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8 Perfect Musicals Where Every Song Is a 10/10

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Musicals are built on beauty and chaos because they don’t wait for a perfect moment. They create one. A character might be mid-breakdown, mid-celebration, or just walking down the street, and suddenly the world bends to their story and bursts into melody. It’s not just storytelling, but storytelling turned inside out, where emotions are too big for words alone. The songs decorate the plot, drive the character arcs, and make a movie unforgettable.

But let’s be honest. Most musicals have their dips. A transitional ballad here, a comic relief number there, and a song that feels more like a detour than a narrative device. But some rare musicals stand out because every single track is 10/10.

With Wicked: For Good flying into theaters real soon and promising to close one of the most beloved musical adaptations of the decade, it’s the perfect time to celebrate the elite bunch. Here are 8 perfect musicals where every song is a 10/10.

8

‘Mary Poppins’ (1964)

Dick Van Dyke & Julie Andrews star in Mary Poppins
Buena Vista Distribution Company, Inc.

In Edwardian London, the Banks family is in disarray. Mr. Banks is a rigid banker, Mrs. Banks is a distracted suffragette, and their two children, Jane and Michael, are in desperate need of attention and care. Enter Mary Poppins, a mysterious and magical nanny who arrives via umbrella to restore order, not through discipline, but through wonder. With her friend Bert, she takes the children on whimsical adventures, including jumping into chalk paintings, floating on laughter, and dancing on rooftops.

There’s a reason Mary Poppins swept five Oscars and became a generational touchstone, and it’s that the music is truly enchanting. “A Spoonful of Sugar” is as catchy as it is clever, while “Feed the Birds” delivers an unexpected gut punch. “Chim Chim Cher-ee” won Best Original Song, and “Supercalifragilisticexpialidocious” is still a shorthand for whimsy. The Sherman Brothers crafted a score that is musically rich and narratively essential, making sure each song drives the story forward.

7

‘The Greatest Showman’ (2017)

Hugh Jackman as the Greatest Showman
Hugh Jackman as the Greatest Showman
20th Century Fox

Loosely inspired by the life of P.T. Barnum, The Greatest Showman follows the rise of a visionary who turns a ragtag group of outcasts into a dazzling spectacle. After losing his job, Barnum dreams up a circus that celebrates trapeze artists, bearded ladies, and performers that society has cast aside. As the show gains fame, Barnum’s ambition grows, leading him to court high society and the opera world. But in chasing stardom, he risks losing the very people who made his dream possible.

The Greatest Showman is a story of belonging, reinvention, and the cost of chasing a bigger applause. Every track in the movie is a banger. “This Is Me” became an anthem of self-acceptance, earning a Golden Globe and an Oscar nod. “Rewrite the Stars” is a swoon-worthy duet with real aerial choreography, while “The Greatest Show” and “Come Alive” explode with energy. The album topped the charts worldwide, and the movie, despite its 56% Rotten Tomatoes score and mixed reviews, became a sleeper hit through word-of-mouth and streaming.

6

‘Singin’ in the Rain’ (1952)

Gene Kelly stars in Singin' in the Rain
Gene Kelly stars in Singin’ in the Rain
Loew’s Inc.

Set during Hollywood’s transition from films to talkies, Singin’ in the Rain centers on Don Lockwood, a matinee idol whose career is threatened when sound revolutionizes the industry. To save his latest movie, Don and his best friend Cosmo Brown team up with aspiring actress Kathy Selden to dub over his shrill-voiced co-star Lina Lamont. All of it leads to a backstage comedy full of romance and showbiz satire.

The plot is light but clever, serving as a love letter to the golden age of Hollywood and the chaos that came with technological change. But what’s interesting is that there is not a single skip in this Technicolor masterpiece. “Good Morning” is a trio that still feels fresh, “Make ’Em Laugh” is a slapstick clinic by Donald O’Connor, and of course, the title number, which finds Gene Kelly dancing through a downpour, is one of the most iconic scenes in movie history. To add, Kelly’s athleticism, Debbie Reynolds’ charm, and O’Connor’s comedic timing make every song land.

5

‘La La Land’ (2016)

Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone kiss in La La Land
Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone kiss in La La Land
Black Label Media

In a dreamy, pastel-hued Los Angeles, La La Land tells the story of two artists chasing their ambitions. Mia is an aspiring actress stuck in a cycle of failed auditions, and Sebastian is a jazz pianist determined to open his own club. Their paths cross in traffic, at parties, and eventually in love, as they push each other to pursue their passions. But as success inches closer, their relationship suffers from the weight of compromise and timing.

Damien Chazelle’s modern musical is both a tribute to old Hollywood and a bittersweet meditation on what it means to choose between love and dreams. It’s an emotional story, and the soundtrack echoes just that. “City of Stars” won the Oscar, but it’s the full suite, comprising “Another Day of Sun,” “Audition (The Fools Who Dream),” “A Lovely Night” that makes the movie feel like a mixtape of hope and heartbreak. Emma Stone and Ryan Gosling aren’t Broadway belters, but their raw performances led the movie to earn six Academy Awards.

4

‘Chicago’ (2002)

catherine-zeta-jones-chicago Miramax Films

Adapted from the 1975 Broadway musical of the same name, Chicago follows the story of Roxie Hart, a housewife with dreams of vaudeville fame, who murders her lover and lands in jail. There she meets Velma Kelly, a nightclub star also accused of murder. Both women vie for the attention of slick lawyer Billy Flynn, who spins their crimes into media gold, turning the courtroom into a stage and burying the truth under sequins and smoke.

Directed by Rob Marshall, the movie transforms the Bob Fosse stage musical into a razzle-dazzle spectacle of ambition, manipulation, and fame. Catherine Zeta-Jones and Renée Zellweger bring sharp contrast, while Richard Gere’s Flynn oozes charm. The musical sequences are cleverly staged as fantasy performances, with “Cell Block Tango” turning confessions into choreography and “Razzle Dazzle” being the cynical showstopper. Chicago won six Oscars and revived interest in movie musicals in the 2000s.

3

‘The Sound of Music’ (1965)

The Sound of Music
The Sound of Music
20th Century Fox

The Sound of Music is set against the looming backdrop of World War II, and it tells the story of Maria, a young nun-in-training, who is sent to be the governess for the seven children of Captain Georg von Trapp, a widowed naval officer. Her warmth and love of music slowly thaw the captain’s stern heart and bring joy back into the household. But as Maria and the captain fall in love, the family must confront the rise of Nazism in Austria and flee to safety.

Rodgers and Hammerstein’s score is simply perfect. “Do-Re-Mi,” “My Favorite Things,” “Edelweiss,” and “Climb Ev’ry Mountain” aren’t just catchy songs. They are emotionally resonant and rich with messages about love, resilience, and the healing power of music. Julie Andrews’ voice is crystalline, and her performance as Maria is endlessly warm. The movie won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture, and remains one of the highest-grossing musicals of all time.

2

‘West Side Story’ (1961)

Rita Moreno sings in the original West Side Story
Rita Moreno sings in the original West Side Story
United Artists 

Inspired by Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet and set in the streets of 1950s New York, West Side Story follows two rival gangs, The Jets, a white American gang, and the Sharks, a Puerto Rican group, as they are locked in a bitter turf war. Between all the chaos, Tony, a former Jet, falls in love with Maria, the sister of Shark leader Bernardo. Their romance sparks hope but also escalates the violence around them, leading to a series of devastating turns that challenge the possibility of peace.

Directed by Robert Wise and Jerome Robbins, West Side Story reimagines a world where love and violence dance side by side. From the opening finger snaps of the “Prologue” to the aching final notes of “Somewhere,” it delivers a soundtrack that is both musically daring and emotionally explosive. Leonard Bernstein’s score, Stephen Sondheim’s lyrics, and Rita Moreno’s fiery performance in “America,” all drove it to take home 10 Academy Awards and turned it into a towering achievement in the history of musicals.

1

‘Wicked’ (2024)

Ariana Grande as Galinda whispering into the ear of Cynthia Erivo as Elphaba Thropp in the 2024 movie Wicked
Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande 
Universal Pictures

Wicked: dives into the untold story of Elphaba, the misunderstood young woman who would become the Wicked Witch of the West. Set in the magical land of Oz before Dorothy’s arrival, it follows Elphaba’s early days at Shiz University, where she meets the bubbly and ambitious Glinda. Though polar opposites, the two form a complicated friendship that’s tested by power and prejudice. As Elphaba begins to question the Wizard’s regime and her own place in the world, she is forced to make a tough choice.

Wicked: Part One honors Stephen Schwartz’s legendary score, setting the stage for a sweeping two-part saga of identity, rebellion, and sisterhood. “Defying Gravity” is an undeniable showstopper because Cynthia Erivo’s performance reportedly brought audiences to their feet. “Popular” is a comedic gem, “I’m Not That Girl” aches with heartbreak, and “What Is This Feeling?” captures the duo’s early friction with bite. Ariana Grande’s Glinda is a revelation, too. Moreover, the production design and faithfulness to the source material ensured Wicked was a massive commercial success.



This story originally appeared on Movieweb

10 Most Disturbing Movies About Motherhood, Including Die My Love

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Die My Love is the latest Lynne Ramsay movie that focuses on motherhood, marriage, and the mental health concerns surrounding both. The entire theme has been part of movies for years, and these films approach everything from postpartum depression to the excessive expectations that society throws onto mothers.

The best movies about motherhood often have fantastic actresses starring as these mothers facing societal and mental problems, sometimes breaking down in the midst of their struggles, and fighting to regain their autonomy. With Die My Love receiving positive reviews, here are the most disturbing films focusing on motherhood.

Die My Love (2025)

Jennifer Lawrence looks up while dancing with confetti falling around her in Die, My love

The most recent movie about a woman breaking down thanks to the weight of marriage and motherhood is Jennifer Lawrence’s Die My Love. Directed by Ramsay, who has made other movies about the struggles of motherhood, this film sees Grace and Jackson move to his old country home, where they soon have their first child.

The entire film is about a young mother who develops postpartum depression and finds little help in the community where they moved. This shows the breakdown of their family, as both Grace and Jackson start to struggle in their roles as partners and parents, but it is Grace who has the most significant breakdown of the two.

Critics praised the film as a depiction of an “oft-ignored experience,” while audiences were less favorable thanks to its tendency to bounce around and keep everyone watching off balance. However, that is its brilliance, and Lawrence is earning award recognition for her performance.

Grace (2009)

Jordan Ladd as Madeline Matheson with her baby in Grace
Jordan Ladd as Madeline Matheson with her baby in Grace

Grace is a horror movie set in the world of motherhood, and it is another metaphor for both postpartum depression and the idea that a child will “eat away” at their mother from the moment they are born. The parallel here is that the concept of a baby and a vampire are equal when it comes to draining the mothers.

The movie opens with a disturbing moment as a woman is in a car accident that kills her husband and her unborn baby. However, she asks to carry it to term anyway, and then the baby is born alive. However, when the baby begins needing to feed on blood, the entire film takes a horrific turn.

This was clearly a cult indie horror movie, with Jordan Ladd delivering an excellent performance as the mother. The story is a nice little mix of Rosemary’s Baby and The Exorcist, with a bit of Dracula thrown into the mix.

Mother! (2017)

Jennifer Lawrence is being grabbed by several people including Javier Bardem, she looks frightened in the movie Mother
Jennifer Lawrence is being grabbed by several people including Javier Bardem, she looks frightened in the movie Mother

Die My Love was not the first time that Jennifer Lawrence had starred in a movie about mothers and their place in the world. She was in a much more bizarre film about the topic when she starred in Darren Aronofsky’s mother! in 2017. That film received a wildly polarized reception from critics and the audience.

Javier Bardem stars as “Him,” a poet whose pregnant wife, “Mother,” is his muse. However, one day a group of people arrive at their house. When “Him” invites them in, they stay and refuse to leave. “Him” doesn’t seem to mind, but “Mother” begins to lose herself when these people want to control her pregnancy.

While this is a complicated film, Lawrence has said it is an allegory about how society “rapes and torments Mother Earth,” and she represented that Mother in this film, while Him represents God.

A Mouthful Of Air (2021)

Amanda Seyfried as Julie Davis with her baby in A Mouthful of Air
Amanda Seyfried as Julie Davis with her baby in A Mouthful of Air

Released in 2021, A Mouthful of Air is a psychological drama with Amanda Seyfried starring as a young mother named Julie. The film opens with a traumatic scene as Julie survives a suicide attempt on the night of her son’s first birthday. As she recovers, she tries to show gratitude, but her anxiety is ongoing.

A second pregnancy makes her decide she has to face her own childhood trauma if she and her children are to survive. The movie was a box office flop, but most of that had to do with it being released in the middle of a pandemic and people not wanting dark subject matter when the real world was so bleak.

However, A Mouthful of Air was a solid look at trauma and motherhood with a devastating lead performance by Seyfried. The actress chooses honesty rather than histrionics, and it is this performance that shows the real effects of depression and anxiety on a young mother.

We Need To Talk About Kevin (2011)

Tilda Swinton as Eva in We Need to Talk About Kevin
Tilda Swinton as Eva in We Need to Talk About Kevin

Lynne Ramsay, the director of Die My Love, had a very different look at motherhood in her 2011 film, We Need to Talk About Kevin. Instead of exploring a mother’s trauma after having a child, this deals with a mother whose child is already a teenager – and then does the unthinkable.

Tilda Swinton is the mother in this movie who has to deal with the fallout when her son, Kevin (Ezra Miller), goes to school one day and kills several students, after also killing his dad and sister. She has no idea what led to this and doesn’t know how to react, yet the entire community blames her for the tragedy.

The movie includes flashbacks of Eva and her husband starting a family with Kevin as their young child, and then shows possible reasons she might have to blame herself for his later actions. It is a horrifying movie about a mother’s love and never understanding why he did what he did. It is a tough, yet rewarding watch.

Us (2019)

Adelaide (Lupita Nyongo) looks distressed in Jordan Peele's Us
Adelaide (Lupita Nyongo) looks distressed in Jordan Peele’s Us

Us is a Jordan Peele horror movie that shows a mysterious underground society that hides doppelgängers of everyone in the city above. However, one day, these doppelgängers come to the surface and begin killing their opposites, seeking to take over their lives.

The star is Lupita Nyong’o, who plays a mother who will do anything to protect her family and kids when their doubles come for them. However, there is a horrifying twist at the end of Us that shows nothing is as it seems. This is a story about motherhood, but who the real villain is remains the question.

While not as successful as his previous movie, Get Out, Us still received critical acclaim, with a 93% Rotten Tomatoes rating, and critics calling it a great story about oppression and the American family.

Huesera: The Bone Woman (2022)

Huesera The Bone Woman character stands in a doorway looking at the crib
Huesera The Bone Woman character stands in a doorway looking at the crib

Huesera: The Bone Woman is likely the most obscure, disturbing movie about motherhood, but it is one that anyone interested in the genre should seek out. This is a Mexican-Peruvian supernatural horror movie about a pregnant woman who finds herself threatened by the occult.

It sounds similar to what Rosemary’s Baby offered, but this is more of a body horror movie, with the woman having terrifying nightmares that all tie into her upcoming pregnancy. The soon-to-be mother has to make a choice, and in the end, she wants nothing to do with her child.

Critics praised the film, awarding it a 97% Rotten Tomatoes rating, calling it “bone-chilling body horror” and a twisted take on what to expect during pregnancy. It relies primarily on disturbing images and themes that motherhood can sometimes feel like a curse.

Hereditary (2018)

Toni Collette looking terrified as Annie Graham in Hereditary
Toni Collette looking terrified as Annie Graham in Hereditary

Hereditary is another movie that has a mother dealing with traumatic experiences after her kids are already starting to get older. This trauma is twofold, as the mother here is Toni Collette’s Annie, a woman whose daughter dies in a tragic auto accident, causing her to blame and push away her son, destroying her family in the process.

Ari Aster creates a story here about trauma and how one terrible accident can drive any mother over the edge. Of course, he also brings the occult into it and takes a little bit away from the actual family drama, since this group was always pulling the strings that drove Annie over the edge.

Critics awarded Hereditary a high 90% Rotten Tomatoes rating, praising the slow-burning horror and the depiction of one death destroying the entire family, leaving only the mother to try to understand her fate when it is all too late.

Rosemary’s Baby (1968)

Mia Farrow as Rosemary looking horrified at the end of Rosemary's Baby
Mia Farrow as Rosemary looking horrified at the end of Rosemary’s Baby

Roman Polanski’s masterpiece is his 1968 horror movie, Rosemary’s Baby. Mia Farrow stars as Rosemary, a woman who moves into a new apartment with her husband and finds the residents in the building to be a little too interested in her life. When she ends up pregnant, she realizes her life is in danger.

It is no spoiler to reveal that she is pregnant with the Anti-Christ, and that her pregnancy was after a demon sexually assaulted her following a deal her husband made with the cult in the building. This is easily a parable about a woman who loses her own bodily autonomy and finds that she has no say in her fate.

By the end of Rosemary’s Baby, when the mother looks at her baby and asks what is wrong with its eyes, she realizes too late that she might have delivered the being that would destroy the world. When she decides to settle down with her baby anyway, it shows her resigned to her fate as a mother.

The Babadook (2014)

Essie Davis as Amelia Vanek reading to her son in The Babadook
Essie Davis as Amelia Vanek reading to her son in The Babadook

The Babadook is a horror movie that relies on its audience to read between the lines, which is not always easy for mainstream audiences who prefer to have things spelled out for them. Directed by Jennifer Kent, the main story is about a woman and her son and the fear that a creature known as the Babadook is terrorizing both of them.

However, the film suggests the idea that the Babadook is not real, but only a metaphor open for interpretation. It is easy to watch the movie and see that the Babadook represents the grief of a mother who doesn’t know how to control it. This small family lost their husband/father years ago, and both are dealing with his loss in different ways.

The most prominent theme here is how a mother can help a child understand grief and overcome trauma healthily, and if she is ignoring her pain, there is no way she can teach her child to remain strong. When it comes to movies about motherhood, this shows how challenging that role can be in the end.



This story originally appeared on Screenrant

Whitesnake’s David Coverdale calls it after five decades

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Whitesnake frontman David Coverdale had an important announcement to make: He’s quitting.

Actually, retiring is more like it. And in classy fashion.

“After 50 years-plus of an incredible journey with you, with Deep Purple, with Whitesnake, Jimmy Page, the last few years it’s been very evident to me that it’s time, really, for me to hang up my rock ‘n’ roll platform shoes and my skin-tight jeans,” the 74-year-old singer said while holding a highball glass, in a video posted Thursday on YouTube.

“And, as you can see,” he said, ruffling the chin-length gray hair that has replaced his well-known long locks, “we’ve taken care of the lion’s wig.”

After a few years with local bands in the late 1960s and early ‘70s, including a band that opened for Deep Purple, Coverdale stepped into the rock ‘n’ roll public’s eye when he took over as that band’s frontman in 1973. He would go on to found Whitesnake five years later.

Coverdale hung it up temporarily once before, after wrapping a Whitesnake world tour at the end of 1990, only to find himself “in an appalling, confused state across the board … privately and professionally.” He was married to actor Tawny Kitaen — who had starred in a host of Whitesnake videos in the MTV-dominated late ‘80s — from 1989 to 1991 and remembered that entire time in an interview with The Times a couple of years later as his “mousse abuse” period. The band’s popularity had exploded.

“I just had to stop everything … this whole circus. I had never gone into [music] for the image thing at all … and I really couldn’t do it anymore.”

But it was a short retirement: By the next spring, he had teamed up with Led Zeppelin guitarist Page and begun working on a Coverdale/Page album that was released in 1993. One record exec at the time disparagingly called it a “rock version of a corporate merger.” But the album was a hit.

At the time, Page told The Times that after doing unsatisfying solo work in the years after John Bonham died and Zeppelin broke up, “working with David was a totally different thing. It was suddenly right back to that original spark of creativity and ideas flowing.”

Coverdale chimed in: “A lot of people could misconstrue the band as some sort of corporate (game plan) because we share the same record company, but that was purely coincidental. We didn’t set out to make Led Snake.

“The first indication of just how special this could be was when Jimmy and I started walking around Manhattan and actually stopped traffic,” he continued. “People started honking their horns and asking if we were going to be working together. It was a very chilling moment in a positive sense.”

Despite the record’s success, the bulk of their planned tour had to be axed because of poor ticket sales, leaving a reinvigorated Coverdale to reconstitute Whitesnake in 1994 with some new members. They were together for four years and went on a tour that was billed as Whitesnake’s farewell.

Unsurprisingly, and once again, it was not the band’s last hurrah. Whitesnake returned in 2002 to tour with Scorpions and, in subsequent years, released their 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th studio albums. That last was a bit unlucky, perhaps; less than a year later, the COVID-19 pandemic delayed a planned Whitesnake tour until 2022. Then health problems among the band members — including Coverdale — derailed that effort after only a couple of months.

The singer’s official retirement comes after Whitesnake released a greatest hits record last year.

“It’s time for me to call it a day,” Coverdale said in his Thursday video. “I love you dearly. I thank everyone who’s assisted and supported me on this incredible journey. All the musicians, the crew, the fans, the family. It’s amazing. But it really is time for me to just enjoy my retirement. And I hope you can appreciate that.

“I love you with all my heart,” he said, lifting his highball glass in a toast. “Fare thee well.”

Then the recording cut to a remix of Whitesnake’s song “Forevermore,” with the video including pictures from throughout Coverdale’s career.

“Without a doubt, this is the classiest farewell I have ever seen or heard from an artist,” one fan wrote in comments. “Words cannot express what your music has meant to me. Thank you for everything, and fare thee well, indeed.”

Said another: “Respect to David who knows when it’s time to call it a day. Some never quit, even after it’s too late. David is not that man. Short and to the point with little fanfare. This is how it is done. Bless you, David.”



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Hilary Duff, Katy Perry & Meghan Trainor Return With Brand-New Music

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Pop girlies Hilary Duff, Meghan Trainor and Katy Perry have been busy in the studio and made a return. Hilary Duff dropped “Mature” and is going on tour, Meghan Trainor dropped her new single “STILL DON’T CARE,” and Katy Perry surprise-dropped “bandaids.” Watch as we go through all their new releases, their tour life, and interviews we did with them!

Tetris Kelly:

It is pop girly fall and your boy is over here losing his mind. From Katy to Meghan to Hilary, we’re running down all the new releases, and we’re gonna start with the one whose comeback announcement literally gave me a heart attack. New music and a brand-new tour. This is what dreams are made of. Hilary Duff is back. The new song “Mature” touches on all the notes that we missed from our girl Hilary Duff, and the music video is just as perfect. And there’s even a viral dance; I need to learn it now. Hopefully this all means a new album because her discography, top to bottom, it’s flawless. But most importantly, she’s going on tour. She’s hitting the road for the Small Rooms, Big Nerves Tour with four dates, including London and LA. Did you get lucky when tickets went on sale? We can’t wait. We are so excited about the return of Hilary Duff, but what’s our fandom name? I say Duffsters, but online, I’ve also seen Duffel bags, which honestly is kind of genius. Anyways, we did have Hilary talk to Meghan Trainor on our show Quizzed a while back, and it was iconic. 

Keep watching for more!



This story originally appeared on Billboard

Teresa Giudice Hugs Joe Gorga After Years-Long Feud, Shocking Fans

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What To Know

  • Teresa Giudice surprised fans by publicly reconciling and hugging her brother Joe Gorga at BravoCon 2025 after years of family feuding.
  • Both Giudice and the Gorgas expressed relief and optimism about moving forward.
  • Fans reacted with a mix of hope and skepticism on social media.

The Real Housewives of New Jersey star Teresa Giudice shocked fans when she hugged her brother, Joe Gorga, at BravoCon 2025.

On Friday, November 14, Giudice, 53, announced that she had finally made amends with Joe and his wife, Melissa Gorga, after years of feuding. “We have all gotten together. I’m really grateful and I’m thankful,” she revealed during the “Housewive2Housewive” panel at Caesar’s Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Giudice was later spotted hugging her younger brother, 51, and posing for photos in a video circulating on social media. Her husband, Luis Ruelas, also kissed Joe on his cheek.

“I saw my husband’s relief, and for me, that’s the most important thing,” Melissa told Us Weekly of making up with Teresa. “It’s the siblings, and it’s the kids, and this trickles down. To see the relief in Joe’s eyes and in his face, to me, I’m like, ‘I’m game. Let’s go. Let’s do this.’”

Melissa added, “We can’t really hash it out too deep, because we’ll just keep circling back. It’s better to just say, ‘Listen, we’ve all made some mistakes here, and it’s time to move forward.’”

Teresa’s daughter, Gia Giucide, 24, told People on the BravoCon 2025 red carpet that “it feels really good” to reconnect with her uncle and aunt. She added, “I’m looking forward to the path of rebuilding and just getting to a better place, which we already are in, so, yeah, it’s exciting. I’m really happy about it.”

@hurrdatentertainment Now this is what we call Turning the Tables 🫶🏼🫶🏼🫶🏼 @Teresa Giudice #rhonj ♬ original sound – Hurrdat Entertainment

In the comments of a TikTok video of Teresa and Joe’s embrace, fans shared mixed reactions. One TikTok user confessed, “Call me delusional, but this is heartwarming to me 🥹.”

Another fan shared, “Family is family at the end of the day 💕 nice to see them making up!” as someone else echoed, “IDC, this means the world to me.”

However, not everyone was convinced the reconciliation would last. A different TikTok user wrote, “I think I’ve seen this film before. And I didn’t like the ending.”

Someone else agreed, predicting, “They [are] going [to]fight about where to go to dinner after this, just give it some time.”

Over on X, one fan exclaimed, “HELL HAS FROZEN OVER! Teresa Giudice & Melissa Gorga reunite PUBLICLY #RHONJ #bravocon.”

Yet another person shared via X, “I truly hope that they can repair their relationship for the sake of family that is what her parents would want and the kids as well.”

The Real Housewives of New Jersey, Season 15, TBD, Bravo




This story originally appeared on TV Insider

Be thankful: November’s Patch Tuesday has just one zero-day

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This November Patch Tuesday update offers a much reduced set of updates, with only 63 Microsoft patches and (only) one zero-day (CVE-2025-62215) affecting the Windows desktop platform. Microsoft SQL Server has returned with a single update, so the Readiness team suggests a standard patch release schedule for Microsoft Office, Developer tools and Microsoft browsers. (Windows desktops do require a “Patch Now” plan, and while the severity of these security vulnerabilities is less than in October, the testing requirements are still extensive.)

To navigate these changes, the team from Readiness has provided an infographic detailing the risks of deploying the updates to each platform. (More information about recent Patch Tuesday releases is available here.)

Known issues 

Microsoft reported a single known issue, experienced across multiple Windows Server 2022/5 builds and patching methodologies: 

  • When installing KB5070879 or later updates, Windows Server Update Services (WSUS) does not display synchronization error details in its error reporting. This functionality is temporarily removed to address the Remote Code Execution (RCE) vulnerability, CVE-2025-59287. If left unpatched, this could lead to deserialization of Microsoft patch data and subsequent arbitrary remote code execution. 

Major revisions and mitigations

Microsoft published several documentation and patch related updates after October‘s Patch Tuesday, including:

  • CVE-2025-25004: PowerShell Elevation of Privilege Vulnerability. Microsoft updated the download links for PowerShell 7.4 and version 7.5. No further action required.
  • CVE-2025-59287: Windows Server Update Service (WSUS) Remote Code Execution Vulnerability. There have been several updates and an out-of-bound patch to this update. Microsoft also reported known issues with this update (and the associated hot patch). Administrator scrutiny is highly advised.
  • CVE-2025-55315: ASP.NET Security Feature Bypass Vulnerability. Microsoft has updated the documentation for this update to reflect the increased level of severity. Hey, some justification is required when Microsoft bumped this update from a CVSS3.1 score of 9.9 to the highest possible rating of 10.0.

For those who are not familiar with the CVSS3.1 rating, there is a handy calculator that combines a base score, a temporal factor and the target environment. For those in a hurry, a CVSS3.1 score of 10.0 means “not good.”

Windows lifecycle and enforcement updates

October was a big month for Windows 10; this month, Microsoft has ended servicing for Windows 1123H2 for both Home and Pro versions. This means these versions will no longer receive security or maintenance updates. Don’t worry if you’re using Windows 11 Enterprise, as LTSC support ends Oct. 9, 2029.

Each month, Readiness team analyzes the latest updates and provides detailed, actionable testing guidance based on a large app portfolio and a comprehensive analysis of the Microsoft patches and their potential impact on Windows and app deployments. The November release delivers updates across network infrastructure, remote connectivity, and wireless components, with no high-risk flags but significant breadth requiring testing and validation.

Network and Remote Access

Network stack changes affect every application’s ability to communicate, while dual-stack environments mean both IPv4 and IPv6 paths require validation. Remote Desktop Protocol serves as the primary access method for remote workers and administrators, making connection stability non-negotiable. We suggest testing the following remote connection related areas:

  • Send and receive packets over both IPv4 and IPv6 protocols;
  • Transfer large files over IPv6 connections;
  • Test web browsing, file downloads, and Microsoft Teams/Skype messaging workflows;
  • Enable Remote Desktop (Settings > System > Remote Desktop) and verify client connections.

These Microsoft driven network updates affect fundamental connectivity from basic packet transmission to complex application workflows. IPv6 support will require dedicated validation alongside IPv4 network operations.

VPN, Bluetooth and Remote Access Services

VPN connectivity testing presents challenges because connection failures manifest as authentication issues, routing problems, or silent packet loss — each requiring different diagnostics. Several Remote Access Service components received updates this month requiring the following tests:

  • Enable/disable RASMAN logging and establish VPN connections to verify logging file creation.
  • Launch RRAS management console (local or remote) and perform configuration and viewing operations.
  • Test both administrative paths since different code handles each scenario.

Microsoft’s RASMAN logging provides critical VPN diagnostics, while RRAS management must work reliably to prevent stranding administrators unable to configure remote access infrastructure. Bluetooth pairings need to be tested, primarily for music. We also recommend a Microsoft Teams audio test.

Security and UI components

Smart card authentication failures create immediate security incidents, yet testing requires physical cards and configured certificate infrastructure. Desktop Window Manager problems manifest as sluggish transitions or unresponsive shortcuts. The Readiness team suggests the following testing:

  • Smart Cards: Test authentication for both local workstation login and remote sessions;
  • Desktop UI: Test Live Preview (taskbar hover), Alt+Tab switching, and Win+L system lock and verify that all UI transitions remain responsive.

Organizations should prioritize the testing of these updates based on infrastructure footprint: VPN connectivity if Remote Access Services are first, then IPv6 file transfers for dual-stack environments, and finally, Wi-Fi profile synchronization where Microsoft account ecosystems are used. Desktop Window Manager and Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP) warrant standard validation, given their universal deployment. UWP broadcast applications represent a narrow use case — most organizations can deprioritize unless specialized broadcasting apps are deployed.

Each month, we break down the update cycle into product families (as defined by Microsoft) with the following basic groupings: 

  • Browsers (Microsoft IE and Edge) 
  • Microsoft Windows (both desktop and server) 
  • Microsoft Office
  • Microsoft Exchange and SQL Server 
  • Microsoft Developer Tools (Visual Studio and .NET)
  • Adobe (if you get this far)

Browsers

Microsoft released the following Chromium updates to the Edge browser, all of which have been rated as important:

Add these low-profile updates to your standard browser release schedule.

Windows

Microsoft updated both DirectX and the GDI core Windows components to address two critical patches. The following areas have been updated with the 35 remaining patches (all rated important) for this patch cycle:

  • Windows SmartCard
  • Microsoft Hyper-V
  • Windows Storage and Common Error Logging system
  • Winsock, wireless networking and streaming services

Due to the zero-day (CVE-2025-62215) in this month’s release affecting the Windows system kernel, our team recommends a “Patch Now” schedule for these.

Microsoft Office

This month, Microsoft addressed a single critical rated vulnerability (CVE-2025-62199) for the Office platform with an additional 15 updates — all of which are rated as important. Add these Office updates to your standard release calendar.

Microsoft Exchange and SQL Server

Microsoft released a single update (CVE-2025-59499) that affects Microsoft SQL Server. Note:  this update can be part of your standard server update schedule, but will require a server restart.

Developer tools

Microsoft released a lone update (CVE-2025-62214) rated as critical and three others rated important for Visual Studio. None of these has been reported as exploited or disclosed, so we recommend adding them to your standard developer release schedule.

Adobe (and third-party updates)

We keep promising to retire this section or replace it with a section detailing Microsoft published third-party updates. That said, there were no Adobe updates and no third-party updates  (excluding Chromium) this month. We’ll give Microsoft (and Adobe) one more chance before we make any changes. C’mon Adobe!



This story originally appeared on Computerworld

This entry-level Roomba robot vacuum is on sale for $150 ahead of Black Friday

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Robot vacuums can be a huge help, keeping your floors clean regularly without much extra work on your part. Black Friday deals often include some of our favorite robovacs, and this year is shaping up to be no different. iRobot’s entry-level Roomba 104 Vac robot vacuum is available for 40 percent off right now, bringing it down to a record low of $150. A number of other Roombas are on sale for Black Friday, too.

In iRobot’s lineup of robot vacuums, the Roomba 104 sits on the low end, adept at vacuuming up dust and hair, but without the mopping ability of its more expensive Max, Plus or Combo counterparts. The Roomba 104 Vac makes for a great first robot vacuum all the same, though, because of its four levels of powerful suction, and easy-to-use app. Like iRobot’s other vacuums, the Roomba 104 maps and navigates your home with LiDAR, which helps it avoid obstacles. And using the Roomba Home app, you can schedule it to clean specific rooms, and even spot-clean particularly dirty spots.

iRobot

The Roomba 104 is available for 40 percent off its normal price.

$150 at Amazon

An earlier version of the Roomba Vac is Engadget’s favorite budget robot vacuum, and you’ll get the same great performance out of the newer Roomba 104 Vac. That includes a specialized brush for cleaning the hard-to-reach corners of your home, and also a charging dock that the vacuum can automatically return to once it’s down charging.

This sale on Roomba vacuums comes at an admittedly difficult time for iRobot at large, with the company dealing with a serious financial shortfall as of its last earning statement. Regardless of what happens to iRobot, though, the Roomba 104 Vac’s offline mode should mean that it can clean your home and charge itself without the need of an app or an internet connection.



This story originally appeared on Engadget

Emily Thornberry: In a world of disinformation, the BBC remains a 'source of truth and reliability'

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In a wide-ranging interview with Gavin Lee, British MP and Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Emily Thornberry offers a candid and reflective discussion that spans the complexities of global diplomacy, foreign policy, and the stark challenges of real governance. We explore raging conflicts in Gaza, Ukraine, and Sudan, alongside political turbulence at home within the frat boy culture of British politics. The conversation includes in-depth analysis of the BBC as a century-old institution: its crucial role in the digital age of disinformation, the integrity of its journalism, and the political pressures it faces, both at home and abroad, as a publicly funded broadcaster striving to maintain trust in a deeply divided media and political landscape, amid a fractured world. We are reminded that If you tread the middle path well, “both sides are likely attack you,” explains Ms. Thornberry. “This is life.” The British MP is heartened by a new noticeable trend “whereby people want to have explainers, they want to understand’: the full story with historical context to better understand our world.


This story originally appeared on France24

California to revoke 17,000 commercial driver’s licenses issued to immigrants

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California will cancel 17,000 commercial driver’s licenses that had been issued to immigrants after officials said they extended beyond the date the drivers were allowed to work in the country — a violation of state law.

California requires driver’s licenses and work permits to have the same expiration dates, officials said. Notices were sent out on Nov. 6 to affected drivers warning their licenses would expire in 60 days.

The move comes amid an ongoing clash between the Trump administration and Gov. Gavin Newsom over California’s non-domiciled commercial driver’s licensing program. It also follows a nationwide audit of such programs after officials said a truck driver living in the U.S. illegally made a U-turn and caused a crash in Florida that killed three people.

“This is just the tip of the iceberg. My team will continue to force California to prove they have removed every illegal immigrant from behind the wheel of semi-trucks and school buses,” Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy said in a written statement.

State officials, however, said the drivers were not “illegal immigrants” and that they were authorized to work in the country by the federal government.

“Once again, Sean ‘Road Rules’ Duffy fails to share the truth — spreading easily disproven falsehoods in a sad and desperate attempt to please his dear leader,” said Brandon Richards, a Newsom spokesman.

California is one of 19 states, in addition to Washington, D.C., that issues driving licenses to immigrants without legal status. Doing so allows people to work and travel safely, immigrant rights advocates argue.

But California — along with six other states, including Texas — came under scrutiny after an audit conducted by the Department of Transportation’s Motor Carrier Safety Administration, the agency responsible for preventing commercial motor vehicle-related deaths and injuries.

That audit found irregularities in the issuance of non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses.

Duffy said the audit found 25% of the licenses issued in California violated federal rules, including by extending well beyond an individual’s work permit end date.

In October, following the audit, Duffy withheld more than $40 million in transportation grants and claimed California was not only continuing to issue commercial driver’s licenses to immigrants living in the country illegally, but was also not enforcing new English language requirements for truckers.

Officials have refuted Duffy’s claims and said the state has complied with federal laws and regulations. California’s Department of Motor Vehicles said on its website that it was not issuing or renewing non-domiciled commercial driver’s licenses as of Sept. 29.

Proposed new federal rules that would include mandatory federal immigration status checks, limiting the duration of the license and limiting eligibility to certain immigration visas, were temporarily put on hold by a federal appeals court this week.

The ruling provided relief for thousands of immigrants who were at risk of losing their licenses.



This story originally appeared on LA Times

Paris Hilton Parties the Night Away in Sparkly Minidress

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Paris Hilton has re-entered her 2000s party girl era. Only this time, it’s more glamorous. The entrepreneur recently stepped out for the House of Harlow event, celebrating the brand’s new jewelry collection, followed by the GQ Men of the Year party. And of course, in signature Hilton style, she wore a sparkly animal print minidress for the night.

Paris Hilton stuns in sparkly animal print minidress

Paris Hilton’s sparkly animal print minidress couldn’t fit her aesthetic more. It came with lots of sparkles and was unapologetically extra. She complemented it with a black leather jacket and shades. With her signature blonde waves and glossy lips, she proved once again why she is considered the first-ever influencer. One thing is for sure: nobody does it like the socialite.

She came together with her old friend, Nicole Richie. This is the kind of full-circle moment that millennials did not know they needed. Standing arm in arm, their photos together felt like a heartwarming reunion. The event brought together two women who built an era.



This story originally appeared on Realitytea