It’s hard to keep your home clean when you have a child, but when you have four, unless you have a live-in maid, it’s completely impossible. There is no dishwasher fast enough to keep up with the dishes in the sink and no magical point where all four children have it together enough to put their toys away.
The problem is that if you take your eyes off the prize and let a day go by without cleaning up, you’re practically drowning in chaos.
TikTok user and stay-at-home mom Bri James (aka @themessymama4) did the unthinkable and let her home go four days without tidying up and shared the incredible mess with everyone on TikTok.
“I know I’m going to get roasted,” she says in the clip, “but … this is what happens when two really lazy adults have four kids and don’t clean up after themselves.”
The clip shows cutlery on the floor, empty packets everywhere, dishes piled a mile-high in the sink, and clothes and toys strewn everywhere. The house looks like the parents went away on a permanent vacation and left their kids to fend for themselves.
The video was praised by a lot of parents who are tired of seeing mommy influencers with spotless homes and children in matching linen outfits. Finally, there was a mom on TikTok they could relate to.
“I’d MUCH rather see you clean your realistic house than watch another blonde clean an already clean countertop,” Meghan Sanders wrote.
TikTokker Its_not_that_serious put things in perfect perspective. “Dude, at the end of the day all of their fingers and toes are attached and feeling safe and loved you’re doing fine. Someday the house will be clean,” they wrote.
“Having children is mentally and physically exhausting and you don’t always have the energy to clean every day,” Rose added.
But not everyone appreciated Bri’s slice of reality. Some people thought that her messiness was borderline neglectful and that she was setting a terrible example for her children.
“Set a good example for your kids. Make them help,” carleebocciaa wrote.
“Without children = fine, your choice. With children (especially small ones) = completely unacceptable,” ACZOgirly wrote.
Shortly after posting her first video, Bri got to work on the impossible task of cleaning up the entire house. Noticeably absent from the job were her spouse and four children. She appears to clean the entire place by herself.
She showed her cleaning prowess through a series of fast-motion videos.
my butt does not look flattering in these Walmart lounge pants 🤦🏼♀️😅
Finally, at 9:30 p.m., Bri was done with most of the job, although she still had a bit of vacuuming to do and there were still some dishes in the sink. At the end of the job, she was exhausted. But she got the job done and that’s all that matters. It’s OK to let your house fall into disarray from time to time but eventually, you have to take care of business.
We’ll give TikTokker Sannon Martin the final word on this story because she hits the nail on the head. “Your home is exactly like mine,” she wrote. “Some days it’s a wreck and some days it looks amazing. That’s life. You’re doing great!”
Have you ever witnessed something in nature that inexplicably made you cry? You think you’re good—just happily enjoying some beauty or wonder of some sort—and then all of a sudden, out of nowhere, the tears just start flowing.
A viral video of a young woman from Oklahoma having that experience while seeing the ocean in person for the first time has people saying, “Yep. I get it.”
At first, the woman just laughs out loud when she sees the ocean. “There’s no ending! There’s no ending!” she exclaims as she walks down the boardwalk toward the shore. Then, as she steps onto the beach, she has to pause and and put her hands on her knees, clearly overcome with emotion.
“Damn,” she says, wiping away tears. When the man she’s with wraps his arms around her, she sobs.
If you know, you know. And looking at people’s comments, a lot of people understand her emotional reaction to witnessing the awesomeness of the ocean for the first time.
People reacted to the video on Reddit with their own stories of overwhelming awe at the natural world:
“The first time I saw the ocean was a big deal for me too. We drove all day, got there in the dark, and my wife, daughter, and myself stood in silence for a good five minutes in awe. The ocean is the only thing that’s ever given me a religious experience.” – Automaticwriting
“I was coming home from a business trip and was miserable after a long winter travel day. When I got to the hotel there was a dude out front that looked like he was on drugs. Mouth slightly open. Staring up at the sky and kind of circling. I asked if he was OK. He told me he had never seen snow before. It made my day. I hung with him for a bit to soak it in.” – tinsinpindelton
“This is how I reacted during totality of the eclipse! I was surprised because I was looking up at it and then… suddenly I was crying?? lol” – alison_bee
“Such a beautiful reaction. You can never understand the powerful connection we have to nature until you have finally seen something you have always wanted to see in person…you should hear my kid talk about the Sequoias…” – Unique-Pastenger
“As someone who has never lived more than 1.5 hrs from the ocean, I felt the same way when I saw the sand dunes in Tunisia, awe inspiring.” – IronicINFJustices
“I remember going into the Rocky Mountains for the first time a few years ago. We made it to a peak and I looked out into the continental divide and just cried. I’d never seen something that made me feel so small.” – Choco_tooth
People also shared how the ocean still affects them, even when they see it frequently.
“I’ve lived within 2 hours of the ocean my entire life. I can’t fathom what it must be like to see it for the time. To feel it. To smell it. I kinda feel that way every time I go to the shore.” – timothypjr
“I cry when it’s been a long time and I see it again. It’s a powerful thing. It’s so deeply a part of us, our heritage, our survival. I could smell this video.” – -Disagreeable-
“I’ve seen the ocean hundreds of times and i still act this way lol” – diogenessexychicken
“I live right on the ocean and this is my reaction everyday. 🏖❤️” – NoCauliflower1474
There’s something awe-inspiring about the ocean—its immense power and deep mysteries, the diversity of life it contains, the way it connects us to other lands across vast distances, the continuous rhythm of the tides, the sound of the waves breaking on the shore, the soothing blues, grays and greens it reflects. Perhaps there is something primal within us that it speaks to. Maybe it hits us the way a sky full of stars does, making us feel tiny in the grand scheme and putting our lives into perspective.
Whatever it is, when we see someone else profoundly affected by it, so many of us can honestly say, “Yes, I feel that too.” Awe may hit us at different times and be inspired by different things, but the experience of it truly unites us all.
If there’s one thing Uproxx knows best, it’s the importance of being on the dancefloor at once-in-a-lifetime curated events. As per my own submission in the Spring Travel Hot List, “music is the universal force that connects us all.” And if there was any event this spring season that got the memo, it was Texas Eclipse Festival.
The festival welcomed an astounding 35,000 attendees for its sold-out celestial event in Burnet. Placed within the path of totality, festival founder Mitch Morales and global promoter Disco Donnie executed an event where creativity, music, art, space, and technology converged in one massive celebration. It was essentially the ultimate Burning Man meets Art Basel meets SXSW meets TED Talks destination festival of the year, and possibly even the decade.
Except that…
No professionally curated event can best Mother Nature.
While social media has run rampant over the past couple of weeks with far-fetched rumors, over-exaggerations, and conspiracies as to why the festival abruptly canceled its final day, if you took the time to look into the detrimental weather forecast you’d (mostly) understand. While the days leading up to the festival and even the first three days of the event boasted beautiful Texan sunshine, Monday night’s forecast was bleak.
Thankfully, Texas Eclipse gave attendees the option to stay onsite for the afternoon or leave at their leisure to witness the solar eclipse before the storm arrived. As far as I could tell “Cancelled!” was much more a way to get people’s attention and have them take the forecast seriously. That said, I decided to get offsite — hiking nearby until I found a secluded area surrounded by wildflowers to fully bask in the solar eclipse’s transformational energy.
By later that evening, most attendees were offsite, and while it was upsetting for everyone involved to cancel the final day’s programming, the golf ball-sized hail, thunderous lighting strikes, and flooding on the grounds later that evening and early Tuesday morning should be enough to convince the “FYRE FEST II” skeptics that it was the right call.
(For information on pro-rated refunds, click here.)
With that elephant in the room at least partially dealt with, I want to focus on the three days of the festival that did happen. I’ve been to dozens of music festivals around the world and the celestial art concepts, musical programming, and learning experiences offered by Texas Eclipse are certainly deserving of praise. While the weather and perhaps even some of the overall contingency planning is up for debate, from my vantage Texas Eclipse Festival was one of the best events I’ve ever been to.
Here’s what worked:
Stage Conceptualization
One aspect that immediately jumped out at me was the impressive conceptualization of each stage. While I knew that there would be seven stages, Texas Eclipse took it a step further and curated seven different music environments — each soundtracked by artists whose global sounds matched the energy of that particular space. Paul Oakenfold and Desert Hearts flew us through techno soundscapes on the Sky Stage; Big Gigantic and The Disco Biscuits jammed in a league of their own on the Lone Stage Stage; Subtronics and Zeds Dead revealed low-end soundscapes and illuminating dubstep on the Eclipse Stage; Vincent Antone and Equanimous vibrated connective global beats on the Earth Stage; Distinct Motive and Ashez kept us in awe of their visceral bass on the Moon Stage; and Re:birth Festival hosted its global deep techno collab on the Ether Stage.
But it wasn’t just the artists that made these stages work but rather the art design surrounding each environment. Paired with zero sound overlap among the stages, each stage provided a perfect musical oasis to get lost in.
Nova Sky Stories Stunning Drone Show
One night before the eclipse, there was also a spectacular drone show that kept us in awe of the sky on Sunday night. Nova Sky Stories designed and flew three drone shows between the Eclipse and Lone Star Stage and it was a sight to behold. While the use of drones in sky shows is gaining mainstream appeal, Nova Sky Stories exceeded any preconceived expectations, illustrating for viewers a celestial story full of intergalactic happenings. Flying thousands of drones to mimic an eclipse occurring, spaceships shooting off into space, and spinning planets is truly an art unto itself — one that Texas Eclipse elevated both literally and metaphorically.
Transformational Learning
Aside from the music, Texas Eclipse was home to inspiring conversations and innovative learning. While Reveille Peak Ranch lit up with infectious beats at night, the property hosted some exceptional thought leaders and experts from around the world during the day time, including Paul Stamets, Allyson and Alex Grey, Dr. Andrew Weil, astronauts Brendan Hall and Nicole Stott, BIOTA Institute Director and Chief Scientist Dr. Bruce Damer, international yoga and meditation teacher Hannah Muse, to name a few.
These workshops and inspiring open conversations not only offered a fresh lens on current topics surrounding plant medicine, AI, space technology, and mindful movement, but also cool, shaded areas to retreat to during the day. There was even a Kendama workshop that brought dozens of amateur and skilled players together for a mid-day meetup on the dusty grounds. Unless you’ve been living under a rock, kendama is the newest “flow toy” in the festival community, although it has been around for centuries in Japan. I’ve never seen so many people (including myself) walking around with a kendama to play and practice with at a festival.
With so much happening at all hours, I was fortunate enough to listen in on Andrew Weil’s speech on how eclipses affect consciousness.
“Eclipses make people do and say weird things,” Weil said. “The government doesn’t want you to look up during an eclipse. Eclipses can be threatening to anyone in power because it’s out of the ordinary and makes people question their own consciousness and reality. There are some countries and cultures that bar their windows to prevent their citizens from observing the sky during an eclipse because of this very reason. It can also provoke incredible shifts of thinking and action for those who witness one for days, weeks, and months after.”
Inspired Artwork
When picking out a property to host Texas Eclipse, founder Mitch Morales wanted to ensure it was in the path of totality while also offering enough space to foster a psychedelic playground.
“I wanted to make sure that the location was perfect for this type of event,” Morales said. “[Reveille Peak Ranch] is an incredible property. It spans over 1,300 acres, 60 miles of hiking trails, and elevated hilltops for optimal viewing of the eclipse.”
What’s impressive about this feat is that only 200 acres were dedicated to the campgrounds, leaving 1,100 acres for the seven sound “environments” and additional art programming. Almost every nook and cranny of the festival grounds boasted some sort of art installation, immersive experience, or renegade stage. From Meow Wolf’s “Gone Fishing” activation, Gregg Fleishman’s Sky Portal X sculpture, the Multiversal Dome that featured the artistic work of VJ Android Jones and innovative teams Chimera.art and Microdose VR, to the various glow-in-the-dark and LED art installations lining the walking paths to the stages and within the vending areas, Texas Eclipse filled up Reveille Peak Ranch with effervescent and psychedelic eye candy.
Even synesthetic artist Sarah Kraning — who was supposed to live paint during the totality of the eclipse on Monday — found the beauty in shaping her art to the ebb and flow of the festival’s abrupt cancelation on Monday morning and found solace within the quietness of Texas Hill Country.
“We sourced a private location on Monday morning, a family friend’s ranch in Florence, TX just 20 minutes away from the festival grounds,” she told me later about her painting session. “I did not know what to expect…leading up to totality. Wildlife was really loud and the spot was full of bird calls. When it became totality, it became quiet pretty suddenly and then all that was left was crickets chirping. My painting actually illustrates a timeline of painting the sounds 30 minutes before totality and 15 minutes after totality. During totality, the painting doesn’t have a lot of color due to the lack of sound that was experienced and observed during totality. Right after totality, there was an eruption of sound as the birds and other animals saw the sun again, so it was very colorful for me right away. I didn’t expect it to be so intense.”
Fans can snag one of the only 1,000 high-quality prints of Kraning’s eclipse painting by making a donation of $125 or more to Re:wild. With a global network of more than 500 partners in 86 countries, Re:wild is driving the conservation of 450 million acres of wild places, protecting thousands of species, and equipping our Earth’s Guardians to be effective stewards of our shared home. To donate and receive a print, click here.
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While Texas Eclipse may not have been perfect, mostly due to Mother Nature’s spoiler role, the festival offered a global reunion for curious learners, dancefloor gurus, and wisdom sharers to one of the world’s only locations to witness this celestial phenomena in totality. It was truly special to witness — even with the hiccups.
Baby Reindeer might be Netflix‘s latest hit, but the chilling story behind the show has inspired other people to speak out about their own harrowing stalking experiences, including Miranda Cosgrove.
In 2020, the iCarly star revealed that four years prior, she had been stalked by a man who later set himself on fire and took his life in front of her home. Cosgrove recalled the story to Whitney Cummings, and now, she revealed even more about the scary situation.
Cosgrove, who stars in Netflix’s rom-com Mother of the Bride, told Bustle that the incident still affects her. “That’s another reason why I go back and forth to my parents’ house so much,” she said. “I just don’t feel super safe in that house. For two years after it happened, I wouldn’t really stay there. Then I got into a relationship and because that person was there with me, I was less scared. But I don’t really like being there on my own that much.”
Cosgrove’s stalker had been frequenting the actress’ house, and even shot at a woman who resembled her. Cosgrove met the survivor at an event years later. “This girl came up to me, and she was like, ‘I didn’t know if I should tell you this here or how to say this, but I’m actually the girl that was at your house that got shot at.’ She seemed like she processes things in a similar way that I do,” Cosgrove said. “She said she’d just gone through a breakup the night before and was going to her friend’s house because she was so distraught. When they brought her into the Hollywood Police Station to ask what he looked like and how it all happened, the detectives were like, ‘Start from the very beginning. What happened?’ And she was like, ‘Well, he broke up with me last night,’ and she started telling them all about her breakup.”
Even though Cosgrove enjoyed Baby Reindeer, she said she could never retell her trauma on a show in the way that Richard Gadd does. “I feel like if that were me, having to go back through your most terrible experiences and then try to act them [out], that’d be so hard,” she confessed.
Meanwhile, the real-life “Martha” from Baby Reindeer insists that the Netflix series is not accurate. “He is lying, and they [Netflix] are lying,” Fiona Harvey told Piers Morgan. “They have billed it as a true story, so has he, and it’s not. It’s blatantly not.”
Both Baby Reindeer and Mother of thee Bride are streaming on Netflix. Chose wisely.
The hustle is real in the video for Coi Leray‘s new synthpop single, “Lemon Cars.” While Coi is primarily known as a rapper, she’s been known to dabble in other genres, and that’s exactly what she does for this sympathetic review of a strip club employee’s nightly struggles. The title appears to be a reference to the protagonist’s tendency to get so inebriated that she mixes up the terms “lemon drop” and “fancy cars.” The character is so caught up in the hustle, that she loses track of time and her sense of self, but knows that living in a blur risks eventually hitting a wall.
The video gives Coi another chance to show off her growing pole dance skills as she embodies the burnt-out protagonist, going from the club’s stage to its bar and back to keep herself from feeling the exhaustion of the paper chase. On her Twitter account (not “X,” be serious), Coi elaborated on the song’s pro-stripper philosphy.
“I know strippers who own houses , businesses, real deal boss ass bitches get money bitches,” she wrote. “some with degrees and some without ! But I know the hustle speaks for itself every time . Come correct when you speaking on strippers . Tuh! Keep doing you ladies!”
I know strippers who own houses , businesses, real deal boss ass bitches get money bitches. some with degrees and some without ! But I know the hustle speaks for itself every time . Come correct when you speaking on strippers . Tuh! Keep doing you ladies !
Chris Pine is winning. He says as much when talking about the fact that his labor of love – Poolman – is getting a theatrical release with a premiere at the historic Vista Theater in LA and playing at the Angelika in New York.
The film is a winding neo-noir about a daffy disheveled pool cleaner obsessed with preserving the history of LA. If you look back on all of Pine’s many magazine covers and blockbuster turns where he’s always smiling, confident, and put together, this might seem like his biggest challenge. If you check out his much-celebrated chill style in pictures of him running errands to LA book stores or listen to him talk about the film, the subject of feeling alone, or frustrated by the way LA (and the world, in general) is rapidly losing some of its beauty and charm, though, it becomes clear that this is Chris Pine’s most personal project.
Poolman is, at its heart, something born from Pine’s desire to tell a story about lonely people in a version of LA he grew up around. A city that can give and take so much when it comes to dream fulfillment. That all of that is nestled inside of a screwball comedy is an interesting choice for the star who is also making his writing and directorial debut here. Does it work? I think so and Pine seems really happy with the end result and the fact that he was able to step away from his day job and do something that pushed on the boundaries of structure in a way that’s interesting to him. He’s also aware that some critics haven’t loved it, but his description of the film as a “wavelength” film that might not appeal to everyone speaks to a healthy view on such a subjective thing.
We discuss all of that, at length, with Pine. From the soul of this project to what he wants to bring to possibly his last go as Captain Kirk in Star Trek, the vulnerability of being the only one accountable for a film, and the poetry he sees in artfully created things.
There’s a beautiful moment in the movie with you and Stephen Tobolowsky that I don’t want to ruin, but your character talks about loneliness a little bit. It really made me think about the idea of feeling alone when you’re in a room full of people. I know this was sort of a pandemic baby, timing wise. How did the loneliness of that era come through in this character and the script?
It really had less to do with the pandemic. I would say the pandemic, contextually, was the impetus to do it because personally, I was going through some difficult moments in my life. I had to process a lot, I think it was then, compounded with the isolation of the pandemic.
The idea of the aloneness was my own. I’ve felt alone a lot of my life and outside of the cool class. And the great irony of my life is that I’m hired to play these guys that are sometimes the epitome of cool, when I don’t feel that way at all. So I wanted to make a film, ultimately, that really, at its heart, is a story about trauma and resolving trauma. But instead of going at it directly, I asked myself, “Well, what would it look like if you went completely in the opposite direction and not in a dramedy way, but go so far as to make a screwball comedy, “What would that look like? Can those two tones hold one another?” And I don’t know if I was totally successful, but that was the aim of it, really.
And a lot of people comment on the Stephen thing and the moment, and I think it’s because it’s the first time in the film that I let anybody actually listen to one another. The film is very much about my experience growing up, where it just felt loud and non-relational. And the moment in the film is when two people, the antagonist and the protagonist, find themselves in a place where they’re like two eight-year-olds on a playground apologizing to one another. Anyway, that felt good to me.
In terms of telling this meandering story… which I say that in a good way. I’m a big fan of films like The Long Goodbye. But the idea of telling a story in that way, with a searching kind of film, was the goal, “I want to tell a story like that,” or was it more that it fit this character?
I’ve very rarely had an opportunity to push the boundaries of failure. To really push the boundaries of, I’m going to just do what I want to do. I’m going to explore my instinct. And in exploring my instinct, all that is good is what delights me and what in my inside says yes. And if that means having a scene about three people talking about the whys and wherefores of an uncooked Japanese dinner, because it made me happy, then that’s what I’m going to do.
We spent a lot of time analyzing structure and we went through many permutations of it and it just, frankly, bored me. So I would rather sacrifice structure and what should happen at the midpoint for… Yeah, what I say about this is, you can come for the story, but you’re going to stay for the characters and it’s like a wavelength film. You either get on board and like it or you don’t and you like these characters and want to hang out or you don’t. And there was no conscious trying. It was simply following my giggle.
I’m curious about the aspect of his character where he’s so committed to preservation, history. Why was that a key pillar for him?
Because I talk about that all the time. Even driving here today, I was looking at some of the buildings that we’re building on, I don’t know, you name it, Santa Monica. Aesthetically, I find them… I am more in love with an LA… I romanticize a pre-war LA that’s the old Spanish homes and the Art Deco, the beautiful Art Deco stuff. Some wonderful buildings made in the mid-century, but they’re few and far between. The days when we had a trolley car system all over LA, traversing it you could get from the San Gabriel Mountains to the beach in 30 minutes.
I feel like we make things now that are disposable, that are made for pure function without any eye toward beauty. As if to make sustainable housing – which I’m all about and housing people – but because it’s made for people that can’t afford it, it should be made in the cheapest way humanly possible? Buildings that we look at every day, driving by, and we’re going to have to look at for the next 75 years, it breaks my heart.
I was at a museum over the weekend and I was thinking to myself about the disposability of things and… what will be in a museum for us in a hundred years? Nothing. It’s all digital, cheap plastic and gone.
Yeah! Exactly. You know what I think about this is that we are moving towards, especially with… I feel like the end game of this march of technology is to make things easy for everyone all the time. So that we’ll become some sort of Stellan Skarsgård in Dune sitting in a vat of oil, like everything’s fed into us and we just move things with our eyes. I think there’s a beauty in things that are difficult, craft that is difficult, and things that take time.
We’ll never have artisans anymore that will want to spend the time, nor will we pay them, to build the old subway terminal building downtown that’s now whatever the hell it is. There was an artisan that built something in the corner, a beautiful piece of stone masonry that no one would ever see, and yet someone paid for that guy to do it because, simply, it was beautiful. I find that deeply poetic and tragic that we don’t do that anymore.
Obviously, reviews have been a little mixed.
(Laughs) That’s generous, but I appreciate that.
Listen, it hit me. I’m on the wavelength.
Oh, good. Well, far out. I like that.
There’s only so much you can control with something like this, especially once it’s out the door. But that you were able to make this statement, that you were able to put this out there, is that enough? Or is it a disappointment if it’s not fully absorbed and heard?
Well, it’s a really good question. I think it gets to really the nut of what I’ve been experiencing the past year. I think the deep vulnerability of… There’s one thing being hired as an actor, and I’ve been inured to shitty reviews as any actor has over the years, and what you look like and the quippy bullshit the critics throw out there. You just get used to it and it’s fine. It’s all good. And also, you can hide behind the director, the writer, the editor, the release pattern, fucking the music.
Not this time.
This is about as close as it gets to being a standup comedian, walking up on stage and being right there looking at people. So I’m not going to sit here and lie to you and say, it’s like water off a duck’s back. No, it sucks. And the delight that critics took in tearing this film apart was… And thankfully, I haven’t read anything, thank God, but I’ve had enough of an idea of what’s been going on.
That made me sad. But man, I tell you, the growth, it’s the best thing that ever happened to me. Oddly. It’s the best thing that ever happened to me. Better, in fact, I think of people who were patting my back because I can still sit here and say, “I watched the film over and over again, and it absolutely tickles me to no end.” It hasn’t taken away from the joy of it. There’s hurt in it, and there’s some deeper messages in it that I think are important that people don’t want to pay attention to, and that’s their prerogative. But I have my premiere tomorrow night at the Vista, and I’m going to have a party.
With Star Trek, if you get the chance again, how excited are you to grow that character? Play him at this space in your life. As more of a grownup?
So fun, so stoked. I love that character so much, and I love that world and quite honestly, I love the people that I’m playing with. I love my friends. I think we would have a blast. I think we’d have such a blast. So much has changed in… Oh my God, 17 years. So much has changed.
That’s a hard one.
Yeah, tell me about it. I don’t want to talk about it either. We’ll just scoot right past that. I think it’d be a lot of fun. And as I’ve said, I think there’s a journey with this group of people and this… They’ve said that it’s the last one that they’re making as we’re aging out, this cast. It’s a pity that they’re saying it’s the last one. Because I think there are a lot of great stories to tell.
And also, on a scale that is more manageable in appeal. Look, we always try to get to the Marvel numbers of making a billion dollars, and we never did because Star Trek is its own beast. It’s like Poolman, you either get it or you don’t. So why don’t we just make it for the people that get it and like, go on with it?
‘Poolman’ is playing in limited release. Check local listings.
As the weather around the country heats up, so does the All American fever for fans of the original series and its spin-off. The latter is already deep into its sixth season, which is currently airing on CW. Now, all that’s left is for All American: Homecoming to launch into its long-awaited third season. CW renewed the show for its third season, but it’s yet to air any new episode since season two concluded over a year ago, back on March 27, 2023. Thankfully, a premiere date has been set for All American: Homecoming season three. With that being said, let’s get you up to speed on everything you need to know for All American: Homecoming season three.
Release Date
Season 3 of All American: Homecoming will return on July 8. The show will air for at least three months, as thirteen episodes will be available to viewers thanks to weekly releases that will kick off just a little before All American season 6 comes to a close. New episodes of All American: Homecoming will air on Mondays, first at 9pm ET/PT on the CW TV channel before being available to stream on the CW app and website at 3am EST/12am PST the following day.
Cast
The cast for season 3 of All American: Homecoming will remain the same for the most part, but there will be some changes. Peyton Alex Smith (who plays Damon Sims) and Kelly Jenrette (who plays Amara Patterson) will no longer be series regulars in season 3 while Martin Bobb-Semple (who plays Lando) was upped to a series regular according to Deadline. Outside of that, things will remain the same for the main cast list, which you can view below.
Geffri Maya as Simone Hicks
Cory Hardrict as Coach Marcus Turner
Cory Hardrict as Coach Marcus Turner
Sylvester Powell as Jessie “J.R.” Raymond, Jr.
Mitchell Edwards as Cam Watkins
Netta Walker as Keisha McCalla
Rhoyle Ivy King as Nathaniel Hardin
The rec curing cast for season 3 of All American: Homecoming can also be seen below:
Peyton Alex Smith as Damon Sims
Kelly Jenrette as Amara Patterson
Leonard Roberts as President Zeke Allen
Tamberla Perry as Keena Sims (Damon’s mom)
Joe Holt as Jessie (J.R.’s father and Damon’s biological father)
Martin Bobb-Semple as Orlando ‘Lando’ Johnson
Blake Brewer as Nico Logan
Plot
After sharing the official premiere date for season 3 of All American: Homecoming, CW unveiled the plot line for the new season. You can read that below.
In Season 3, Simone deals with the fallout from the romantic choice she made in Season 2, but romantic drama will take a back seat when she finds her tennis ambitions threatened. Her friends rally to support her, particularly Thea (Camille Hyde), the team’s former Queen Bee, now looking to make her mark on the pro-circuit. JR (Sylvester Powell) struggles to get his life back on track following his ousting from KEK and the completion of treatment for aplastic anemia. Meanwhile, Coach Marcus (Cory Hardrict) deals with unforeseen consequences of his wife’s return, Lando (Martin Bobb-Semple) forges new links with the friend group and becomes a regular at “family dinner” and Cam (Mitchell Edwards), Keisha (Netta Walker) and Nate (Rhoyle Ivy King) all struggle to balance their romantic relationships with their chosen career pursuits with varying degrees of success.
Trailer
CW has yet to release a teaser or trailer for the upcoming season of All American: Homecoming. Stay tuned for its release as you can expect either or in the coming weeks.
All American: Homecoming Season 3 Episode Schedule
There will be 13 episodes in season three of All American: Homecoming. Here is the expected tentative schedule for the new season:
July 8: Episode 1
July 15: Episode 2
July 22: Episode 3
July 29: Episode 4
August 5: Episode 5
August 12: Episode 6
August 19: Episode 7
August 26: Episode 8
September 2: Episode 9
September 9: Episode 10
September 16: Episode 11
September 23: Episode 12
September 30: Episode 13
How To Watch All American: Homecoming Season 3
New episodes of All American: Homecoming season 3 will be available weekly on the CW TV channel on Mondays at 9pm ET/PT. The new episodes will also be available to stream on the CW app and website the following day at 3am EST/12 am PST.
‘All American: Homecoming’ season 3 debuts on CW on July 8. Seasons 1 & 2 are now available to stream on Netflix.
You’d likely be hard pressed to find a woman born in the early 80s that hasn’t memorized nearly every line from the iconic movie “Dirty Dancing.” Many spent hours in front of a mirror practicing every dance Baby had to learn so they could don their flowy dress to give their spins the perfect amount of realism. An entire generation is transported when those famous words, “now, I’ve had the time of my life…,” croon over a speaker no matter where they are.
A woman from Portugal decided she was going to become Baby for her 40th birthday party and she was not messing around. The woman, Raquel, uploaded the video to her social media page Miolo Mole e Bitoca.
Raquel stands in what appears to be a dance hall decorated to look like the infamous last dance that closes out “Dirty Dancing.” She’s in a pink dress that looks nearly identical to Baby’s and that familiar tune starts to play. The camera pans to her partner dressed like Johnny Castle in all black, and yes, they did the dance step by step.
A large screen was set up right behind them playing the dance scene behind the pair as the nailed the dance. Now, they didn’t disclose if they practiced the lift in a lake to stay completely true to the movie, but they nailed it nonetheless. Commenters on the internet are absolutely delighted with the recreation of the famous dance.
“Now y’all did that. Man y’all put a smile on my face. Dirty Dancing is my all time favorite movie,” someone says.
“I’ve never smiled like a Cheshire cat as much as I just did watching that! Proper cheese but I loved it,” one person writes.
“Not me bawling my eyes out and smiling so big, this is everything! One of my all time favorite movies and you can tell you’s had so much fun and share so much love for one another,” another commenter cries.
Having your first baby is a scary experience. Everything is new—you’ve quite literally never done this before—not to mention an entire human is going to be removed from your body one way or another. Childbirth, no matter how your baby leaves your body, is not for the weak. But imagine giving birth alone to not just one baby, but three, all at the same time. Then imagine doing that feat at the age of 14.
Shariya Small experienced that scenario in a hospital in Indiana, and her nurse Katrina Mullen took note. Small’s babies were premature, born at just 26 weeks, when the average gestation for triplets is 33 weeks, according to ReproductiveFacts.org. Due to their early birth, the babies, Serenitee, Samari and Sarayah, had to stay in the NICU at Community Hospital North in Indianapolis for more than five months, according to Today.com.
During their time in the NICU, Mullen noticed the young mom visited her babies alone, not appearing to have much of a support system. “She’d be there alone for days at a time sitting at her babies’ bedside,” Mullen told Today.com.
The pair got to know each other over the months that the babies were in the hospital, but Small continued to be reluctant to open up about her family life. That changed after she found out that Mullen had her first child at 16 and had given it up for adoption. Their experiences bonded the two moms, and Mullen began helping to care for the babies and Small by giving her advice and showing her how to properly care for the infants.
Eventually, Mullen gave Small her phone number before the babies were discharged from the hospital. It quickly became apparent that Small did not have a support system, as she called Mullen often asking for advice. Out of concern, the nurse went to visit Small an hour away, where she was living with a family member.
The condition of the home was concerning enough, but Mullen became even more worried when she saw how thin Small’s son Samari was. It turns out he had to be admitted to the hospital, which prompted a visit from Child Protective Services, who determined that Small and her three infants would need to enter foster care. She gave the social worker Mullen’s information and things began to fall into place.
Listen to Small and Mullen explain their unique story below:
Formula One has been dominating pop culture in recent years, so it only makes sense for Brad Pitt to want to hop on the bandwagon and whip up his own movie to be hip with the trend.
Pitt is set to star as Sonny Hayes, a beloved Formula One driver forced into retirement in an upcoming film from director Joseph Kosinski. While an F1 flick will no doubt be a big hit, the film is allegedly going to be one of the most expensive movies ever made, so it has to be really successful. This can’t be another Babylon situation for Pitt.
As initially reported by Puck News, the untitled movie has already surpassed the $300 million budget, even without a distributor. That puts the sports movie up there with 2017’s Justice League, which was wasn’t quite a hit.
Apple has seemingly been in talks to release the film, and even went as far as to reach out to IMAX, though it has not been confirmed, nor has a release date.
The cost was reportedly due to delays in production, and the use of authentic racing cars only exacerbated the already large budget.
Kosinski knows a thing or two about big-budget blockbusters. Kosinski directed Top Gun: Maverick with an budget of roughly $175 million, and that ended up doing pretty well.
On the bright side, F1 icon Lewis Hamilton is set to star in the film as himself, so maybe his sizable fan base will race their way over to see him in theaters (safely).
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