Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Halsey Is Joining The NFT Wave To Auction Off A Painting

The NFT wave is growing more and more every day. Among the participants are musicians, who, with concerts and tours still on hold due to the pandemic, have turned to cryptocurrency art to make some money. It should come as no surprise that Halsey has decided to join in on the fun. The singer announced on Friday that she will be auctioning off an original painting she made on Nifty Gateway, a marketplace where some of the biggest NFT collectors can be found. Halsey’s art will be listed as the series “People Disappear Here” and it will feature digital animations of the painting’s seven characters, complete with chilling music. A digital animation of the full painting will be available as well.

“The characters are all inspired by figures that occurred in a series of sleep paralysis nightmares I had at home during the quarantine,” Halsey said in a statement. “After seven years of bed surfing hotel rooms around the world, adjusting to my own pitch black cave in California had a little bit of a learning curve. From toddler TV programming evil dentists, a child born with massive claws who scratched her way out of the womb, to a woman who stood at the foot of my bed and demanded I watch her masturbate. They were memorable to say the least. I’m excited to be sharing them in a space that prioritizes artist integrity, and in a market that perpetuates the value of intellectual property.”

The auction is set to begin on March 17. Halsey’s announcement comes after Grimes made $6 million on music that she released through a cryptocurrency art auction. Post Malone is also giving select ticket holders a chance to play beer pong with him, funded by NFTs, while Diplo is preparing to sell a collection of digital animations as well.

You can watch a trailer for the upcoming auction on Halsey’s Instagram Story here.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Utah State’s Marco Anthony Wears The Number 44 As A Tribute To Wendy’s

There are plenty of jersey numbers in the world of basketball that are iconic for one reason or another — Michael Jordan’s 23, Kobe Bryant’s 8 and 24, you can probably rattle a few off of the top of your head without having to think all that hard. Now, thanks in part to one of America’s most iconic fast food menu items, a junior on the Utah State men’s basketball team is joining these ranks.

Ok, that’s a bit hyperbolic, but still, Marco Anthony has quite the story behind the number he wears on his uniform. During the Aggies’ 62-51 win over Colorado State in the Mountain West semifinals, the announcers told the story behind Anthony wearing the number 44 as a way to honor the 4 for $4 deal that Wendy’s offers up.

As an added bonus, when asked whether it is true or not before the game, Anthony gave a sensational answer: “How could I make something like that up?”

Anthony reacted to this on his Twitter account with a burger emoji.

Anthony has gone from a reserve for the Aggies to a major member of their rotation this season, averaging 10.2 points, 4.8 rebounds, three assists, and one steal in 31.3 minutes per game. Utah State will hope to take down San Diego State on Saturday night in the conference title game. Should they win, it stands to reason that Anthony will celebrate with some Wendy’s, which is a pretty reliable victory meal for any occasion.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

The NBA 2K League Has Its Eyes On ‘Global Growth’ Ahead Of Its Fourth Season

The NBA 2K League, the fast-growing gaming league from the NBA, will set off on its third season on Saturday evening with its fourth draft, in which 265 players from around the globe will wait anxiously for their chance to be one of the 63 rookies selected. The draft, which airs at 7 p.m. ET on Twitch and YouTube, will feature celebrity gaming fans like 2 Chainz and seven-time NBA champion Robert Horry. The pool of eligible players features a pair of records, with 33 international players and ten women eligible for selection.

“Season three was just about growth,” 2K League president Brendan Donohue told Dime. “What we’re trying to do is continue to build upon it, and the good news is we have so much low-hanging fruit in front of us.”

That low-hanging fruit includes continued global expansion, both in terms of non-NBA affiliated pro teams like Gen-G in China as well as broadcasting around the world, and continued diversity efforts that aim to put the absolute best product in front of NBA 2K fans going forward. Last year’s Finals averaged 2 million viewers, up from 650,000 in 2018, a signal that that league is growing and potentially becoming a new way for the NBA to connect with young audiences.

Ahead of Saturday’s draft, Donohue took some time to discuss the evening’s festivities and what fans can expect from season four of the NBA 2K League.

When you think about your fourth season, do you have any particular goals in mind? What do you want to come out of this NBA 2K League season having accomplished as a league?

There are a couple real key initiatives. One is we want to continue our global growth. You saw last year, we added more distribution. We added Loco in India, we added Egg in Southeast Asia, Sportsnet in Canada. We’re going to be adding more distribution across Europe as well as from around the world, but I would say global growth from an expansion perspective (is a priority).

The other thing I would say is adding global teams, through expansion, to our league. Last year with the expansion to add the Gen-G Tigers from Shanghai, that was our first new non-NBA owner in the league. And that really has stirred a lot of interest, so we’re having a lot of active conversation with other owners looking to potentially join the 2K League.

The last thing is continuing to evolve our broadcast. We’ve brought a really professional, well-done broadcast our first three seasons, and we were challenged this past season with the pandemic and having to create a virtual studio. But this year, we’re going to look to do more unique game and fan experiences. Imagine us doing Community Night on one night, Game of the Week another night, and kind of a rapid-fire (schedule) of games a different night, really trying to bring different experiences to our fans and begin to test new products on our broadcast.

When I hear you talk about international growth or even innovation on the broadcast and digital side of things, those could be words out of Adam Silver’s mouth. When you look at those initiatives within the 2K League, do you feel like the NBA sees your work in those spaces as a first step with potentially following suit with the broader league?

I’d say it somewhat differently. Adam Silver and Strauss Zelnick, the CEO of TakeTwo, their voices are very much a part of shaping our league, and they run two of the most innovative companies in the world. I’m on Adam’s senior leadership team and his voice shapes how we go through things. So I definitely think we’re learning a lot about how he thinks about the broader NBA through his input on the 2K League.

Where I think we’re unique and there’s maybe a lesson to be learned is that we have a very young audience, and that audience, their expectation is to consume content in a very different way than somebody else who consumes the NBA in a different way and has for decades. So whether it’s the ability to chat with other viewers in the Twitch chat during a live game or to give input and see their ideas used in a future broadcast, that type of input for a fan to have on our experience, I think that’s the future.

That’s that kind of more direct-to-consumer experience that I think is happening. We’re catering our content to an audience that consumes content and has expectations of their voice being considered more than at any other time.

I wanted to move to the Women in Gaming Initiative because we’ve interviewed people like Aerial Powers of the WNBA here, and I know she’s done some work with your league. Why is it important to you personally that you incorporate female gamers and that part of the industry or the community into what you do as a league?

What we’re most focused on, and this relates to all of our programs regarding diversity, is to just get the best players in the world in our league, hard stop. That’s what we’re trying to do. There are some obstacles for those groups to overcome. What we’ve tried to do the first several years of our player identification process is identify challenges, unique challenges to those groups, and we’re trying to help them overcome them so they have a level playing field.

The good news is you’re going to see some great players emerge out of some under-represented groups. I think they’re going to have a ton of success in the 2K League, and all we did was shine a light on them. We had to change some of our processes to do that, but I think the teams that actually lean into diversity as they shape their roster, I think they’re going to get paid handsomely.

When you think about the 33 international players, the ten women who are in the draft pool, and obviously the hope being close to all of them get drafted and have success, what does success look like for the league with regard to those players, who are having their first go in the league this year?

Success for us would be normalcy. For the expectation to be that there’s a diverse group of players from different countries, different parts of the world, women, men, and that that kind of becomes more of a normal thing and we’re not talking about this as much. That’s the goal.

We fully think that those players from these underrepresented groups, we’re going to find that they’ll have great success when they’re on the sticks and able to play.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Kid Cudi Is Not A Fan Of A New TikTok Trend That Uses Lyrics From ‘Day ‘N’ Nite’

A new music-based trend seem to be born every week on TikTok. The social media app has housed favorites like the Renegade, Buss It, and Silhouette challenges, all of which have been supported by the artists whose songs serve as the their foundations. Kid Cudi is the latest act to have his music trend on TikTok, but when he saw the way his song was being used in the videos, the rapper found it hard to show support.

“I dont f*ck w what they did to my song on tik tok takin out the lyrics,” he wrote in a post on Twitter. “We live in a strange time. Im not flattered (shrugging emoji).” The TikToks Cudi is referring to finds users taking the “now look at this” line from Cudi’s 2008 hit “Day ‘N’ Nite,” which is used for a two-part video. In the first part, users recite the “Day ‘N’ Nite” line as the song plays in background. This leads into the second half, in which something bizarre or hilarious happens. A fan responded to Cudi’s tweet and said, “Cudi is goated, but it just ain’t that deep really,” but the rapper pushed back.

“I dont think im makin it ‘deep’ by tweetin how I feel,” he replied. “Now if I was ranting thats another thing. Nothing wrong w me stating I dont approve, plus if u are such a fan, u know my lyrics are most important to me.” Cudi added, “Im passionate about my sh*t so idc who has a problem w that.”

You can see some examples of the TikToks below.

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

A High School Basketball Announcer Blamed His Racist Comments During The National Anthem On A Blood Sugar Spike

The latest example of someone showing their rear end while athletes opted to show solidarity against racism came from the world of Oklahoma high school basketball. Prior to a game between Norman High School-Midwest City in the quarterfinals of the Oklahoma 6A State Girl’s Basketball Tournament, and while “The Star-Spangled Banner” played, Norman’s entire team took a knee.

A hot mic of the broadcast of the game caught one of the individuals calling the game, whose name is Matt Rowan, ridiculing Norman’s players, saying multiple expletives and using the n-word to describe them. A video of the incident, as tweeted out by Norman’s coach, can be viewed here.

A statement that began circulating in the aftermath by Rowan attempted to apologize for what happened. His excuse for what happened is that he, a Type 1 diabetic, was in the midst of a blood sugar spike.

It is, of course, absurd to blame saying something extremely racist and derogatory on diabetes, and it is certainly not new that a person brings up their religious beliefs as they apologized for getting exposed as a bad person. In a statement after this occurred, David Jackson, the head of the Oklahoma Secondary Schools Activities Association, announced that the crew from this game won’t call games anymore.

“While we are currently investigating the incident, this crew will not be doing any more games for the remainder of our championships,” Jackson said. “This kind of behavior will never be tolerated by anyone representing the NFHS or OSSAA.”

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

A Republican Governor Claiming Marijuana Legalization Will ‘Kill Your Kids’ Has Everyone Thinking About ‘Reefer Madness’

As more and more states across America began legalizing marijuana, it was only inevitable that this would happen: Republicans, trained to robotically push back against anything remotely progressive, would take some time from getting angry about Pepé Le Pew and go old school against getting high. Indeed, on Friday Reefer Madness — the notoriously hysterical 1936 propaganda film that warned against the dangers of smoking bud — began trending online after a Republican governor told his constituents that blazing up puts you down in the ground.

As per Mediaite, Nebraska Governor Pete Ricketts held a press conference after state lawmakers discussed a bill that could legalize medical marijuana. Ricketts, though, is old-fashioned — really, old-fashioned. And he was sure the data that linked getting stoned with suicide was legit.

“This is a dangerous drug that will impact our kids,” Ricketts said during his presser. “If you legalize marijuana, you’re going to kill your kids. That’s what the data shows from around the country. That’s why it’s dangerous to go around the established process we have to determine whether or not drugs are safe and effective, why legalizing marijuana and going around the regulatory process to keep people safe is dangerous, and going to harm our kids.”

Mind you, the bill being bandied about only legalizes cannabis for medical use, and it’s only for serious medical conditions, prescribed only by doctors and physicians. But Ricketts was evidently more concerned with over-the-top fears than about alleviating the suffering of those in need.

But many on social media weren’t buying that. Many saw a return to the bad old days, namely Reefer Madness, in which stoned people resort to such non-chill activities as manslaughter, rape, and hit-and-run accidents. And the jokes, they flowed.

Meanwhile, those interested in watching what audiences in 1936 — as well as current Republican governors — thought about getting high can always watch the film itself, which has long been helpfully in the public domain.

(Via Mediaite)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Jennifer Lopez And Alex Rodriguez Deny Reports That They Called Off Their Engagement

On Friday Page Six reported that Jennifer Lopez and Alex Rodriguez called off their engagement, breaking up after four years of dating. The alleged split occurred as Rodriguez continues spring training for the upcoming Major League Baseball season and as Lopez shoots her next movie, Shotgun Wedding. But it turns out things between the couple may not be entirely done, as they came forward to clear the air about the rumors.

In a statement to CNN on Saturday, Lopez and Rodriguez denied that they broke up, though they did admit they’re “working through some things.” The original report also claimed that the couple’s split was due to an allegation of infidelity between Rodriguez and reality-show star Madison LeCroy, who appears in Bravo’s Southern Charm. That claim was also labeled as false, as per TMZ.

Lopez and Rodriguez’s engagement began in 2019, just after two years of dating. A date for their wedding was set, but they were forced to postpone it multiple times, something she spoke about on Access Hollywood. “We had to cancel the wedding because of COVID, because of the quarantine. And we actually did it twice, which people don’t know,” Lopez said. She also added that their goal was to “wait it out,” saying, “everything’s cool and it’ll happen when the time is right. I feel like it’s not a huge priority to go and have a big wedding right now, that’s not what life is about.”

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Flavored Whiskey Blind Taste Test — Jim Beam Vs. Jack Daniels

It’s time for another blind taste test. Today’s pick? Flavored whiskey from Jim Beam and Jack Daniel’s, two brands I really enjoy making a genre of whiskey I don’t particularly care for. Which made for an altogether fascinating experience.

Speaking generally, I find that almost all flavored whiskeys skew towards being overly saccharine. So be patient with me if you feel me having to stretch to find positive things to say throughout this blind tasting. The whiskeys themselves are already sweet enough, they don’t need help from me.

I also changed up the format slightly. I’m tasting six bottles staring with Jack Daniel’s and Jim Beam’s honey and apple expressions plus JD’s Fire (their cinnamon expression) and Beam’s Red Stag (their cherry liqueur infused with bourbon). I tasted the honey bottles against each other and chose one as a winner. I did the same with the apple expressions. Then the Fire and Red Stag were like a “Wild Card” round. In the end, I still ranked them all by taste.

I did find one dram I didn’t mind in all this chaos. I was kind of taken aback by it, in fact, because I’ve had the expression before and dismissed it. Today, it rang the truest and won the day.

Part 1: The Taste

Zach Johnston

Taste 1 (Honey):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Okay… I’m getting a lot of vanilla cream on the nose. In fact, it’s almost exactly like a box of Jell-O vanilla pudding but thin like it was made with skim milk. The taste is not that at all — it’s very sweet honey hard candies. The mid-palate lurches back towards that vanilla cream which doesn’t feel quite right with the honey candy. The end is very short and very sweet but more vanilla than honey.

Taste 2 (Honey):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Well… this is weird. There’s almost nothing on the nose besides mineral water and a very slight touch of grain and fruit. The taste on the other hand explodes with a fresh honey vibe and peaks with a slight end-of-the-tongue spice note and buzz. The honey lasts and feels like I had a spoon of actual honey.

WINNER:

Taste 2 by far. It tasted like actual honey.

Taste 3 (Apple):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

There’s a really sour apple note on the nose that almost feels like an apple yogurt with a hint of wet wood. The taste is so sweet that it’s pretty much an apple Jolly Rancher through and through. It gets syrupy the longer it goes on, to the point where it tastes like the apple bar syrup you use for Appletinis.

Taste 4 (Apple):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This is a sweet apple on the nose, almost Red Delicious. The taste is kind of like an apple cider — not the bubbly kind but those little stubby Martinelli’s Apple Cider bottles you get in delis. It’s also smooth and leads towards an apple cider oak barrel, with a touch of spice.

WINNER:

Taste 4. It was familiar and dialed back. It was sweet but the sweetness came via the apple, not the syrups.

Taste 5 (Wild Card):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

Wow! This nose is exactly like cinnamon ginger snaps. It’s boldly cinnamon and ginger forward to the point that I feel like it’s December again. The taste is all Red Hots with a good cinnamon spice that starts to get woody by the end of the sip. Plus, it still feels a little bit like whiskey. A definite perk.

Taste 6 (Wild Card):

Zach Johnston

Tasting Notes:

This nose is cherry candy that almost feels like cherry yogurt with a hint of sourness. The taste is pure cherry bar syrup. After another sip, there’s a slight hint of spice and maybe caramel somewhere under all that sugary cherry.

WINNER:

Taste 5 by a landslide. I have to say, I actually like that cinnamon whiskey quite a bit.

Part 2: The Ranking

Zach Johnston

6. Jim Beam Apple (Taste 3)

Beam Suntory

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $18

The Whiskey:

This product starts out with Beam’s own apple liqueur. The juice is then cut with a touch of Beam’s classic bourbon and bottled at a very low proof of 70.

Bottom Line:

This and the Red Stag are basically tied. Still, the overly sweet apple here was just not doing it for me. It kind of reminds me of a bygone era when apple syrups were considered a fine replacement for actual apples.

5. Jim Beam Red Stag Black Cherry (Taste 6)

Beam Suntory

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $18

The Whiskey:

This is the same as above. Cherry liqueur is cut with standard Jim Beam bourbon to create a mixer.

Bottom Line:

Again, this is so sickly sweet and only vaguely reminiscent of cherry. As with the Beam Apple above, there’s no sense at all that you’re drinking alcohol. I get that these are for mixing, but still…

4. Jack Daniel’s Honey (Taste 1)

Brown-Forman

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $25

The Whiskey:

Like Jim Beam, Jack Daniel’s starts by making a honey liqueur. They then add in their signature Tennessee whiskey to create a mixing liqueur with a touch of whiskey taste.

Bottom Line:

This was more like a vanilla whiskey than a honey one. Yes, there was definite and clear honey on the palate. But it was weirdly over-sugared and felt more like a facsimile of honey than actual honey.

3. Jim Beam Honey (Taste 2)

Beam Suntory

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $18

The Whiskey:

Jim Beam’s honey starts with their own honey liqueur that’s cut with Beam’s iconic bourbon. The expression is built as a mixer.

Bottom Line:

This wins out for Beam by actually tasting like real honey. It’s not as complex as the JD Honey above, but that felt like a good thing today. Still, this had the same problem as the other Beams in that I had no idea I was drinking alcohol.

2. Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Apple (Taste 4)

Brown-Forman

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $25

The Whiskey:

Jack Daniel’s starts by making their own apple liqueur before adding in a dose of their Old No. 7 to remind you that you’re drinking the good stuff.

Bottom Line:

This hit a sweet spot in that Martinelli’s Apple Cider vibe. I can see using this in a highball or mixed into a spicy, wintry cocktail.

1. Jack Daniel’s Tennessee Fire (Taste 5)

Brown-Forman

ABV: 35%

Average Price: $25

The Whiskey:

Cinnamon liqueur and Jack Daniel’s come together in this bottle. The cinnamon is given the spotlight with the Old No. 7 there to remind you that you’re still drinking Tennessee whiskey.

Bottom Line:

This was shockingly refined. It was truly spicy but in a nice clean way — derived from cinnamon and ginger. The overall experience was pleasant. I could actually see drinking this as a shot, in a highball, or even in an old fashioned.

Part 3: Final Thoughts

Zach Johnston

If I were ranking the Beam and Jack separately, it’d go like this:

Jim Beam: 3rd Red Stag, 2nd Apple, and 1st Honey.

Jack Daniel’s: 3rd Honey, 2nd Apple, 1st Fire.

At the end of the day, it was Jack Daniel’s Fire that won by a fairly big margin. There was no getting past the balance and flavors delivered. In fact, I’m thinking of mixing the Jack Daniel’s Apple and Fire to get a stewed apple pie vibe going and making an old-fashioned with that.

There you have it, folks. I came into this rolling my eyes pretty hard and I’ve left with an idea for a creative riff on a classic cocktail. That’s the beauty of a blind tasting, you never know where it’ll take you — even when you’re facing a genre of spirit that you don’t like!

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Lara Trump Is Being Compared To Cruella De Vil After Reportedly Funneling Money From A Dog Charity To Line Her Father-In-Law’s Pockets

Shortly after her father-in-law left office in disgrace, Lara Trump — spouse of his younger son Eric — was hailed by some Republicans as the future of the party. Unlike other family members, who are loose cannons (Don Jr.), tainted (Ivanka), not much liked (her husband) or disinterested (Tiffani), she seemed like a respectable choice. But she’s far from ideal, and a recent report that she’s allegedly funneling money from dog rescue charities into her father-in-law’s businesses should make matters worse.

According to The Huffington Post, numerous documents show that Big Dog Ranch Rescue, a charity linked with Lara Trump, has spent $1.9 million at the former president’s properties, including a whopping $225,000 at Mar-A-Lago, once treated like the “Southern White House,” this weekend.

As per HuffPo:

Internal Revenue Service filings show that the group has spent as much as $1,883,160 on fundraising costs at Mar-a-Lago and Trump’s golf course 18 miles north in Jupiter starting in 2014. Lara Trump, the wife of Eric Trump, started being listed as a chairwoman for charity events in 2018, and the group’s president, Lauren Simmons, visited the White House in 2019 for the signing of a bill addressing animal cruelty.

In a response, Simmons defended associating herself with the Trumps. She was also, perhaps not coincidentally, among those spreading misinformation about the fraud in the 2020 election.

When people caught wind that a dog charity linked to Lara Trump was spending so much money at her father-in-law’s properties, social media was quick to condemn her. Some compared her to another canine-related scam artist, 101 Dalmatians baddie Cruella De Vil.

Others were simply horrified.

And some pointed out that maybe, just maybe, the Trump family is not as wealthy as they say they are.

(Via HuffPo)

Categories
News Trending Viral Worldwide

Soleil Moon Frye On Turning Pain Into Art With Her New Documentary, ‘Kid 90’

Soleil Moon Frye has lived a life on camera, becoming a household name as a kid actor while starring as the precocious Punky Brewster in the ’80s sitcom of the same name. When the show ended, however, she was left to navigate life as a teenager with the added pressure of still being a fascination to the press and public. She grew up and spoke out — about teen drug use and her decision to have breast reduction surgery. All on camera. She tried to find herself, leaving Hollywood for college in New York to study filmmaking, camera in hand. Not to paraphrase Alanis, but she loved, she lost, she learned. You know, life. And she documented a whole lot of it in a way that might feel more common now, but which was uncommon for someone who grew up in the less technologically lush ’90s.

For years, Frye kept her videotapes, audio recordings, and journals in a box. But something changed four years ago while she was planning a documentary and exploring how reliable a narrator our memories can be. The end result is Kid90 (which is now streaming on Hulu), a far more raw and personal project than Frye intended, but also a fascinating slice of ’90s nostalgia filled with raw footage of her and a whole lot of familiar faces that were in her orbit as a fun-loving teen in ’90s Hollywood. Fun is the key word here and the thing that you walk away feeling most nostalgic for. No matter when you grew up and who you hung out with, you can almost surely relate to the easy laughs and worry-free moments of your own awkward teen years. But it’s Frye’s reflection of those good times and also the more challenging times that gives the doc its soul.

While many of us (myself included) often try to avoid lingering on our past trauma lest it catch up to us and weigh us down, Frye is willing to sift through hers with the idea that she can, as she says, turn her pain into art. This while trying to better understand her memories and a life formed by her experiences. We spoke with Frye about that journey, about letting go of guilt, how the sexualization of teens then and now crosses the generational divide, and about finding her way back home.

What was the prompt for this exploration?

I had originally started it as a documentary that was meant to be about anything but me. It was not originally going to be a personal coming-of-age story. I was fascinated by the idea of memory and if things happen the way I remembered them. And I also think on a subconscious level, I had put so many of the tapes away. And as much as I had lived this very joyful, fun, amazing life, there was also pain that was under the surface of some of my experiences. And so, about four years ago, I wanted to know if things happened the way I remembered them because I remembered so much of it being so joyful. And then I went on this journey of exploration that really changed my life forever.

It takes a lot of courage to look back. I know, me personally, I am very much of the keep it in a box, move forward mindset. I’m guessing it took some time to get to a place you’d be comfortable calling some of those memories into question, right?

Yeah. I mean, for me, I wasn’t planning, again, on it being this personal experience, so I literally had locked it all away. And then in the process of opening it up, I discovered so much that was there that I wasn’t planning on finding or discovering. And once you unlock those experiences, you can’t put them back, nor would I want to, because they were part of my transformation, of me rediscovering who I once was. It was almost like I left a chronological blueprint for me to find my way back home.

Obviously, you’ve talked about your life in the past with other projects, other documentaries, books, and talk show appearances through the years. I’m curious, the level of catharsis that you feel from that, does it ever match what you’re hoping for, or is it a mixed bag?

I mean, for me, it was incredibly cathartic, it was incredibly painful, and it was also incredibly beautiful. And the way that I look at it is that, my parents had always raised us to be fighters, to be survivors, that when you have a painful experience, you turn it into art. And I really look at it as everything having happened for me and not to me. So it was a culmination of all of it — the messiness, the joy, the love, all of it — that’s brought me to right here right now, and I wouldn’t change a thing.

And at this point, is it [telling your story] more of a rewarding feeling than in the past?

It’s been such a rewarding experience, because it’s stripped me down to my truth. It’s been this process of peeling back the onion, and peeling it back to my core essence, where this was not about it being about doing it for anyone else. You know what I mean? There’s so much teen approval that I think you hear me seeking as a little girl in it, when I’m going, “Am I my pretty? Am I ugly? Am I this? Am I that?” And the little girl inside that wanted approval from everyone else, which I think is so what the human experience is, of so many teenagers and so many adults, right? Who doesn’t want to be loved?

In the course of this experience, I realized not only did I love people, but as I say, I didn’t realize how loved back I was. And so, the illumination of that has been so deeply profound, and also to try to piece it together and just show the blueprint of what was there, and to get to a place, where I could just speak my truth and not be dependent on anyone else’s validation of that, do you know what I mean? That was an incredibly rewarding feeling, because it came with a great deal of pain and reflection, and yet a great deal of courage. You know, I keep thinking about what are my feelings as this is about to come out? And my dad always had this word that he would say, which was “anticipatory”, and I really feel anticipatory about it. [Laughs] And at the same time, I feel really proud to have done that shadow work.

You had mentioned in the film at a couple of points, feeling some level of guilt over certain things that had happened. Some of the losses [of friends] and not necessarily hearing people in that time when … and who could expect that from a teenager, to be able to be that present? But I’m curious how you’re dealing with that, processing that, from when the film wrapped to now. Are you still carrying that or have you let yourself off the hook a little?

There was a great deal of guilt that I felt and just wanting to be there more, or wanting to have seen it more. I think about Jonathan Brandis and just how much I loved him. And I love his parents so much, and we talk on a regular basis, and they love him so much. And sometimes no matter how much love is around us, still, we can’t always take away someone’s pain.

And so, I have really processed, and I’m still in the process of processing, but I really do feel like it has been a really cathartic experience. And now I look at, okay, how do I continue to live my life, where I can listen a little more, hear a little more, and try to be more compassionate and make… I love that the teenage girl in me writes that letter and says, “Have you made your life worthy? Who are you today?” And asks all of those questions, that I feel that I now want to live with a deeper purpose.

What’s the interaction with this footage and the story of the documentary with your kids? Have they seen it?

I’ve shown the girls, which has been amazing, and they’ve really been my supporter. As parents, you’re like, “No, I’ve been through it.” And they’re like, “No, you haven’t…” And it’s like, “no, I really have, I’m going to show you.” And so, it has created a really beautiful conversation for my daughters and me. And also, they were such a part of it. They did research. One of my daughters shot it. I mean, they have really been a part of the process. And I think that’s really important, especially when you’re living in the edit bay, day and night. And when there were a lot of days that I was away from home, for them to know that what I was working on was something that was so deeply important to my growth. And also, because I changed so much through the process, and it was such a transformation and it was impossible for it not to be because I had never really reflected on any of this. So it brought up so much, and I was going through such a transformation, and they were seeing it. And so, I thought it was important for them to have an understanding of it.

I think it’s really interesting also, because it really obviously directly connects to what people are experiencing right now, as they grow up. They have access to all this technology. They’re on camera constantly. They’re broadcasting their thoughts constantly. Big question, but do you think the generational divide is overstated and that there’s more that connects us?

I mean, I look at the stage of me going through puberty as a really clear indication of something that is so relevant today… and the ways in which the objectification that was happening around me at the time… It’s been fascinating in recent months, even just to hear the plethora of [ways that] this conversation, which I think is so important to have… I was a little girl, right? And then I started developing, and it’s as if sometimes they want to keep you in that box of being a little girl. And yet, we grow up, and we go through puberty and we go through these awkward stages.

And the way in which I envision it now for teens, being magnified so much by social media… I think it is more important now than ever that we have these conversations. That we talk about it through documentaries, that we in the media have these dialogues, and that we have these dialogues at home. Because really, more than ever, I feel that it is so important to the mental health and wellbeing of young people that we have these dialogues. It’s a really important conversation to have, and it’s our responsibility to have it. So as far as the divide, I think so many similarities still exist and are just completely magnified on a whole other level.

I agree. It’s interesting because it’s almost like this project is an unintentional bookend to the Britney Spears documentary. I don’t know if you’ve seen that, but there are some similarities specifically with that topic and not just the way that women are objectified, but also…

The sexualization?

The sexualization, but also the malice that the media comes at people with, referring specifically to the Britney Spears thing with Justin Timberlake and how much she was made to be a villain and what that does. Have you seen that documentary?

I haven’t seen it yet, but I’m familiar with it. And my daughters have seen it, and we had conversations around it. I’m grateful that documentarians are telling these stories and that journalists are shedding light on these stories. And I think it’s really important, and it’s definitely on the top of my list of documentaries that I want to watch.

Does this experience solidify the want to continue down this road as a documentary filmmaker? Are you working on any other projects?

I love documentaries, and it’s interesting, because the [previous] documentary that I made [Sonny Boy], I also locked away in a vault for many, many years. And so, now I plan on adding some pieces to it and finally sharing it with the world. My father had gone through Alzheimer’s, and I drove cross country with him and retraced his history. And I realize now that I wasn’t ready to share it with the world. So I tend to work on these projects that span over multiple decades, which I love. So I want to continue making documentaries. And then I am so grateful for the fact that I get to also be doing what I love with acting and this incredible experience with Punky Brewster. And being able to do the continuation has just been a dream come true. And so, I really feel like I am living a dream in that way. And then the amazing work I get to do with CORE, which is a non-profit so close to my heart, where we’ve done over half a million vaccinations and testing of over 4.8 million people across the country and nationwide. I mean, it’s awe-inspiring. So to continue being of service to others is really important to me too.

‘Kid90’ is streaming now on Hulu. ‘Punky Brewster’ is streaming on Peacock.