnerable to a negative spiritual thing like this. When that happens, it can be helpful to address this relational breach spiritually. 'There are a number of ways we can do that. Sometimes it is appropriate to bring everyone into the room together to address what happened. But maybe it's not safe to do that straight away. When the tāne (man) isn't ready to take responsibility for that violence, that relational breach, then we often need to find other means to seek resolution in the wairua.' I was still pondering the significance of the moment in the bathroom when Grace had commanded the thing she saw to leave. When I raised this, Hazel spoke up. 'It's interesting that it hasn't come back since then, has it? You stamped your mark and said, 'Get out of here! This is our home; me, my Mum and my sister's home.'' Wiremu responded, 'I'm not surprised it hasn't shown its face. When you did that, you took your authority back. You took charge. And there was something else you did when you told that thing to get lost. You said, 'In the name of Jesus.' Through our relationship with God we are given this ability to have authority over anything that is impinging on our space. That includes anything that might be harassing you in a spiritual way.' Wiremu then explained how Grace seeing her Dad hurting her Mum was important. 'When something like that happens, it's like a gap in the spiritual protection you get from your family can open up just enough for this thing to try to scare you with that voice and the man you saw. That negative spiritual thing was trying to take advantage. However, you can address this by taking charge of your space, like you did, and for the adults to make sure what happened between your Dad and your Mum gets resolved safely.' Five Years after the Family Healing Session Hazel: Grace will be 16 soon. Since that time just before meeting Wiremu, she has never had any more experiences of voices or visions. She works hard at school and enjoys hanging out with her friends. She is keen on her youth group and social media but is also comfortable with her own company. Overall, I would say in the last five years she hasn't looked back. I told Grace's Dad about the voices. He didn't question any of it. I knew he was blaming himself for what we all went through. After getting out of jail, he saw several counsellors. At first, he just told them what he thought they wanted to hear. Later, he found a counsellor who didn't pussyfoot around and was very direct with him. With this counsellor, over a long period of time he was able to look at some painful things from his own life. After that he had a stronger foundation for being a Dad with them. He felt more comfortable with himself and as a result his relationships with the girls improved. He gave up drinking a while ago and stopped hanging out with the guys he would socialise with before. He has had a steady job and has been working hard to improve who he is. Six months ago, we got back together. It took me a very long time to trust him again. Once he took responsibility for what he did, over time I was able to acknowledge my part in what happened between us. When we first got together, I was 15 and he was 18. I was pregnant with Grace when I was very young. We are not teenagers anymore: we're adults. Neither of us are perfect. Every day we are working on our relationship and trying to be better than yesterday. Wiremu NiaNia: We have looked at Grace's problem of the voice and visions she experienced from multiple people's viewpoints. Her family tackled this problem from their Christian point of view, but they also asked for medical advice. Allister examined it from his child psychiatrist viewpoint and considered if it could be psychosis, trauma or another physical health cause. For me, I always look to wairua first. As well as the information I picked up from wairua, I was able to share concepts from te ao Māori to which the whānau responded with their own kōrero. These diverse perspectives are not separate. It is harmful to say it's just one or the other. I am one person with all of these parts. The psychological hurt Grace experienced after witnessing her Dad assault her Mum could be considered a hinengaro (psychological) problem from one viewpoint, but it is intimately linked to her whānau and her tinana (body) and has profound negative effects on her wairua, as we have seen. If we as clinicians and wairua practitioners work together, we can offer a response that creates space for each of these. There is a saying, 'E hia kē ngā tāera waru kūmara.' There are many ways to peel a kūmara. An abbreviated chapter taken with kind permission from Ngā Kūaha: Voices and Visions in Māori Healing and Psychiatry by Wiremu NiaNia and Allister Bush with David Epston (Routledge, $34). Wiremu and Allister met at Te Whare Mārie, a Māori mental health service in Porirua. Allister became curious about Wiremu's work with a 17-year-old who had a terrifying vision of a Māori warrior threatening him with a taiaha. Wiremu discovered the teenager had picked up a pounamu pendant he found on the side of the road, inadvertently breaching a tapu. When he was blessed by a tohunga, his disturbing experiences ended. Allister realised the young man's experiences didn't fit into traditional psychiatric ideas about mental illness. From that point on, the two men began working together to help young people who heard voices and saw visions – Wiremu from a Māori spiritual perspective, and Allister from a psychiatric perspective. Their book Ngā Kūaha includes accounts of their healing sessions and interviews with young people they worked with many years ago to see how their lives have been affected by these sessions. Wiremu and Allister's work challenges psychiatrists and psychologists to consider mental health from a Maōri perspective. They held a series of events around the country to launch Ngā Kūaha late last year. In the month it was launched, it was Routledge's largest seller worldwide.

Support Onalaska's Hazel & Seth's recovery after a vicious dog attack
Support Onalaska's Hazel & Seth's recovery after a vicious dog attack

Yahoo

time7 days ago

  • Health
  • Yahoo

Support Onalaska's Hazel & Seth's recovery after a vicious dog attack

ONALASKA, Wis. (WLAX/WEUX) – A peaceful walk turned into a nightmare for Hazel and her family—and now, they need your help. Haley Radtke has organized a fundraiser on behalf of Hazel, a sweet and gentle three-year-old dog who was brutally attacked by two unleashed pit bulls. While out on a routine walk with one of her owners, the pit bulls suddenly charged and began mauling Hazel. The unprovoked attack left Hazel with a severe bite to her back leg before both dogs tore into her stomach. She was rushed to the animal hospital, where she underwent a critical three-hour emergency surgery. Hazel suffered extensive internal and external injuries, including multiple torn muscles, a surgical drain, and over 50 stitches. Her recovery will be long, painful, and expensive. Hazel is more than just a dog—she's family. Though shy at first, it only takes a couple sniffs and a treat before she's your biggest fan. Her goofy tail wags like a little fan, and if she really likes you, she might nibble gently on your nose or ear as her way of saying, 'I love you.' That same gentle spirit makes this attack all the more heartbreaking. But Hazel wasn't the only one injured that day. During the attack, her devoted owner, Seth, put himself in harm's way to protect her. He dropped to the ground, shielding Hazel with his body. In doing so, he was bitten multiple times in the face, including deep punctures to his nose and mouth. Seth was taken by ambulance to the emergency room, where he received 25 stitches. Despite his injuries and the chaos, Seth refused to leave Hazel's side—his courage and love for her likely saved her life. It ultimately took three grown men to pry one of the pit bulls off Hazel. Now, both Hazel and Seth are recovering from physical wounds and emotional trauma. Their family is asking for support from the community to help cover the mounting medical bills for both emergency surgeries, hospital stays, and ongoing care. As of now, over $7,000 has already been raised, and every contribution makes a difference. The road ahead will be long, but with help, Hazel and Seth won't have to walk it alone. To donate or learn more, visit the official GoFundMe page organized by Haley Radtke. Let's rally together to support this brave duo and help them heal. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

From Laughs To Thrills, Here's What To Watch On OTT This Weekend
From Laughs To Thrills, Here's What To Watch On OTT This Weekend

News18

time12-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • News18

From Laughs To Thrills, Here's What To Watch On OTT This Weekend

Last Updated: New shows and movies to stream this weekend—your binge-watch list just got better. Looking for something to binge-watch this weekend? We've got you covered with a fresh lineup of new movies and series now streaming on popular OTT platforms like Netflix, Prime Video, Zee5, and JioCinema/Disney+ Hotstar. Whether you're into thrillers, comedies, or heartwarming dramas, there's something for everyone to enjoy. FUBAR – Season 2 Arnold Schwarzenegger returns in the second season of the action-packed Netflix series as the undercover team dives into a high-stakes mission. The tension escalates when a shadowy terrorist emerges, putting lives—and global security—at risk. With bigger threats and bolder action, Season 2 promises explosive twists and relentless suspense. Available to stream on Netflix starting June 12. Watch the trailer here: The Traitors Based on the globally popular reality format, The Traitors is the Indian adaptation produced by BBC Studios India in partnership with All3Media International. The show brings together 20 celebrities from different walks of life in a high-stakes game built on strategy, trust, and betrayal. With a significant cash prize and a coveted title up for grabs, alliances will be tested and secrets will unravel. You can watch it on Prime Video starting June 12. Watch the trailer here: The Fairly OddParents: A New Wish – Season 2: Hazel's adventures continue as she settles into life in Dimmadelphia, only to discover that her quirky next-door neighbours are undercover fairy godparents. With new magical twists and hilarious mishaps, Season 2 promises even more fun for fans of the animated classic. It will be available to stream on Netflix from June 12. Watch the trailer here: Shubham Blending supernatural comedy with quirky obsession, Shubham delivers a light-hearted ride perfect for summer viewing. Samantha shines with her playful charm, keeping things fun even when the pacing wobbles. While the writing may be uneven, the film still manages to entertain as a breezy, feel-good watch. It will be available on JioCinema/Disney+ Hotstar from June 13. Watch the trailer here: Alappuzha Gymkhana This uplifting sports drama tells the story of an underdog team that rises against all odds, fuelled by determination, teamwork, and hope. With emotional depth and compelling performances, Alappuzha Gymkhana is a must-watch for fans of heartfelt, motivational cinema. It will be streaming on Sony Liv from June 13. Check out the trailer here: Rana Naidu – Season 2 The highly anticipated second season of the gritty crime drama Rana Naidu returns with more secrets, betrayals, and family feuds. Starring Rana Daggubati, Venkatesh Daggubati, and Arjun Rampal, this new chapter raises the stakes with heightened suspense and raw intensity as old wounds resurface and new enemies emerge. It will be streaming on Netflix from June 13. Check the trailer here: Eleven In Eleven, ACP Aravind (played by Naveen Chandra) is thrust into a chilling murder investigation in Visakhapatnam, where bodies turn up without identities and the killer leaves no trace. As the death toll rises, a seemingly minor clue sets him on a dark and twisting path filled with suspense and unsettling revelations. This gripping crime thriller promises edge-of-the-seat tension and a mystery that keeps you guessing till the end. Watch it on Aha Tamil starting June 13. Watch the trailer here: Devil's Double Next Level Santhanam returns in Devil's Double Next Level, the hilarious fourth chapter of the beloved Dhilluku Dhuddu horror-comedy series. With a fresh mix of supernatural chaos, laugh-out-loud moments, and over-the-top antics, the film promises to be an all-out entertainer for fans of the genre. This time, the scares are funnier, the ghosts are weirder, and the madness is turned up a notch. Catch it streaming on Zee5 from June 13. Watch the trailer here: From light-hearted laughs to dark mysteries, this weekend's OTT lineup has something for every mood. First Published:

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