Tuesday, December 2, 2025

 
Home Blog Page 61

‘Everybody Loves Raymond’ Creator Reveals Why There Will “Never” Be a Reboot

0


Everybody loves a good reboot — but there won’t be one for Everybody Loves Raymond. As the cast of the hit sitcom reunited to celebrate its 30th anniversary, show creator Phil Rosenthal and star Ray Romano clarified that this was only a “reunion,” not a hint at a potential return for the show.

“We’re never gonna do one [a reboot], because we’re missing three cast members, three family members,” Romano explained at the beginning of the CBS Special. “So we would never try to do the show without them.”

Everybody Loves Raymond ran for 9 seasons from 1996 to 2005. Peter Boyle and Doris Roberts, who memorably played Raymond’s comically quarrelsome parents, Frank and Marie Barone, both passed away after the show ended in 2006 and 2016, respectively. The series also saw the loss of one of its youngest cast members — Sawyer Sweeten, who played one of Ray and Deborah’s twin sons, Geofrey Barone. Sweeten tragically died by suicide in 2015 when he was only 19.

“It wouldn’t be the same,” added Rosenthal. “We have too much respect for the show itself and for the beautiful audience…to keep it the way it is, and, thankfully, the show is still on every day, all over the world. If you want to visit your friends, we’re here.”

Earlier this year, Patricia Heaton also weighed in on the possibility of a reboot, telling the New York Post that she felt it would be a “disservice to the show” to try to do it “without the cast members that we’ve lost.”

“You shouldn’t try to go back and redo something that is pretty much perfect. We need to just leave it there and let people enjoy it for what it was.”

The Everybody Loves Raymond: 30th Anniversary Reunion aired on CBS on Monday, Nov. 24. Fans who missed it can still catch it streaming on Paramount+.

If you or someone you know needs help with their mental health, you can call or text the National Alliance on Mental Illness at 1-800-950-6264 or visit the NAMI website. If you are in an immediate crisis, you can text 988.



Release Date

1996 – 2005

Network

CBS

Showrunner

Phil Rosenthal

Directors

Gary Halvorson, Will Mackenzie, Jerry Zaks, Kenneth Shapiro, Steve Zuckerman, Jeff Meyer, Michael Lembeck, Brian K. Roberts, John Fortenberry, Michael Zinberg, Jeff Melman, Ken Levine, Alan Kirschenbaum, Andy Ackerman, Asaad Kelada, Michael Lessac, Paul Lazarus, David Clark Lee, Rod Daniel, Wil Shriner





This story originally appeared on Movieweb

New Fast & Furious Release Out Today Is A Can’t Miss For Fans

0


The Fast & Furious franchise has been around for 24 years. What started as a low-budget street-racing film has evolved into an epic blockbuster series spanning 11 films and $7.4 billion of ticket sales at the box office. With Vin Diesel at the lead as Dominic Toretto, people around the world have come to love the Fast & Furious movies.

While audiences were last treated to one of these releases in 2023 when Fast X came out, there is a promise that more will come. Universal is still developing Fast X: Part 2, but there are no confirmed details on when it is coming. Waiting for a return to this world has been frustrating for fans, especially after Fast X‘s cliffhanger ending.

Luckily, there is a new release connected to Fast & Furious that fans should not miss. It’s not a movie. It’s not even a TV show. Rather, there’s a new book diving into how this franchise has been made, including all the ups and downs, feuds, and difficult decisions that came along the way.

Welcome To The Family Is An Insightful In-Depth Look At Fast & Furious’ History

Welcome To The Family Fast & Furious book

Launching today, November 25, Grand Central Publishing and author Barry Hertz have published the first-ever book about the making of the Fast & Furious franchise. It’s titled “Welcome To The Family: The Explosive Story Behind Fast & Furious, the Blockbusters that Supercharged the World” and is a can’t-miss read for anyone part of this fandom family.

Grand Central Publishing’s official description of “Welcome To The Family” is as follows:

What do Miami drug traffickers, bloodthirsty Yakuza warriors, Corona-soaked backyard BBQs, Dame Helen Mirren, and a duct-taped 1984 Pontiac Fiero-turned-rocket-fueled spaceship have in common? They are all essential elements of the ever-expanding, logic- and laws-of-physics-defying Fast & Furious universe: the most entertaining, outlandish, and secretly genius Hollywood creation that everyone has taken for granted – until now.

Through an escalating series of high-risk maneuvers – from synapse-stretching stunts to timeline-bending narratives to explosive PR wars between the biggest, baddest, baldest egos in showbiz – the Fast family (and it is a family above all else) has redefined the art and commerce of popcorn moviemaking. And the gang did it all while staring down the kind of monumental, soul-rattling challenges – the death of a star, the upheaval of an industry – that would have crushed the speed and spirit of any other filmmaking team.

An unauthorized journey into the makings of a cinematic saga unlike any other, Welcome to the Family exposes the stranger-than-fan-fiction journey of the franchise from the ground up. Through rigorous behind-the-scenes reporting and incisive cultural commentary, writer Barry Hertz’s ride-or-die epic details every single twist and turn of Fast & Furious drama, a quarter mile at a time. By the end, you will believe a car can fly.

That is an apt description for this novel. I’ve already had the privilege of reading “Welcome To The Family” and can attest that it lives up to the promise of being an in-depth look at one of Hollywood’s biggest franchises.

“Welcome To The Family” is full of great interviews with crew members who have been instrumental to the franchise for years, providing personal stories on how they’ve dealt with various challenges or developed fresh ideas to pull off what seemed to be impossible. You’ll come to understand just how many people have poured their lives into making these movies a reality.

It also features some brand-new tidbits about the development of these films, showcasing just how many ideas have been considered over the years, including how some of them recur in future installments. And it doesn’t skip past franchise-changing moments, ranging from Diesel and Dwayne Johnson’s feud, Paul Walker’s death, or the turmoil behind Justin Lin’s Fast X departure.

Through it all, Hertz brings everything together with colorful writing, old and new facts, and insightful commentary on its past and future that makes the 365 pages from the prologue to the epilogue go by faster than a quarter-mile race between Dom and Brian O’Conner.

With the franchise’s future still in limbo, “Welcome To The Family” provides fans with an alternative way to connect to the Fast & Furious franchise than before, one that should bring a greater sense of appreciation and awe for what this series has managed to accomplish.

Fast_and_Furious_Poster

Cast

Vin Diesel, Paul Walker, Michelle Rodriguez, Tyrese Gibson, Eva Mendes, Lucas Black, Sung Kang, Bow Wow, Jordana Brewster, Dwayne Johnson, Jason Statham, Charlize Theron, Idris Elba, John Cena

Video Game(s)

The Fast and the Furious (2004), The Fast and the Furious (2006), Fast & Furious: SuperCars, Fast & Furious: Showdown, Forza Horizon 2 Presents Fast & Furious, Fast & Furious Crossroads

Character(s)

Dominic Toretto, Brian O’Conner, Letty Ortiz, Roman Pearce, Monica Fuentes, Sean Boswell, Han Lue, Twinkie, Mia Toretto, Luke Hobbs, Deckard Shaw, Cipher, Brixton Lore, Jakob Toretto

Comic Release Date

213284




This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Ed Sheeran on his new one-shot Netflix concert special

0


The idea of a concert special didn’t exactly light up Ed Sheeran’s mind.

“Every time it was pitched to me, I just wasn’t excited,” says the English singer and songwriter who’s spent the last decade or so among the world’s top touring acts. “‘We could do this theater and this town and this…’ — it was like, ‘I’ve seen that before.’”

But then Sheeran got a call from Ben Winston, the Emmy-winning producer and director known for his role overseeing the Grammy Awards and as a creator of James Corden’s “Carpool Karaoke” series.

Actually, it was an email, Winston points out. “You can’t call Ed because he doesn’t have a phone,” he says. “You have to email him and hope he FaceTimes you back from his iPad.”

Winston’s pitch earlier this year was simple but intriguing: What if they took the one-shot approach that helped make Netflix’s “Adolescence” such a sensation and used it to film a performance by Sheeran — not simply onstage but as he goes on a journey somewhere? And instead of getting a director “kind of like the guy who shot ‘Adolescence,’” as Winston recalls putting it, “Why don’t we just ask the guy who shot ‘Adolescence’?”

Sheeran liked the idea; so did Philip Barantini, who won two Emmys in September for directing that acclaimed miniseries about a 13-year-old boy accused of killing a female classmate. (Winston got Barantini’s number from Corden and hit him cold on WhatsApp.)

Now Netflix has just released “One Shot with Ed Sheeran,” in which a camera trails the 34-year-old singer as he roams New York City, acoustic guitar in hand, between soundcheck and a gig at the Hammerstein Ballroom. The hourlong result, which true to its title presents the roving performance in a single unbroken shot with no edits, can of course be seen as a piece of high-toned promo ahead of next month’s launch of a world tour behind Sheeran’s latest album, “Play.”

But doing the special as a so-called oner — and with a limited number of chances to get it right — also posed an invigorating creative challenge for a performer who’s been entertaining crowds since he was 15.

“Because I do the same thing every weekend, just in a different place, I don’t really feel the nerves anymore,” Sheeran says of his live show, which typically features him alone onstage (even in football stadiums) with only a guitar and a looping station for accompaniment. “Whereas with this, I really felt the pressure.”

Winston says the team behind “One Shot” chose New York as the setting “because we felt like every corner of New York feels like a movie set.” In the show, Sheeran plays his hits as he rides in a taxi, walks the High Line, serenades a couple mid-proposal and pops unannounced into a rooftop birthday party; he also clambers up to the top of a double-decker bus and joins Camila Cabello in an SUV in the middle of traffic for a duet on his song “Photograph.”

“We probably could have picked a different city that was quieter and blocked off the roads and did it perfectly,” Sheeran says. “But the chaos of it, I think, is what makes it interesting.”

Philip Barantini at the 77th Primetime Emmy Awards in Los Angeles, CA, Sunday, Sept. 14, 2025.

Philip Barantini at September’s 77th Emmy Awards.

(Jason Armond / Los Angeles Times)

Sheeran did just three takes: a dress rehearsal on a Sunday afternoon the filmmakers shot “in case it went great,” says Winston — “It didn’t,” he adds — then two performances on a Monday sandwiched between the morning and evening rush hours. Three camera operators passed a lightweight Ronin 4D rig among themselves as the singer moved from set piece to set piece, and not always as smoothly as they’d hoped.

One of the guys proposing to his partner took about two minutes to pop the question, according to Sheeran. “It was literally like he was on his own reality show,” says Barantini. One of the women celebrating her birthday, meanwhile, “just hopped onstage and started twerking,” Sheeran recalls. “For the whole song.” (Alas, she’s not in the take they used.)

“I was in the van watching the monitors, going, ‘This is cool,’” Barantini says. “Then it got to the point I was like, ‘This is not cool anymore. Can we please get her down?’” The producers used a casting director to find these folks but Sheeran says none of them knew they’d be encountering him as they went about their business in Manhattan.

For Winston, “One Shot” is in keeping with his determination to “try and see where music goes in different places,” he says. He compares the project to the time he had Adele sing outdoors at the Griffith Observatory for a CBS special in 2021 and the time he put Bruno Mars on the marquee of the Apollo Theater for a different CBS special in 2017.

Ben Winston on the red carpet at the 63rd Grammy Awards in 2021.

Ben Winston at the 63rd Grammy Awards in 2021.

(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)

“Even in the Olympic handover,” he adds of the concert he oversaw last year, “rather than doing it in the Paris stadium, we were like, ‘Hold on — wouldn’t it be cool if you had Dre, Snoop, Billie Eilish and the Red Hot Chili Peppers on the beach in L.A.?’” (Winston will serve as executive producer for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2028 Summer Games.)

Barantini singles out 2014’s “Birdman,” which Alejandro G. Iñárritu designed to resemble one continuous take, as a visual inspiration for the Sheeran special; the singer himself mentions the famous scene from “Goodfellas” where Martin Scorsese’s camera follows Ray Liotta and Lorraine Bracco into the Copacabana nightclub.

Yet everyone involved with “One Shot” is eager to emphasize that, unlike those movies, their show wasn’t scripted.

“It’s a lot more honest than you might think,” Winston says.

Sheeran recalls asking Cabello on camera as he’s getting out of her car whether she’d like to join him and his family that night for spaghetti Bolognese.

“That was the only time you said that,” Barantini tells the singer, “and I remember saying to you afterwards, ‘That was really good — I like the improv.’” He laughs. “And Ed was like, ‘No, but she is coming to mine tonight.’”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Recipe for a Thanksgiving Soundtrack: All About That Baste

0


We trust that, at this point, you’ve planned the details of cooking your Thanksgiving dinner. (Or, perhaps smarter, that you’ve secured reservations at a nearby restaurant.)

But, what about the music to accompany your Thanksgiving Day festivities?

Related

As you celebrate the holiday with loved ones, let Billboard serve your musical soundtrack. Please feel free to fill up a playlist, as you fill up at the table, from a vast menu of Thanksgiving-appropriate charted songs and acts.

From everyone at Billboard, have a happy, healthy and safe Thanksgiving!

First, the Sides

“Mashed Potato Time” Dee Dee Sharp
A No. 2 hit on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1962

“Gravy (For My Mashed Potatoes)” Dee Dee Sharp
No. 9 Hot 100, 1962

“Mr. Potato Peeler” Bobby Gregg and His Friends
No. 89 Hot 100, 1962

“Mashed Potatoes U.S.A.” James Brown and the Famous Flames
No. 82 Hot 100, 1962

“Gravy Waltz” Steve Allen
No. 64 Hot 100, 1963

“My Sweet Potato” Booker T. & the MG’s
No. 85 Hot 100, 1966

“Hot Potato” LaToya Jackson
No. 38 Dance Club Songs, 1984

And, anything by … the Cranberries

(Honorable, and mostly mouth-watering, mention, to a song that charted only as a cut on Bobby Bare’s album Bare, which reached No. 44 on Top Country Albums in 1978: “Greasy Grit Gravy and Gizzard Greens” (which, per the lyrics, “make you wanna split your jeans”)

Ah … the Main Course

“Let’s Turkey Trot” Little Eva
No. 20 Hot 100, 1963

“Birdland” Chubby Checker
No. 12 Hot 100, 1963 63

“Surfin’ Bird” the Trashmen (although you may be more familiar with this version)
No. 4 Hot 100, 1964

“This Little Bird” Marianne Faithfull
No. 32 Hot 100, 1965

“May The Bird of Paradise Fly Up Your Nose” “Little” Jimmy Dickens
No. 15 Hot 100, 1965

“Cold Turkey” Plastic Ono Band
No. 30 Hot 100, 1970

“Jive Turkey (Part 1)” Ohio Players
No. 47 Hot 100, 1974

“Free Bird” Lynyrd Skynryd
No. 19 Hot 100, 1975

“Three Little Birds” Bob Marley and the Wailers
No. 1 Reggae Digital Song Sales; released in 1977

“The Bird” the Time
No. 36 Hot 100, 1985

“I’m Like a Bird” Nelly Furtado
No. 9 Hot 100, 2001

“Gobble Gobble” Matthew West
No. 32 Christian Airplay, 2020

“Birds of a Feather” Billie Eilish
No. 2 Hot 100, 2024

And, anything by … the Byrds

Please Be Specific

“Skinny Legs and All” Joe Tex
No. 10 Hot 100, 1967

“Hot Legs” Rod Stewart
No. 28 Hot 100, 1978

“Legs” ZZ Top
No. 8 Hot 100, 1984

“Broken Wings” Mr. Mister
No. 1 Hot 100, 1985

“Pretty Wings” Maxwell
No. 33 Hot 100, 2009

Or, anything by … Wings

And, for Dessert

“Sweet Potato Pie” James Taylor
No. 37 Adult Contemporary, 1989

“Sweet Potato Pie” Domino
No. 13 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, 1994

And, anything by … Smashing Pumpkins

Musical Trimmings

“I Wanna Thank You” Bobby Rydell
No. 21 Hot 100, 1961

“Thank You Girl” the Beatles
No. 35 Hot 100, 1964

“I Thank You” Sam & Dave
No. 9 Hot 100, 1968

“Thank You Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin” Sly & the Family Stone
No. 1 Hot 100, 1970

“Be Thankful for What You Got” William DeVaughn
No. 4 Hot 100, 1974

“Thank God I’m a Country Boy” John Denver
No. 1 Hot 100, 1975

“Thank You for Being a Friend” Andrew Gold
No. 25 Hot 100, 1978

Of course …

“The Thanksgiving Song” Adam Sandler
An annual No. 1 on Comedy Digital Songs (which Sandler premiered on NBC’s Saturday Night Live on Nov. 21, 1992)

“Thank U” Alanis Morissette
No. 1 Adult Pop Airplay, 1998

“Thank You” Dido
No. 1 Adult Contemporary, Adult Pop Songs, Dance Club Songs, 2001

“I Wanna Thank Ya” Angie Stone
No. 1 Dance Club Songs, 2004

“Thnks fr th Mmrs” Fall Out Boy
No. 11 Hot 100, 2007

“I Want to Say Thank You” Lisa Page Brooks featuring Royal Priesthood
No. 1 Hot Gospel Songs, 2010

“Thank U, Next” Ariana Grande
No. 1 Hot Hot 100, 2018

“thanK you aIMee” Taylor Swift
No. 23 Hot 100, 2024

And, a still piping-hot entry (entree?):

“All About That Baste,” courtesy of the Holderness Family, which knows how to cook up, in addition to a tasty turkey, a catchy parody. (#noskinnybritches)



This story originally appeared on Billboard

Harrison Whitaker’s Mom Speaks Out as Son Becomes Super-Champion

0

What To Know

  • Harrison Whitaker, originally from Terre Haute, Indiana, has achieved super-champ status on Jeopardy! with 10 consecutive wins and $289,600 in earnings, placing him among the top 20 all-time winners.
  • His mother, Beth, expressed pride and gratitude for the support from their local community, sharing that Harrison developed his passion for trivia in college rather than during his upbringing.
  • Harrison set season records for most correct answers and highest single-game payout, emphasizing that quick reflexes on the buzzer are just as crucial as knowledge for success on the show.

Harrison Whitaker‘s mom, Beth, spoke out about her son’s reign on Jeopardy! that has put him in super-champion status. Harrison, from Terre Haute, Indiana, has won 10 games, and it already in the top 20 players for All-Time Winnings with $289,600 following the November 24 episode.

Beth talked with their local news station, WTWO, about her son’s streak and how he got involved with Jeopardy! and trivia. “You can’t describe how nerve-racking it is as a parent who wants the best for their child. Watching them on national television,” she told the outlet.

“We have been absolutely overwhelmed, touched, moved, by the support of the Terre Haute community. It has moved me to tears more than once. We are so blessed to have raised our children; we have three children, and they all were in their formative years raised in Terre Haute, and it is just a beautiful place to raise a family, and we feel very blessed that we had that opportunity with our children.”

Beth shared that Harrison didn’t come from a trivia family and learned to love it in college. “We didn’t do trivia, you know, bar trivia or anything like that with him growing up; the only thing we did was Trivial Pursuit. And that was just periodic,” she said. “All of this began to happen when he went to college and began to be able to kind of get into the quizzing circuit there.”

Harrison also told the outlet that being on the game show is more than “having knowledge.” “Being able to be the first on the buzzer consistently is what really matters,” he said.

See him below with his sisters.

He also set the record this season for most right answers in a single game and the biggest payout of the season. “If you’d ask me after the game, I would have just said I had got in a bit of a groove. I had no idea that I had broken a series record,” Harrison said.

The super-champ was also shocked to find out that there are only 15 minutes in between taping each episode. “When you win a game, you have to be back out on stage in fifteen minutes, ready to play the next one, so like that is just a completely different experience than what I expected,” said Harrison.

“Right where you think you win a game, and then you get to go, have a nice sleep and rest up and do a bit of prep. But no, like you win a game, they, you know, get you into a new outfit and you’re back on the stage in ten minutes basically.”

Although he lives in England now, Harrison grew up in Indiana with his mom, Beth, dad, Todd, and sisters, Katherine and Madeline. Both of his parents are college professors, which ingrained a love of learning into Harrison.

Jeopardy!, Weekdays, check local listings, stream next day on Hulu and Peacock




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

CISA warns against unencrypted messaging – Computerworld

0



Google is testing end-to-end encryption, and Apple has promised to introduce it. “End-to-end encryption is a powerful privacy and security technology that iMessage has supported since the beginning, and now we are pleased to have helped lead a cross industry effort to bring end-to-end encryption to the RCS Universal Profile published by the GSMA,” Apple said. “We will add support for end-to-end encrypted RCS messages to iOS, iPadOS, macOS, and watchOS in future software updates.” 

Right now, the smart money has RCS encryption as a potential addition within iOS 26.2. This makes sense given Apple sees privacy as a human right, and protection of that right demands E2EE in its messaging apps.

CISA says things are dangerous

CISA pulled no punches in the recommendations it made. It warned that potential targets (particularly in military, government, or political positions) should immediately review the security protections they have in place. “Highly targeted individuals should assume that all communications between mobile devices — including government and personal devices — and internet services are at risk of interception or manipulation,” it warns.



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

We found the biggest savings on AirPods, iPads, MacBooks, Apple Watches and AirTags

0


This year, Black Friday has definitely hit early. There are still technically a few days until the actual event, but we’re seeing significant deals across the web — Including some brand new all-time lows on Apple gear. In the past 24 hours or so, we’ve seen the AirPods 4 drop to $69, the base-model iPad dip to $274 and the Apple Watch Series 11 go to $339 — all of those are brand new lows. There’s no telling if prices will go any lower — or if things will start selling out. With Black Friday, as in life, there are no certainties. But as of right now, these are the best Black Friday deals on Apple gear we could find.

Apple Black Friday deals: AirPods

Billy Steele for Engadget

In our review of the new AirPods Pro 3, we said they were Apple’s “most comprehensive update” to its Pro line yet. They feature live translation and heart-rate sensing, as well as improved overall sound, better active noise cancellation and a longer battery life. This is the lowest price yet on the new buds. Also at Walmart, Best Buy and Target.

$220 at Amazon

AirPods 4 (with ANC) for $100 ($79 off) at Amazon: If you just need moderate noise cancellation and prefer an open-wear fit (where nothing goes in your ear canal), you may prefer the new AirPods 4. They don’t have heart rate sensing or the hearing features the Pro models have. But we found the sound quality to be pretty good and appreciated Pro-level features like live translation. Also at Walmart and $140 at Best Buy.

AirPods 4 (no ANC) for $69 ($61 off) at Amazon: You miss out on a few more features on the base-model AirPods 4: no live translation, no noise cancellation and no heart rate sensing, but you do get Personalized Spatial Audio with dynamic head tracking, like on the pricer models. We gave the entry-level buds an 88 in our review. The previous low price was $80. Also available at Walmart and Target.

AirPods Max for $430 ($120 off) at Walmart: These cans have been around for quite some time now, only getting the slightest upgrade with a new USB-C port in 2024. The hardware is otherwise the same as it was when the over-ear headphones debuted in 2020. Still, they’re comfortable, have good sound quality and the on-board controls are unique but good. Also at Amazon.

EarPods for $13 ($6 off) at Amazon: For those who prefer a cord, here is the only Apple-branded wired earphone option. This is a dollar more than the all-time low. Also at Walmart.

Apple Black Friday deals: iPads

Image for the small product module

Jeff Dunn for Engadget

The entry level iPad doesn’t support Apple Intelligence, but that didn’t bother us when we reviewed the new slate. We found the speed to be plenty for what most people need an iPad for: casual gaming, streaming, browsing, answering some emails. We wish the display was laminated and had some anti-glare coating. But this is the lowest-priced way to get your hands on a current-model iPad. Also at Walmart, Target and Best Buy.

$274 at Amazon

iPad Air (M3, 11-inch, 128GB) for $449 ($151 off) at Amazon: The Air is the Goldilocks Apple tablet. It strikes the perfect balance between price and performance, making it our overall pick for the best iPad you can buy. The build is lovely; it feels premium and the display is a big improvement over Apple’s base-model slate. The M3 chip is plenty fast for everyday use and can handle an average day of productivity no problem, particularly with its improved multi-tasking abilities. This matches the lowest price we’ve tracked. Also on sale at Target and Best Buy.

iPad Air (M3, 13-inch, 128GB) for $649 ($150 off) at Amazon: A larger screen will make watching shows and playing games more expansive. And if you use your iPad more like a personal computer, you’ll appreciate the extra real estate for spreading out your work. Like the 11-inch Air, this has a powerful M3 chip and an excellent screen, as well as support for the Apple Pencil Pro and Apple Intelligence. This matches the lowest price we’ve tracked. Also at Target, Best Buy and it’s $749 at B&H.

iPad mini (A17 Pro, 8-inch, 128GB) for $399 ($100 off) at Amazon: The smallest Apple iPad is really meant for those who put a priority on the portability and palm-ability of an 8-inch tablet. It uses the A17 chip, which enables support for Apple Intelligence, unlike the base model iPad. We gave it an 83 in our review, praising the fact that you get the full iPad experience, just in a more compact package. We found it particularly suited to messaging, reading, watching video and playing lots of Balatro. It went as low as $379 in October. Also at Best Buy.

iPad Pro (M5, 11-inch, 256GB) for $900 ($100 off) at Amazon: While we think this is an amazing piece of computing machinery, we admit that it’s overkill for most people. It’s got one of the best displays you’ll find on a tablet, the most recent M5 chip (the same that powers the base-level Apple MacBook Pro) and an almost impossibly thin and light build. We gave it an 85 in our review and had very few complaints — aside from the near-prohibitive price tag. Hopefully this Black Friday discount helps. This $100 discount is a new all-time low. It’s $927 at Walmart.

Apple Black Friday deals: Apple Watch

Image for the small product module

Cherlynn Low for Engadget

Apple still makes the best smartwatch money can buy. The flagship Apple Watch Series 11 is not just a stalwart companion for an iPhone, it also offers comprehensive health monitoring and fitness tracking. There wasn’t a huge change from the Series 10 to this one — both have the same thin and light design, but now the glass is tougher and the battery lasts longer. This $60 discount is a brand new low. Also at Walmart and Target.

$339 at Amazon

Apple Watch SE 3 (40mm, GPS) for $200 ($49 off) at Amazon: After a couple years, Apple finally updated its budget-model smart watch. And we were pretty happy with the results, awarding the new wearable a review score of 90. It’s got a smaller screen and thicker bezels than the Series 11 and lacks a few of the more advanced health monitoring features. It’s also made from slightly less-robust materials. But it has nearly everything that makes Apple Watches great for a lot less — particularly now. This is the lowest price we’ve seen since the watch came out in September. Also at Walmart and Target.

Apple Black Friday deals: MacBooks and Macs

Image for the small product module

Apple

As far as we’re concerned, Apple makes the best laptop overall with the M4 MacBook Air. It’s light and portable yet powerful enough to handle all but the most demanding media rendering. The keyboard and touchpad are excellent and the battery will get you through a full day of work and then some. It earned a 92 in our review. Also at Best Buy and it’s $100 off at B&H.

$749 at Amazon

Apple MacBook Air (M4, 15-inch, 256GB) for $949 ($250 off) at Amazon: The M4 chip is quite powerful, to take advantage of all the productivity it enables, you might want a little more room on your screen. When Apple first made a 15-inch option for the MacBook Air a couple generations ago, we were surprised at the difference it made. Also at Best Buy and it’s $100 off at B&H.

Apple MacBook Pro (M5, 14-inch, 512GB) for $1,399 ($157 off) at Amazon: Apple’s most recent M-series chip is the M5, and only comes equipped on the 14-inch MacBook Pro and the iPad Pro. When the M5 MacBook Pro M5 came out last month, we promptly reviewed it and awarded it a 92. That new chip gives the laptop an impressive graphics upgrade that helps make it more suited to gaming — an area where Apple still lags behind PCs. Other than the chip upgrade, it’s mostly the same, which is a good thing. It’s sturdy, powerful and has an impressively long battery life — we clocked 34 hours in a video run-down test. Also at Walmart, Best Buy and B&H.

Apple MacBook Pro (M4 Pro, 14-inch, 512GB) for $1,749 ($250 off) at Amazon: The M5 chip isn’t yet available in the Pro and Max variants. If Apple follows the same six-month gap that separated the M4 from the M4 Pro and Max chips, we may see the M5 Pro/Max in spring of next year. For now, however, those higher-specced chips can only be found in the M4-series lineup. The MacBook Pro with the M4 Pro chip is on sale and it’s our recommendation for creative professionals who need an obscene amount of processing power. Also at Walmart, Best Buy and B&H.

Apple MacBook Pro (M4 Pro, 16-inch, 256GB) for $2,189 ($310 off) at Amazon: You sacrifice a little portability for the larger 16-inch screen, as it adds about a pound and a quarter to the weight. But you might appreciate the extra space for your work on the display. Also at Walmart and B&H.

Apple 2024 iMac (M4, 24-inch) for $1,149 ($150 off) at Amazon: Apple just has one model of an all-in-one desktop computer and it has the M4 chip inside. We called the iMac more cost effective than ever, now that it comes with a minimum of 16GB of RAM. The M4 chip makes it capable for content creation, productivity and gaming.

Mac mini (M4) for $479 ($120 off) at Amazon: Apple’s compact desktop computer got a rave review from us. We called it “shockingly small [and] incredibly powerful.” It also benefits from a bump to a minimum of 16GB of internal memory. It can play modern games at reasonable resolutions and handle most productivity tasks you throw at it.

Apple TV Black Friday deal

Image for the small product module

Apple

You can get six months of access to the Apple TV streaming service for only $36. That means you can catch Pluribus, the new show from Vince Gilligan (Better Call Saul) and other very good originals like Severance, Ted Lasso and Slow Horses. The offer is live through December 1 and is open to new and qualified returning subscribers but you have to subscribe directly through Apple and not through a third-party service.

$36 at Apple

Apple Black Friday deals: Accessories

Image for the mini product module

Apple Pencil Pro for $95 ($35 off) at Amazon: The Apple Pencil situation is a little messy, so you’ll want to double check which model is compatible with your particular iPad. The Pencil Pro is the most fully featured in the lineup with haptic feedback, barrel roll and squeeze capabilities, and a hover preview feature. It’ll work with the two most recent models of the Air and Pro iPads, as well as the latest iPad mini. Also at Walmart and Best Buy.

Apple Pencil USB-C for $69 ($10 off) at Amazon: If you have the new base-model iPad with the A16 chip, this is the pencil that will work for you. It’ll also work with current as well as slightly older models of the Air and Pro iPads.

Apple AirTag (4-pack) for $65 ($34 off) at Amazon: Even though they haven’t been updated in a few years, Apple’s AirTags are still the gold standard of Bluetooth trackers, and what most people think of when they think of trackers. We may get a new version soon, but they aren’t likely to be this cheap. Also at Walmart. A single AirTag is on sale too.

Image for the mini product module



This story originally appeared on Engadget

This AI-adjacent FTSE 100 stock could be good to consider for a Stocks and Shares ISA

0


Image source: Getty Images

Is the year 2025 the ground floor to a Stocks and Shares ISA golden age? One reason to think so is the impact of artificial intelligence on the economy and world as a whole. One recent report predicted yearly economic GDP growth of up to 5.4%. That’s more than double some of the strongest years last century. Developed countries grow at less than 1% a year these days.

The rapid adoption of this technology could lead to challenges, especially regarding fewer jobs being needed. But it may lead to stock market returns higher than we have seen in the past. This could mean a faster-growing Stocks and Shares ISA and all the benefits it can bring, like passive income or an early retirement.

Possibilities

At this point, artificial intelligence is in something of a strange place. The technology is undoubtedly a wonder that’s reminiscent of science fiction (it took Star Trek until the 2400s to invent a speaking AI), but its true utility has yet to be realised.

It’s similar to the early days of the internet. The potential for instant worldwide communication was right before our eyes, but it took decades for some of its most amazing possibilities to come true.

Take $200bn company ride-hailing company Uber. When I was fiddling about on internet chatrooms in the 1990s and learning what this new acronym ‘LOL’ stood for, I couldn’t have predicted it would be used to call a taxi at the touch of a button.

It’s also worth bearing in mind that while the possibilities are amazing, there are no guarantees. Early efforts to produce economic output from AI do not seem fruitful. That might never change. The AI golden age and its impact on stocks and shares might never come at all in fact.

Investments

One of the sectors mooted to be able to use artificial intelligence pharmaceuticals with firms like AstraZeneca (LSE: AZN). The basic idea is that AI’s ability to synthesise and analyse vast quantities of data could lead to new drug discoveries. A number of possible drugs have already been discovered with the technology and are undergoing clinical trials.

Has the promise of AI-discovered treatments boosted AstraZeneca yet? The valuation hasn’t changed too much. The firm trades at 29 times earnings, which isn’t a huge jump from where it has been in the last few years. That could mean AI might not be the game-changer that some think.

And whether they are AI-related or not, a pharma firm lives and dies by its treatments. Therefore a downturn in the uncovering of new drugs and the like is always a risk for this stock.

I think there’s plenty to like about the stock in general though. The company has been flying under its superstar CEO Pascal Soriot, the share price up five-fold since 2012. The research and development pipeline looks strong too with billions of dollars being invested into hundreds of therapies. I think it’s one to consider for a Stocks and Shares ISA.



This story originally appeared on Motley Fool

Zoe Ball admits ‘that is so frustrating’ as she shares ‘worrying’ health issue | Celebrity News | Showbiz & TV

0


Zoe Ball has revealed that she used to “really struggle” with an exhausting health condition, but discovered a solution that “really helped”. During a recent episode of the Dig IT podcast, Zoe Ball and co-host Jo Whiley addressed a question from a listener named Alison, who wondered if they woke up during the night or experienced insomnia. She confessed she tuned into the podcast at 3am.

Alison revealed that her sleep had “deteriorated” as she has grown older. Despite attempting everything from medication to sleeping separately, as well as maintaining good sleep hygiene and using meditation apps, she’s experienced no relief from her nocturnal troubles. She concluded her enquiry by asking Zoe and Jo if they had any advice to assist her.

Zoe responded: “Alison, darling girl, I feel your pain; that is so frustrating. I used to really struggle to sleep, and yeah, I used to take a lot of sleeping tablets. And again, you shouldn’t really take those for a long period of time because, you know, they can add to your risk of dementia, but then, the worry of not being able to sleep makes you not be able to sleep.”

She went on: “So, Alison, from me, something which you possibly have tried because it does sound like you might have exhausted all the avenues, once I started taking magnesium at night, I found that really helped.”

Zoe also mentioned that she’d been advised to take baths in magnesium salts, although she confessed that she was unsure how the mineral aids sleep, but it “definitely has made a difference” to her.

Insomnia is a condition characterised by regular sleep issues, with symptoms not only including difficulty falling asleep, but also waking up during the night, lying awake, waking early and struggling to fall back asleep, and finding it hard to nap during the day despite feeling tired, according to the NHS.

The NHS also highlights that adults need between seven and nine hours of sleep each night, unlike children, toddlers and babies who require more. Some of the causes of insomnia include depression, anxiety or stress, shift work, temperatures, nicotine, caffeine and alcohol, but it also emphasises that improving your sleeping habits can alleviate the condition.

Some of the suggestions included maintaining the same routine when heading to bed and rising in the morning, attempting to unwind approximately one hour before bedtime (recommending reading or having a bath), regular physical activity and ensuring your bedroom remains both dark and quiet.

Healthline states that magnesium might tackle our sleep difficulties by reducing anxiety and depression whilst assisting people in calming down. It explains that magnesium is a common mineral that proves essential for our health.

Indeed, it plays a role in more than 600 “cellular reactions” in the human body , and amongst its health benefits, supports bone health and the function of the brain, heart and muscles.

Regarding sleep, magnesium might assist your brain and body in relaxing, it adds.

One way it may achieve this is through “activating the parasympathetic nervous system”, which the publication explains is responsible for making you relaxed.

Magnesium also regulates melatonin (a naturally occurring hormone that has a role in the sleep-wake cycle) – in fact, people with insomnia sometimes take a synthetic version of melatonin to aid sleep. It could also help in quieting down the nervous system.

Meanwhile, lacking adequate magnesium could lead to issues with sleep, with research indicating that both excessive and insufficient levels could create sleep issues .

In other news, Zoe has reportedly welcomed a mystery man into her home, discussing the matter on another instalment of her and Jo’s podcast. Zoe, who split from her former partner, Michael Reed, two years ago, revealed this while discussing a product she purchased online that she uses to “whack” her legs and underarms.

She claimed that it helps with circulation, noting that it’s “quite good” for lymphatic drainage, and apparently, the mystery man, whom she refers to as “the lodger”, spotted her using it.

She recalled: “I remember the first time the lodger walked in and saw me doing it, and just sort of turned on his heels.”

Jo then asked the BBC Radio 2 icon if he was “still around”, to which Zoe confirmed that he indeed was. She cryptically mentioned that he was still there at present and “still lodging”, but she did not disclose his identity.



This story originally appeared on Express.co.uk

15 Best Sports TV Shows Of All Time, Ranked

0






For those looking to keep the sports thrills going between watching actual games and sports coverage, there is no shortage of sports shows to keep the athletic action going. Even those who aren’t particularly enamored with professional sports can get hooked by an expertly crafted series about the subject. And given the ubiquity of sports in popular culture, athletic-oriented stories can fit in virtually every major television genre. This includes documentary series uncovering the truth behind beloved sports or irreverent comedies using the competitive industry as a backdrop.

Simply put, sports series have been a television staple for decades and continue to entertain audiences at a steady clip. These range from shows covering virtually every major sport in the country, both at a professional and amateur level, with the stakes always seeming as high as ever. Good sports shows don’t even need to center on the athletes playing the game, but can include managers, commentators, and thoroughly invested fans. Here are the 15 best sports TV shows of all time, ranked and ripe for a revisit or first-time watch.

15. Shoresy

After bringing quirky, rural Canadian comedy to Hulu with his hit show “Letterkenny,” series creator Jared Keeso launched the sports comedy “Shoresy” in 2022. The spin-off follows the Sudbury Bulldogs, an ice hockey team suffering from a 20-game losing streak and facing a looming shutdown. In response, the team’s acerbic veteran Shoresy (Keeso) makes a wager to completely reverse the organization’s fortunes if he’s given complete control of the squad. With the team’s general manager, Nat (Tasya Teles), agreeing to these terms, Shoresy sets out to make the Bulldogs the most competitive team in Ontario.

To be fair and clear, “Shoresy” is a very different Canadian comedy series than “Letterkenny,” despite sharing continuity and creative talent. Instead, the spin-off features a clear overarching narrative while doubling down on the raunchy humor that occasionally appeared in Keeso’s previous show. The withering insults and brawls are still present, but all framed firmly within the professional ice hockey context. An underdog hockey comedy in the spirit of “Slap Shot,” “Shoresy” gives a welcome Canadian perspective on its most popular sport.

14. Chad Powers

Absolutely exuding charisma whenever he’s on-screen or at public events, it’s safe to say Glen Powell currently reigns as an American sweetheart. Powell channels that likability into a dual role for the Hulu college football comedy “Chad Powers,” which he co-created with Michael Waldron. Powell plays Russ Holliday, a disgraced football prodigy who creates the false persona of Chad Powers to play as a walk-on at a different college. Holliday begins to reverse his team’s fortunes while trying to maintain his secret and reveling in glory days once again.

“Chad Powers” could’ve just been a one-note raunchy football comedy in the vein of “Blue Mountain State.” Instead, Powell offers a surprising range in his lead performance, certainly delivering the laughs but also a genuine sense of heart. The show revolves around an absurd premise, to be sure, but the story has considerable mileage to it while exploring conflicting sides of Powell’s character. One of the most underrated TV shows of 2025, “Chad Powers” provides Powell with a more nuanced role than his usual fare.

13. Dark Side of the Ring

Like any sport, professional wrestling has more than its fair share of dirty laundry and dark secrets that it’s accumulated over the years. Those secrets come to light in the documentary series “Dark Side of the Ring,” with each episode delving into a different disturbing behind-the-scenes wrestling tale. From fatal accidents and infamous public events to the tragic stories behind the sports’ biggest names, the show offers a searing exposé. Featuring a mix of archival footage and talking head interviews, these stories go in-depth in recounting wrestling’s most notorious moments.

“Dark Side of the Ring” plays out like a true crime series, with the show just happening to cover the colorful world of wrestling. That makes it accessible for people who are only casually aware of the wrestling industry, but still a must-watch for its fans. Given its sensitive subject matter, the show is not without generating its own controversy, including ECW legend Tommy Dreamer reportedly getting suspended for his “Dark Side of the Ring” comments. A no-holds-barred look at wrestling’s biggest tragedies and harrowing incidents, “Dark Side of the Ring” will leave viewers not seeing the sport or its personalities the same way again.

12. Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty

The rise of Los Angeles Lakers owner Jerry Buss and the team’s star point guard Magic Johnson is depicted in the HBO series “Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty.” John C. Reilly stars as Buss, with Quincy Isaiah playing Johnson, with the show starting as Buss buys the Lakers in 1979. From there, Buss wrangles a squad of outsized personalities, both on the court and helping him run the team. The show covers the team’s rise in the early ’80s, ending in an abrupt series finale with the Lakers playing the Boston Celtics for the NBA championship.

Presented as a dramatization, it’s important to note that “Winning Time” isn’t striving to tell a historically accurate story so much as an entertaining one. The entire show just feels larger-than-life, evoking a mythical era of basketball history and filled with plenty of memorably ridiculous figures. As the series progresses, it weaves in more dramatic moments alongside the comedy without losing its effective focus. Bringing plenty of sports-fueled drama and period piece laughs, “Winning Time” is a wild, energetic slam dunk.

11. All American

One of the last original scripted shows on The CW for the foreseeable future is “All American,” a coming-of-age sports drama inspired by the story of real-life pro linebacker Spencer Paysinger. The series centers on high school football player Spencer James (Daniel Ezra), who is recruited from inner-city Los Angeles to play for a significantly more affluent school in Beverly Hills, leading to culture shock. The show chronicles James’ incredible high school career, progressing into playing college football, and culminating in James going pro in the NFL.

“All American” is a sports show that improves as it goes, raising the emotional stakes alongside the athletic ones. James not only grows up throughout the story, but the ensemble cast around him grows and evolves, enriching the show’s scope. The series spawned a spin-off, “All American: Homecoming,” expanding on the college football aspect of the original. “All American” was renewed for a final season at The CW in 2025, signaling an end to James’ story but leaving behind a sprawling sports saga.

10. The League

While football is very much an underlying presence throughout “The League,” the hit FX series isn’t about playing, coaching, or even managing the sport. Instead, the show follows an incredibly passionate fantasy football league among longtime friends living in Chicago. The ensemble obsessively dedicates itself to the league, including lavish draft days to kick off every football season. In between the friends’ back-and-forth competition, the ridiculous aspects of their lives and careers inform their outrageous friendships.

“The League” is a show that starts off relatively grounded in its comedy and gets wildly outlandish as it continues across its seven-season run. The series also brings in some impressive guest stars, including numerous pro football players, with Season 3 adding Seth Rogen and Will Forte. Football may be what brings these characters together, but the humor comes from the wacky misadventures of modern adulthood. Powered by a shared love of football and insatiable competitive spirit, “The League” is a masterclass in juvenile mayhem from a more mature perspective.

9. Welcome to Wrexham

Famous funnymen Rob Mac and Ryan Reynolds went into very serious business together by buying the Welsh football club Wrexham F.C. The two new owners’ trials and tribulations of running a soccer team is chronicled in the FX documentary series “Welcome to Wrexham.” Premiering in 2022, the show details the history behind Wrexham F.C. and how the locals perceive the team and its rapid changes following the new ownership. Reynolds and Mac regularly visit and make decisions on the direction of the club as its ranking in the English football league system rises from its initial struggling position.

“Welcome to Wrexham” keeps its underdog story fun and accessible, even to those not particularly well-versed in English soccer dynamics. Though there are emotional setbacks along the way, the show is a largely triumphant one, filled with heartwarming moments as the soccer team is promoted. During the club’s historic ascent, “Welcome to Wrexham” launched a spin-off series, “Necaxa,” following Eva Longoria investing in a Mexican soccer team. Entertaining, informative, and masterfully pulling at the heartstrings, “Welcome to Wrexham” hits the mark.

8. Stick

Apple TV has become one of the biggest and most consistently impressive streaming services when it comes to premier television. One of the platform’s more recent original comedy hits is the golf show “Stick,” starring and executive-produced by Owen Wilson. Wilson plays Pryce Cahill, a former professional golfer who now works as a golf club seller and amateur coach. Pryce becomes a mentor to young prodigy Santi Wheeler (Peter Dager), but Pryce’s glaring personal issues turn into a liability for Santi’s success.

To be sure, “Stick” follows a familiar formula to anyone with a passing knowledge of these types of sports stories, but it hits all the right notes. Much of this comes from Wilson’s usual laidback charm, with the role of Pryce firmly in his creative wheelhouse. As with many stories of this type, there are steady dramatic elements as well, allowing Wilson to bring more vulnerability to his character. A well-crafted approach to recognizable tropes, “Stick” has been renewed for a second season at Apple TV, set to continue the adventures of Pryce Cahill.

7. GLOW

As professional wrestling hit the big time in the ’80s, one of the circuits that entered the spotlight was the Gorgeous Ladies of Wrestling, or GLOW. This pro wrestling circuit serves as the backdrop for the Netflix original dramedy “GLOW,” right down to its full-on ’80s setting. As the organization forms in Los Angeles in 1985, struggling actor Ruth Wilder (Alison Brie) and her frenemy Debbie Eagan (Betty Gilpin) are among its most prominent recruits. As the women in the organization learn to work together and develop their stage personas, the outfit is overseen by the wry Sam Sylvia (Marc Maron).

While the three lead actors share a solid rapport, the true strength behind “GLOW” is in its wider ensemble cast. The show also leans more into the interpersonal drama between its characters as it progresses, without compromising its comedic sensibilities. Though the series was renewed for a fourth and final season, the show was canceled amid Hollywood uncertainty in the face of COVID-19. While there are things we wish we saw in “GLOW” before Netflix gave it the chop, the three seasons that exist are a fantastic blend of comedy, drama, and pro wrestling.

6. Sports Night

Before he launched “The West Wing,” prolific screenwriter and producer Aaron Sorkin created the workplace dramedy “Sports Night.” The show’s namesake is a pastiche of ESPN’s “SportsCenter,” a cable sports news show broadcast on the fictional Continental Sports Channel. The series centers on the challenges faced by producing such a show in the highly competitive television industry under a discerning network, explored through the show’s two anchors, Dan Rydell (Josh Charles) and Casey McCall (Peter Krause) and their work’s impact on their personal lives.

A lot of the qualities that made “The West Wing” such a television classic are present in “Sports Night,” including overlapping talent in the cast and crew. This includes tight pacing and editing, rapid-fire dialogue, and a fully realized rapport between the cast, especially Charles and Krause. That said, “Sports Night” is a much overtly comedic and lighter show than Sorkin’s political follow-up, making it his funniest show to date. Despite only lasting for two seasons, “Sports Night” provides a fun perspective on the sports industry that’s never been adequately revisited since.

5. Cobra Kai

While most “Karate Kid” viewers are fixated on waxing techniques and crane kicks, the classic ’80s movie does technically center around a martial arts competition. This distinction is carried over to the revival series “Cobra Kai,” with a middle-aged Johnny Lawrence (William Zabka) getting his life back in order by opening his own karate dojo. This reignites Johnny’s rivalry with Daniel LaRusso (Ralph Macchio), who opens a competing dojo, espousing a more philosophical approach to karate. As the San Fernando Valley becomes home to another karate-fueled feud, familiar faces from Daniel and Johnny’s past resurface amid the escalation.

By introducing a new generation of karate students mentored by Johnny and Daniel, “Cobra Kai” recaptures and modernizes the coming-of-age qualities present in the “Karate Kid” movies. The show weaves in many fan-favorite elements from the films and even manages to redeem “The Karate Kid Part III,” all while bringing impressively choreographed fight sequences. And more than just being a one-note joke, “Cobra Kai” gives William Zabka the chance to demonstrate his acting chops in full. A beautiful and entertaining continuation to “The Karate Kid,” “Cobra Kai” proves the classic ’80s franchise still has plenty of mileage.

4. Eastbound & Down

If there was ever a role that was tailor-made for Danny McBride, it’s Kenny Powers, the acerbic protagonist of HBO’s “Eastbound & Down.” After being disgraced for his behavior during his time in Major League Baseball, Powers returns to his North Carolina hometown to work as a physical education teacher. Heightening the awkwardness is the fact that Powers’ ex-girlfriend, April Buchanon (Katy Mixon), also works at the same school as a teacher. Powers tries to find a way to make it back to the majors, but his own ineptitude and boorish behavior often land him right back where he was.

On a surface level, “Eastbound & Down” is a redemption story starring a character who doesn’t think he ever needs to be redeemed. Seeing Powers constantly self-sabotage himself is only part of the fun, with the series building an equally goofy ensemble cast around McBride. The humor is thoroughly raunchy and serves as the groundwork for his subsequent work on HBO, including “The Righteous Gemstones.” A four-season sports comedy that reveled in the ridiculous lengths it could take its characters, “Eastbound & Down” remains one of the funniest HBO original series ever made.

3. The Last Dance

Michael Jordan is, to many, the greatest player to ever suit up in the NBA, and his historic run with the Chicago Bulls is the subject of the ESPN and Netflix co-production “The Last Dance,” which premiered in 2020. Featuring a mix of archival footage and interviews with key figures from the period, including Jordan himself, the documentary series delves into the Bulls’ 1990s NBA dynasty and the drama within. This is juxtaposed with a special focus on Jordan’s final season with the Bulls as he vies for a sixth championship with the team.

There is no other sports documentary series that captivated the world quite at the same level as “The Last Dance.” More than just chronicling Jordan’s many championships with the Bulls, the documentary shines a light on a decade when basketball was arguably at its finest. This is illustrated by plenty of engaging footage from the era, amusing anecdotes from both on and off the court, and an energetic soundtrack. “The Last Dance” is myth-making at its finest, a celebration of Jordan’s legendary status in the NBA.

2. Ted Lasso

If there was ever an original series that put Apple TV on the map, it was the sports dramedy “Ted Lasso.” The show stars Jason Sudeikis as the titular Wichita State football coach who is hired to lead a soccer team in England. Initially set up to tank the organization by its spiteful new owner, Rebecca Welton (Hannah Waddingham), Lasso wins over Rebecca and the squad with his earnest and kind nature. As the team faces stiff competition, Lasso also comes to terms with his own unresolved trauma, with the experience improving him as well as those he leads.

“Ted Lasso” is one of the most refreshingly uncynical shows in recent memory, with Lasso’s qualities carrying over to the audience. While Sudeikis delivers the best performance of his career, the ensemble around him is uniformly solid, especially Waddingham and Brett Goldstein. Though audience reaction to the show’s third season was mixed, the series has since been renewed, and everything we know about Season 4 points to a return to form. A sports comedy with an enormous and genuine sense of heart, “Ted Lasso” set the gold standard for Apple TV.

1. Friday Night Lights

After directing and co-writing the acclaimed 2004 sports movie “Friday Night Lights,” filmmaker Peter Berg repurposed the story for television. Premiering in 2006, the show focuses on small-town Texas high school football coach Eric Taylor (Kyle Chandler). Working at the same school as Eric is his wife, Tami (Connie Britton), with the two balancing their personal lives and work, especially given the heightened importance of football. This is juxtaposed with the coming-of-age drama surrounding the players on Eric’s team and their increasingly turbulent lives.

A blend of teen soap opera, family drama, and bone-crunching sports stakes, “Friday Night Lights” lives up to its premise’s full potential. With the added real estate of five seasons compared to one movie, the story really gets the chance to breathe and grow with its cast. The interpersonal relationships are beautifully messy, the emotional rollercoaster of being a teenager and young adult is effectively captured, and the football action is exciting. “Friday Night Lights” is a tightly crafted teen drama anchored by Chandler and Britton leading the cast, with everything framed against the backdrop of Texas high school football.





This story originally appeared on TVLine