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Shailene Woodley And Aaron Rodgers Reportedly Don’t Discuss Politics: ‘She Is Not Someone Whose Mind You Can Change’

If you’ve ever wondered what Emmy-nominated actress Shailene Woodley and Green Bay Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers talk about when they sit down for dinner—which may or may not be a piping hot plate of clay—one thing we can say is that’s almost certainly not politics. The seemingly odd couple, who began dating at the beginning of the pandemic and officially announced their engagement in February 2021, reportedly don’t have a whole heck of a lot in common when it comes to political views. So for the sake of their relationship and impending happily ever after, they’ve allegedly taken a permanent “agree to disagree” stance when it comes to all things political.

A source who claims to have the inside intel on the Big Little Lies star and her pigskin-tossing fiancé told People Magazine that the couple realized early on that they would likely never agree on political matters. But rather than stop to consider whether such base-level philosophical differences could eventually lead to unavoidable incompatibility, the two instead decided to just ignore these disagreements altogether.

“They are not talking about their politics, and they never really have,” the source told People. “They disagreed on a lot of things. Early on, they decided to agree to disagree about things and not debate them.”

“She is not someone whose mind you can change, so Aaron hasn’t even tried,” the source added, which only sounds mildly terrifying.

Woodley, of course, has long seemed to eschew any of the typical Hollywood starlet tropes. The outspoken actor has never hesitated to speak her mind—even if that means telling The Hollywood Reporter that “I’ve always sort of wondered what it’d be like kissing my brother” or how she likes to “give my vagina a little Vitamin D.”

As for Rodgers? While he once stated, “I’m an athlete, not an artist,” he also recently seemed to be pushing Trump’s Big Lie by casting doubt on the legitimacy of the 2020 presidential election, in addition to all his controversial COVID vaccine opinions that made him quite unpopular with many, so there’s that. Whatever their differences, we’re sure these two kids can work it out over a cup of clay and a dollop of Vitamin D.

(Via People)

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Jimmy Fallon Could Actually Be In Trouble For Awkwardly Pumping His Dumb Bored Ape NFT With Paris Hilton

Jimmy Fallon and Paris Hilton collectively decided to confuse the audience of The Tonight Show on Monday, when they had a very cringey conversation about NFTs that led to Hilton gifting the audience NFTs, which clearly nobody wanted or asked for. Now, it looks like Fallon could actually be in trouble for trying to pump his NFT on viewers.

According to the Los Angeles Times, Fallon likely paid nearly $216,000 (!!!) for the cartoon ape in a striped shirt, and hyping up said ape could boost its price higher, effectively making Jimmy Fallon richer if he choses to sell the NFT later on. This is obviously a problem!

Comcast, NBC’s parent company, has a workplace policy which instructs NBC employees to “not let outside interests or activities interfere with [their] business judgment or responsibilities to the company.” With Fallon pushing his monkey doodles, it may be considered a conflict of interest. NBC also states that employees must “disclose and obtain approval for all outside work, financial interests and other personal activities/relationships that may create or appear to create a conflict,” and that employees should not “use company info, resources, time, etc. for personal benefit,” as stated in the NBCUniversial gifts, conflicts and corruption policy.

If Fallon’s NFT did rise in value, this could be a conflict of interest. An NBC spokesperson insisted that Fallon did not violate the company’s conflict of interest policy, since hosts are able to promote outside projects such as books and movies. But projects and investments aren’t necessarily the same thing, and there seems to be a gray area with NFTs as they become “normalized” among celebrities, despite it being a risky endeavor for everyone who isn’t already a millionaire.

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The Next Three ‘Call Of Duty’ Games, Including ‘Warzone 2’, Will Reportedly Release On PlayStation

Ever since the news broke that Microsoft is buying Activision Blizzard, there have been concern about what that would mean for the future of PlayStation owners. In theory, Microsoft could make Call of Duty an exclusive and prevent people with PlayStations from playing future games. Considering that Call of Duty is one of the biggest franchises in all of gaming and is a high seller on PlayStation consoles, Microsoft doing this would be a huge blow to Sony.

Most of those fears were quickly alleviated when the head of Microsoft Gaming, Phil Spencer, tweeted out reassurance to fans that Microsoft didn’t have plans to remove Call of Duty from PlayStation consoles. He also mentioned Microsoft’s desire to fulfill any of Activision Blizzard’s current contracts with other platforms. Those contracts were recently mentioned by a Sony spokesperson in regards to the possibility of Activision Blizzard games no longer being available on non-Microsoft platforms.

What are those contracts? According to Bloomberg’s Jason Schreier, it includes three upcoming Call of Duty games, and one of them is expected to be Warzone 2.

Before news of the $69 billion acquisition broke last week, Activision had already committed to make the next few Call of Duty games available on Sony’s console, according to four people with knowledge of the deal, speaking anonymously because they were not authorized to speak to press.

That includes this year’s Call of Duty, expected to be a new entry in the popular Modern Warfare sub-series being developed by Infinity Ward, and the following game, which is in development at Treyarch, both Activision-owned studios. The deal also includes a planned new iteration of Call of Duty Warzone, the lucrative free-to-play game that was released in 2020.

What is interesting about this is a portion of this report says that the future beyond those three contracted games is not quite as in stone.

Plans are hazier for the Call of Duty games further out, said the people familiar with the matter. Microsoft said it expects the acquisition to close sometime in the next six to 18 months, after which it will be able to decide whether to continue releasing future Call of Duty games on PlayStation. Top employees at Activision have also discussed spacing out Call of Duty releases rather than putting them out every year, Bloomberg has reported.

For now, all we can do is take Spencer and Microsoft at their word that they plan to keep Call of Duty on the PlayStation. What’s more interesting is the possibility of Call of Duty no longer being an annual title — a Call of Duty game has been released once a year since 2005. It is as much a constant on the video game calendar as Madden, and seeing it lose that distinction would be a major change.

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The Houston Rockets Delivered High Art On Rodeo Night

Move over High Noon, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, The Magnificent Seven, and A Fistful of Dollars, because the Western canon is about to get dunked on.

On an otherwise dreary Tuesday night in January, the Houston Rockets decided to unleash upon an unsuspecting world 14 seconds of unbridled joy, confusion, triumph, and hope.

Why? Why does any master of the genre create? Would you ask renowned émigrés of Expressionism, dubbed the “Master of Darkness” by the British Film Institute, Fritz Lang, why he felt the need to make Metropolis? Or metaphysical genius, Andre Tarkovsky, why he woke up one day and went, “Huh, a movie about ennui, regret, and space, I’m gonna do it”? Absolutely not, no you wouldn’t.

Well actually the Rockets did it because it was Rodeo Night, but it’s a small digression nonetheless.

The film — let’s give it the respect of calling it what it is — opens by physically having two humble, wooden barn doors slide open, thereby inviting us into the world it is going to showcase. A subtle touch with just the right sound mixing so as not to draw our attention, now piqued, away from the figure coming toward us. What hero is this? Will we come to understand his psyche, share in his dreams? And why is he twisting his hand around like that?

“Heyyyy Rockets fans!” greets small forward, Armoni Brooks, shattering the fourth wall. Okay, we think, we can play this part, “Rockets fans.” After all, he has greeted us with such familiarity.

“It’s time for the mechanical bull cam!” Brooks says. For a second, mesmerized by the way his twirling hand has synced up with the rhythm of his words, we have zero understanding of what is going on. But then like a siren song out of the darkness, a cow makes a long, rallying moo. It’s around this point that we also recognize the backdrop as a cow’s hide — a spotty, galactic universe. Is it moving? Are we ever not in this life?

The scene cuts suddenly to a new character. His arm is up, like Armoni’s was, but his hand is out of the frame at first so we only see a bicep mid-flex as he rocks imperceptibly side to side.

“Time cowboy up,” Christian Wood calmly tells us. We want to. Whatever it means, we want to. His arm has come back from the void out of frame and he’s spinning it, too. “And hold on tight,” he adds. Your hand, perhaps on your phone, or resting on a desk, tenses. How do you hold on tight to this mystery, unfurling?

Then, an etherial flash. Bright, bracing. The sense of dawn, breaking resplendent and then Eric Gordon standing alone, smiling, wordless, looping his arm around and around in a way that suggests he might do this forever. The humble vest he wears is the same as the others, but this time, it’s been clasped confidently up — a signal, perhaps, to say give no heed to the ferocious CGI bull blotting out his torso, this man is in complete control. Will he be as victorious as Theseus, who slew the Minotaur, once was?

We have no idea because it abruptly cuts again to Brooks now atop the same beast.

In a brief cut almost too overwhelming, we get the lens flare and the lowing cow simultaneously. The stimulus is too great and your pulse ratchets up until, like a hero materializing over some distant horizon, it’s Gordon again. He takes a breath and you do too.

“Leeeeeeet’s ride!” His hand is spinning faster now, there is no imagining it. The smile on his face the purest distillation of joy.

Suddenly, the humble barn doors slam, and it’s a good thing too. You had the sense that you would follow Gordon to the ends of the earth just then, if he asked. Three steely, cartoon embossed words slam down on the doors, on the world now firmly closed to us: MECHANICAL BULL CAM. Fin.

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Laura Ingraham’s Brother Gives A Thumbs Down To Her Passive-Aggressive Response To That ‘SNL’ Impression

Fox News host Laura Ingraham’s response to Kate McKinnon’s SNL impression was awkward as heck and left people unimpressed while she pasted a smile onto her face and bobbed body around while doing an impression of McKinnon’s impression. Watching this happen was as uncomfortable as the You “comedic” bit that Laura and contributor Raymond Arroyo performed a few months ago, and there’s one more observer of The Ingraham Angle who’s not holding back on how he feels: Laura’s brother.

Curtis Ingraham is a noted critic of his sister’s vaccine lies (and stream of misinformation that rivals that of Tucker Carlson), and he’s referred to her as “bonkers.” He previously called Laura “pathetic” over her Fauci criticism and for comparing climate activist Greta Thunberg to “Children of the Corn.”

In response to Laura’s not-great impression of Kate McKinnon’s impression of Laura, Curtis defended the SNL star. “Kate McKinnon is a professional actress/comedian,” he tweeted. “Laura, what is your professional excuse? Have you lost your mind?!”

It remains unclear whether SNL will respond to the impression of the impression with yet another impression. Will they ignore it? Rootin’ tootin’ Lauren Boebert was similarly triggered over Chloe Fineman’s impression of her gun-toting self, and Ingraham’s response feels so circular that followup might not be worth it, but who knows? For sure, people will be watching.

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Lady Gaga Sees Acting As An ‘Escape’ Because She Was ‘Mercilessly Bullied’ As A Child

Before Lady Gaga began singing, she had studied to be an actor. She even made an uncredited appearance in an early episode of The Sopranos. At this point, Gaga has a much longer list of higher-profile acting roles in A Star Is Born, American Horror Story, and her recent film House Of Gucci. Now, the singer shares why exactly she loves acting — and it has to do with some trauma she endured while growing up.

Gaga sat down for an interview with Jake Gyllenhaal for Variety‘s Actor On Actor series where the two talked about their recent respective roles in House Of Gucci and The Guilty. During their conversation, Gaga shared the reason behind longing to be an actor, saying it was partially because acting was an “escape” from being “mercilessly bullied” as a child:

“Since I was a little girl, I was so mercilessly bullied, and I had a really strict upbringing. So acting for me was a way to totally escape who I was. And I think I’ve done it my whole career with taking on the artistic persona of whatever music I’m writing and living inside my art. And for films, it’s different, but it’s not.”

The singer went on to note the unconventional ways in which she prepared for House Of Gucci role as Patrizia Reggiani, which included watching videos of animals hunting their prey. “I watched foxes hunt and they’re really funny because they hunt mice in the snow and they leap up and they burrow,” she said. “I actually did exercises in my hotel room where I would be the animal.”

Read Gaga and Gyllenhaal’s full conversation here.

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Blxst Spends A Night In With His Lady In The Cozy ‘About You’ Video

It wouldn’t be a surprise if the first thing that pops into your head watching Blxst’s new video for “About You” is the Netflix romantic drama Malcolm & Marie. The two works share a similar aesthetic and theme — a couple’s night in (with Blxst and Power‘s Paige Hurd), shot in classic black-and-white — and feature their leads shifting through the various patterns of a well-worn relationship. They argue, they sulk, they make up, and they cuddle. However, on the whole, Blxst’s version of this tale seems a lot less fraught and toxic — as long as you don’t listen to the lyrics of the song.

“Girl, I know my selfish ways be OD,” the LA-bred singer croons. “But I just express in ways you don’t see.” Of course, he cleans it up by the song’s end — which might actually strengthen the connection between Blxst’s video and the Netflix critical darling.

And just like the streaming giant, Blxst’s career has been flourishing ever since the COVID-19 pandemic caused a lockdown that gave plenty of people way more time for music discovery. Since releasing his debut EP, No Love Lost, Blxst has featured on tracks with Nas, Rick Ross, Snoop Dogg, Wale, and more, becoming an R&B playlist mainstay — as he illustrates in his new video. With live entertainment slowly but surely returning, Blxst is quickly climbing the ranks to become one of the game’s most sought-after stars.

Watch the video for “About You” above.

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Britney Spears Really Doesn’t Like Her ‘Bad,’ ‘Absolutely Horrible’ Purple Hair

A few days ago, Britney Spears showed off her new hair color, a light purple. She had some trepidation about the look, as she wrote at the time, “I did it but not sure I like it.” Now, she is sure… that she hates it.

In a post shared a couple days ago, Spears wrote, “I will be honest I think my purple hair [mermaid emoji] is absolutely horrible …. I wish someone would have told me [crying laughing emoji] [shrugging emoji] !!!!” Then, in a post from yesterday, she noted, “My purple hair is bad … I know [shrugging emoji] … sh*t happens I guess.”

In a different post from yesterday in which Spears is still sporting the purple locks but doesn’t address them, Iggy Azalea commented, “I know, I knowwww the purple isn’t your fave, but I really like how it’s washing out and becoming just color dipped at the tips. I still vote for a long 30 inch bone straight blonde situation… Think of the hair flips!”

In the post where Spears initially confirms she doesn’t like her hair color, she also got heated with the paparazzi, who are apparently pestering her while she’s on vacation in Maui, Hawaii. In the post, she wrote, “If you’re outside my room trying to get another cheap shot of me … please go f*ck yourself and leave me alone !!!! I should be able to run around naked if I choose to.”

Check out Spears’ posts below.

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Phyllis Nagy On Her Terrific New Film, ‘Call Jane,’ And Why It’s Probably Not What You Think It Will Be

Call Jane (which premiered this week at the Sundance Film Festival), considering the subject matter, probably isn’t quite what you think it is. At least, for one, I wasn’t expecting a movie about a suburban Chicago woman, Joy (Elizabeth Banks), facing the prospect of death from congestive heart failure if her pregnancy does not end, who seeks out an abortion from an underground network called the Jane Collective (run by Sigourney Weaver’s Virginia) to be this … well, purposely absurd at times, creating comedic moments in a movie where we probably wouldn’t expect many comedic moments. But, as director Phyllis Nagy tells us, this is the tone she was hoping for.

This is Nagy‘s first time directing a theatrical feature (in 2005 she directed Mrs. Harris for HBO), and since her Oscar nomination for writing the screenplay for 2015’s Carol, it sounds like there’s been a frustratingly long list of false starts leading to this moment. But, seven years after Carol, Nagy has her film and it’s a great one.

Nagy explains below, but there are a few things she wanted to convey with this movie. One is obviously the contrast between then and now, as we await a Supreme Court decision that could make underground networks like the Jane Collective all too needed again. Call Jane ends in triumph, as Roe v. Wade is decided, and then we come to our own reality where that same decision is on the brink of being overturned. Nagy also has an interesting thing she does with the men in this movie. As she says, she didn’t want to demonize them. And Chris Messina as Joy’s husband and Cory Michael Smith as Dean, the abortion doctor, really are handled in a fascinating way.

The last time I talked to you it was the morning you got nominated for an Oscar for Carol. It was one of those reaction interviews, which I actually really love doing, because everyone’s in the best mood.

I remember that day. I was trying not to be in too good a mood because there were others in the film who weren’t nominated. Right?

We talked about that, but you were still very happy.

Okay, good.

I’m surprised it’s first your feature film as a director.

I mean, things work in a funny way. Don’t they? There was a feature that I dearly wanted to do, and I have been retained as writer and director on a couple of them. And over the course of the last, I’d say three years prior to taking on Call Jane, things fell apart: bad luck, COVID, the Korean-Japanese diplomatic situation, believe it or not. That’s a long story for another day.

Oh, wow. Okay.

Yeah. So it wasn’t for lack of trying. And I think at least a couple of those things will come to fruition, in the light of this being out there. And, hopefully, people will see it and say, “Oh yeah, she can really do that.” Well, maybe not. You never know.

Well, my opinion doesn’t mean much, but you certainly can. This movie is great. I just wouldn’t say anything if I didn’t think that.

You see a lot of movies. You know.

I do.

Anybody who sees a lot of these movies has an opinion that’s, how do I put this diplomatically, more interesting to me than perhaps somebody who only watches one movie a year. I think that’s a fair thing to say. That’s not to discount the person who watches one movie a year.

Though, if someone was only going to watch one movie a year and they picked this one, that would be flattering.

Yeah. That would be great. But I mean, just in big, broad general terms it’s always interesting to me that people who watch a lot of movies, who’ve seen all the good and all the bad and everything in between, their opinions are interesting to me. So I’m not a person who thinks critical discourse is not valuable. Well, that’s a tactful way to say that.

I’m still having trouble putting into words how I felt at the end of this movie. Because it ends on this positive note of Roe v Wade being decided, but then it hits you, we might be headed back to this. So I feel good about how the movie ended, but then bad about actual life.

And I think that’s what the ending should make people feel like. I mean, on the one hand, these two ladies have pushed a rock up a hill and helped to create a situation where something looked possible. But listen, getting equal pay, shouldn’t be as hard. Now, we know from the comfort of what, 50 years later or something, none of that happened. It still hasn’t happened. And so, burning up those cards and being overwhelmed with the names and the last menstrual period – which is what LMP is, somebody asked me that the other day, which is why I mentioned it. And it’s overwhelming, and it’s happening again. Our whole world is going up in flames.

And so, the ending is triumphant, but it’s also not. It’s, wait a minute. We have work to do. So somebody, a friend of mine, called it a call-to-arms. And I think that’s fair, too. Not literal arms. I mean that metaphorically. But yes, it is. Can you call it like a, feel good, feel bad movie all at once? I’m not really sure. But that duality, which I think is present in the film, in its themes, in the way it’s shot, in the things that we’re looking at. I think that’s fair. It’s both things at once. And hopefully one day, we will not be there anymore. But listen, we’ve had hundreds of years of this, so I don’t know. What are the odds?

I kept thinking about these types of networks. After this coming Supreme Court decision, which is all but certain to overturn a lot of things, there’s going to be at least a lot of states where these networks are going to have to exist again. Not everyone has the money to fly to New York or California.

That’s right. I mean, that’s what people were saying at the time of the Janes. And even before we started shooting it, there were kind of feminist organizations saying, “Well, wait a minute, rich women could go to Europe, apparently.” And I said, “Well, wait a minute. What is your definition of a rich woman?” These days, it’s even more narrow. Middle class people can’t just up and fly to Stockholm. I mean, I don’t even think I could at this point. It’s so expensive. So I’m terrified, but I also know that New York and California and various states that are like those states will have something in place. You can be sure, because everybody is mobilizing.

Or Illinois…

Right. Or maybe it’s Chicago, but it’s a hell of a lot easier getting to Chicago than it is to wherever. But it is scary. And it’s already having a catastrophic effect on women in Texas and certain other states. So I don’t know what’s going to happen. The Supreme Court probably will chip away at this, maybe not totally, in June, but that’s even worse. We just see an erosion of this, as we’re seeing with other things like voting rights.

I’ve been following this pretty closely and the most disturbing thing about the Supreme Court, when they had the arguments, it sounded like John Roberts wanted to do what you’re saying, like, “Can we reach a compromise and chip away?” And the other conservative justices sounded like they just wanted to go all in.

It’s going to be bad. I mean, I suppose if there is a silver lining to something so draconian, is that a total cutting us off at the knees will mean an uprising. I don’t know what form that’ll take, but people will mobilize much more quickly if they do not have an excuse to hide behind the chipping away. Well, you can still blah, blah, blah. Which is why I think the chipping away is more devastating. It gives allegedly good-minded people an excuse.

You do this great job in the movie of showing so many women go through this. There’s a lot of movies you just say, oh, if people will only watch this, they will maybe understand more. And I truly believe this with this movie, but I’m also so defeated. I don’t believe anyone who thinks the other way is going to sit down and give this a shot…

Yeah. I hope they do. If they do, it’s because it’s not judging them in a condescending way. So hopefully, somebody will at least watch it and say, “Women have a hard time with this.” Not that that’s going to change anything.

You have this kind of montage of Joy being told these different techniques on how to do this herself, like “falling down the stairs.” And it’s kind of almost played in such a, I don’t want to say a comical way, but such an absurd way. It’s all these absurd suggestions were actually what people were told to do.

That’s exactly what was meant. So you got it. I mean, the film does have a tone that encompasses both the comic and the serious, because I just think that’s how life is. And that sequence in particular that you’re talking about, the doctor saying, “Do you think you’re suicidal?” And falling down the stairs. Of course, it has a particular tone. And I think the movie can relax people into going with it, and then all of a sudden, boom, you have a 10-minute scene of an abortion, which is … You know?

Yes.

Right? And it goes down because of what surrounds it, I think. So I’m glad. That’s absolutely right. I mean, at least it’s what I meant. I think other interpretations, people will have, probably equally valid, but yes, I did intend that tonal shift.

Everyone is so great in this movie and I don’t want to be the guy singling out a man in the movie, but your casting of Cory Michael Smith as Dean, the “abortion doctor,” really encapsulates so much about the allies at the time. Basically, “Yeah, I’ll be on your side. I’m going to make a lot of money off of it.” But he also plays it in a way where you don’t think he’s an evil person either. There’s something so good about the way you presented that character.

Yeah. He’s such a dupe! You know? Women are really just running circles around him. He keeps being taken in. But he’s sweet in it. You know? It’s like, “Yeah, I like you. I like older girls.” I mean, I think there’s a tactic to that and to Chris Messina.

Oh, I love Chris Messina.

He’s fantastic. Oh, and John Magaro. Yeah. So one of the things, this was in my script, the men are not being demonized in a way that you might expect. This is the ’60s, and I grew up at the end of the ’60s. I was living in New York. I was a kid, but I saw all sorts of different kinds of men. Right? Hippies and Yippies and coexisting with women in a way that isn’t that behind the fence kind of menace. So I’m glad you didn’t hate Dr. Dean. You understood that tactic.

Well, I didn’t hate him because, he’s obviously in it for the money, but at least the way you portray him, he’s not treating anyone particularly poorly. And he’s very good at what he does.

Yeah. Yeah. It makes sense. There’s an emotional sense to it. And he’s not harming anyone. And he’s right, he’s actually better than a lot of the other people that were there performing these procedures who weren’t doctors. So yes, right.

You can contact Mike Ryan directly on Twitter.

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The Final Season Of ‘Game Of Thrones’ Was Somehow Still One Of 2021’s Most Pirated Shows

The Game of Thrones series finale aired in May 2019. Reaction was — to put it charitably — mixed. But despite the response to the final episode / season (even George R.R. Martin isn’t a fan), the HBO show remains massively popular; there are numerous spin-offs in development and it was one of the most tweeted-about shows in 2021.

Thrones was also one of the most pirated shows of last year. Not the entire series, but the final season. Somewhere out there is a guy who got a computer virus from illegally downloading season eight of Game of Thrones. He got what he deserved.

A report from Akamai (via the Wrap) revealed the most pirated movies and shows of 2021. The movie list was topped by Godzilla vs. Kong and Zack Snyder’s Justice League, both of which were released on HBO Max (the only theaters-only film in the top 10 is F9), while Loki and WandaVision ranked #1 and #2 on the TV side. Thrones placed at #6, ahead of The Flash season seven and Vikings season six, despite season eight coming out nearly three years later. I bet I know one of those pirates.

Here’s the full list:

Most Pirated TV Shows
1. Loki Season 1
2. WandaVision Season 1
3. Rick and Morty Season 5
4. The Falcon and the Winter Soldier Season 1
5. The Walking Dead Season 10
6. Game of Thrones Season 8
7. The Flash Season 7
8. Vikings Season 6
9. True Beauty Season 1
10. Superman & Lois Season 1

Most Pirated Movies
1. Godzilla vs. Kong
2. Zack Snyder’s Justice League
3. Black Widow
4. F9
5. Mortal Kombat (2021)
6. The Suicide Squad
7. Cruella
8. Wonder Woman 1984
9. Raya and the Last Dragon
10. Jungle Cruise

(Via the Wrap)