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Report: The Atlanta Dream Are Close To Being Sold To An Unknown Buyer

The Atlanta Dream are about to have something in common with United States Senate: Kelly Loeffler will no longer be affiliated with either. According to report from Chris Vivlamore of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, Atlanta’s WNBA team, which is owned by a group that includes the now-former member of the Senate from the state of Georgia, is on the verge of being sold.

Details are sparse about, well, all of this sale. In a statement to the AJC, a WNBA spokesperson said, “As it relates to the Atlanta Dream, we understand a sale of the franchise is close to being finalized. Once the sale negotiation is concluded, additional information will be provided.”

Loeffler’s group Dream Too LLC purchased the franchise in 2011, and in recent months, her ownership of the franchise came under intense scrutiny. During her tenure as an appointed member of the Senate, Loeffler, a Republican, bashed the players and the league for its support of the Black Lives Matter movement over the summer. The comments backfired considerably: Players, both from the Dream and across the league, responded by openly supporting a challenger for her Senate seat, Rev. Raphael Warnock, a Democrat, in Georgia’s sizable primary. While he was polling at just nine percent at the time, he rode this wave of attention to a first-place finish in the state’s run-off election and eventually beat Loeffler in January’s race for her seat by nearly 90,000 votes.

Throughout the campaign cycle, calls came from various corners of the basketball world for Loeffler to no longer be affiliated with the franchise, although WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert made clear that Loeffler would not be forced to sell. Baron Davis expressed interest in purchasing the team, and following her loss to Warnock, LeBron James tweeted his desire to form a group to purchase the Dream, although it is unclear if either has anything to do with the group in negotiations.

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Nas Reflects On His Old Beef With Jay-Z And Says He Was ‘Honored’ To Be A Part Of It

One of the most legendary beefs in hip-hop history occurred two decades ago, between Nas and Jay-Z. Starting at the beginning of the century, the two Brooklyn acts bumped heads for quite some time. In 2001 they traded a pair of undeniably iconic diss records: “Ether” and “Takeover.” Nas recently made an appearance on Rick Rubin’s Broken Record podcast where he revisited that battle and discussed its impact on hip-hop.

“The art of emceeing was right there on full display,” Nas said. “It was like, if you’re in the rap game, this could happen — a battle. It was like, ‘This rap thing is real; a battle could really happen,’ so I was honored to have that part of my life happen because that’s how I saw some of the greats do it coming up. I saw some of the greats do it.” After Rubin suggested that Nas and Jay-Z’s beef “elevated everybody” around them, the Illmatic rapper how battles within hip-hop have been present since the genre’s early days.

“Again, it’s about the art of MCing and when you’re trying to make the best stuff you can make and you bump heads with another MC, and then you guys have a war or whatever, that’s what this art form was since the beginning — since Double Trouble and Busy Bee and Kool Moe Dee,” he said. “But that’s what I like about Hip Hop compared to other genres is that, they go at it in Hip Hop, like really at it. Not to say that other rockers didn’t go at it, other reggae artists didn’t go at it, other crooner didn’t go at it, but Hip Hop will always be around because of how competitive it is.”

You can watch the clip from the Broken Record podcast above.

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Tasting Notes On The Hotly Debated Popeyes Chocolate-Filled Beignets

After holding their own in the vicious world of chicken tenders, causing straight-up pandemonium in the fried chicken sando market, and killing it with the side options (Cajun fries? Red beans and rice? Come on!) it appears that Popeyes is making a play in the dessert game. McDonald’s has soft serves and sundaes, Wendy’s has the Frosty, In-N-Out has their line of milkshakes, Jack in the Box has … mini-churros or something, and now, amid much fanfare, Popeyes is bringing the beignet to the fast-food world.

The move actually makes a fair bit of sense for the brand. While the company is currently headquartered in Miami, Popeyes first launched in New Orleans — the beignet capital of America. But as the first menu follow-up to the ultra-hyped fried chicken sandwich, this dessert has its work cut out. Does the chain have yet another hit on their hands or will this treat go down as a sad attempt to catch lightning in a bottle for a second time?

More importantly, how do these fast food beignets compare to the real deal?

A Little Context:

Dane Rivera

A beignet, if you’ve never had one, is very similar to a donut, in that it’s fried dough. But texture-wise, it’s airier, flakier, and also — almost inexplicably — chewier. Generally, beignets are covered in mountains of powdered sugar and make a great accompaniment to coffee, whether you’re sipping on a cafe au lait or like it straight black. Occasionally, they have a filling like raspberry, chocolate (as in Popeyes’ case), or even something more savory.

Check out the famed Cafe du Monde beignets below:

Like many a fried-dessert lover, the Cafe du Monde renditions of this treat are special to me. The vivid memory of trying to dust the powdered sugar from their beignets off my clothes minutes before boarding an airplane from New Orleans to Los Angeles is my last pre-COVID travel memory. And the gate at Louis Armstrong International wasn’t the first time I indulged in the airy treat on that trip, not by a long shot. So you’d better believe that after a year spent going absolutely nowhere, I’m going to remember the taste-bud awakening ecstasy that is a freshly and authentically prepared beignet.

So What’s The Verdict?

Dane Rivera

As you can tell from the photo above, the Popeyes beignets have a serious presentation problem. Not only are they considerably smaller than your average beignet, but the amount of powdered sugar really leaves something to be desired. Part of the problem is that Popeyes serves their beignets in a loose bag, resulting in an under-dusted appearance.

This is a dessert that needs a small, shallow box. Let that sugar show!

The other major strike against the Popeyes beignet is the chocolate, which — as many people will be distressed to discover — comes from Hershey’s. I’m pretty lukewarm on Hershey’s myself, but serious chocolate aficionados have an absolute revulsion to it. Regardless, from what I’ve seen New Orleans beignets typically feature darker chocolate than Hershey’s standard milk chocolate, which Popeyes uses.

All this to say that if you roll up to a Popeyes drive-thru thinking you’re going to experience something akin to a legit New Orleans beignet, I’m sorry to inform you that you’re going to be disappointed. But appearance aside, we wouldn’t go as far as calling them a “deflated disappointment” like the Washington Post. If the idea of fried dough that’s been dusted — okay, sprinkled — with powdered sugar and filled with molten Hershey’s sounds delicious to you, you’re still going to be satisfied.

Texture-wise, the beignets I was handed were perfectly crispy on the outside with a delicious flaky exterior. The inside was soft, chewy, and hot, with each bite exploding with molten Hershey’s (at the very least, let’s agree that Hershey’s is better melted than in bar form). In fact, because these are chocolate-filled, their small size is actually a benefit — simply toss a whole one into your mouth, rather than dealing with biting them in half and getting messy.

The Bottom Line:

Sure, the Popeyes beignet won’t transport you to NOLA. But it’s fried dough caked in sugar that you can get at a drive-thru. In the absence of sitting at an open air cafe in New Orleans, these get the job done.

To be honest — and speaking as someone who is obviously a fan of fried dough — I honestly can’t think of a fast-food dessert that I enjoy more than these little bastardized versions of the classic. I’d readily eat them again, but the chances are I wouldn’t be able to find them. Though they’re theoretically available nationwide in orders of three, six, and 12, it took me over a month to finally snag an order.

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CNN’s Daniel Dale Was Given An Epic Send-off On Twitter After Four Long Years Of Tirelessly Fact-Checking Trump

In the last few months, especially as Trump seemed to utter little but voter fraud lies, CNN’s tireless fact-checker Daniel Dale became something of a celebrity himself. He appeared on air after rallies to plow through a mere Greatest Hits of the president’s distortions and outright fibs. He wrote epic and exhaustive (and exhausting) pieces, dismantling his speeches, untruth by untruth. He also sometimes went after others in Trump’s circle. But Dale has been on the job the entire last four years, and on the last night of Trump’s presidency, he was given a huge online send-off for his heroic work.

Dale — who previously announced he’d have time to fact-check other people, including incoming president Joe Biden, who tend to bend the truth quite a lot less than the Donald — penned an essay for his home news network about the last four years of his life on the job. In fact, it was longer than four years; he started doing it in September of 2016:

I had to email the Boy Scouts to find out if the President had invented a nonexistent phone call from the head of the organization. (He had.)

I had to email a Babe Ruth museum to find out if the President had made a bunch of false claims about the baseball legend while awarding him a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom. (He had.)

I had to email some of Michigan’s most prominent organizations to find out if the President had actually received a state “Man of the Year” award he kept claiming he once got. (Nope.)

I fact checked every public word Donald Trump said or tweeted for just under four years. The job was unrelenting. The job was unrelentingly weird.

And on it went, Dale revealing that the gig “took over much of my own life.”

He walked readers through a day in his life:

I would roll over in bed, turn off my alarm, and open Twitter to see what lies the President of the United States might have told while I was sleeping. And then, because Trump lied about a staggering variety of topics, I would try to rapidly educate myself on stuff I had known nothing about — trade with China, or Obama-era veterans’ health care legislation, or hurricane forecasting.

The lying sometimes continued until I had gone to sleep. Every time I felt like I had caught up, Trump would lie about something new — while still keeping many of the old lies in regular rotation. When I started tweeting fact checks of Trump’s rally claims moments after he made them, admirers viewed this as a kind of magic trick. In truth, it was pretty easy. The President kept saying the same false stuff over and over.

Sounds exhausting! After Dale tweeted the article out on Twitter, a lot of people imagined how happy he must be to be done with an epic job well done.

Others thanked Canada, where Dale is from.

Some joked about where he could go next.

And many simply thanked him for his service.

You can enjoy one of his fact-checking marathons below. In the meantime, nice work, Mr. Dale.

(Via CNN)

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Both Donald And Melania Trump Leave The White House With Comically Low Approval Ratings

There are power couples, and then there’s Donald and Melania Trump. A power couple doesn’t always work together. Instead they excel at different things, with similarly high levels of success. So congrats to the outgoing President and his wife: Before they both snub the incoming Bidens, they can leave safe in the knowledge that he leaves office with his lowest approval rating yet, while she departs with the worst final popularity in First Lady history.

First, The Donald. Gallup, one of the nation’s most trusted sources of opinion polling, revealed that a poll conducted between January 4 and the 15th — i.e., during the failed MAGA coup and its aftermath — had him receiving an approval rating of only 34%. It is indeed the worst evaluation of his entire presidency.

His average approval rating wasn’t much better: only 41%. He never, over four years, cracked over 50%, though he came close: His highest number was 49%. As for its previous low, was 35%, in the fall of 2017, soon after the tragic events in Charlottesville, Virginia, whose perpetrators he failed to sufficiently condemn. Through it all, Republican had his back: There was a record 81-percentage-point average between them and Democratic voters — a whipping 11 points wider than the previous record.

As for Melania, who launched an anti-bullying program called #BeBest that didn’t quite gibe with her husband’s antics, a CNN/SSRS poll had 47% saying they had an unfavorable view of the soon-to-be-ex-FLOTUS, with only 42% saying their view was favorable. She’s never been remotely as divisive a figure as her spouse; her highest came in May of 2018, when she peaked at 57%.

For some contest, before Melania, the average First Lady’s final popularity was 71%, and the average unfavorabilty rating was 21%. Indeed, before her, the only FLOTUS to leave office with a popularity rating below 40% was Hillary Clinton. But maybe Melania’s husband will be proud of her beating Hillary at something.

(Via Gallup and CNN)

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Shepard Smith Calls Out His Former Fox News Colleagues: ‘I Don’t Know How Some People Sleep At Night’

Since leaving Fox News in 2018, Shepard Smith has been holding back his criticisms of his old workplace despite being known for his blunt takes on the network’s opinion programs while still serving as a trusted anchor. That all changed on Tuesday when Smith sat down for a PBS interview with Christine Amanpour, who coaxed the former Fox News host into sharing his true feelings on the network particularly in light of the recent attack on the U.S. Capitol building earlier in the month.

Smith admitted to Amanpour that he stayed at Fox News as long as he did to combat the rhetoric coming from hosts like Sean Hannity and Tucker Carlson, who Smith doesn’t name, but it’s obvious who he’s referring to. (A clash with Carlson is what ultimately prompted Smith to walk away with Fox.) After seeing the damage done by amplifying Donald Trump’s claims that the election was rigged, Smith had sharp words for the Fox News personalities who continue to deliberately mislead the public. Via Mediaite:

“Opine all you like, but if you’re going to opine, begin with the truth and opine from there. And it’s that deviation from that that has caused me the greatest concern. I believe that when people begin with a false premise and lead people to astray, that’s injurious to society, and it’s the antithesis of what we should be doing. I don’t know how some people sleep at night, because I know that there are a lot of people who have propagated the lies, and have pushed them forward over and over again who are smart enough and educated enough to know better.”

You can watch Smith condemning his former co-workers above.

(Via Christine Amanpour on Twitter)

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The 1776 Report is rife with ‘errors, distortions, and outright lies’ say historians

The 1776 Report isn’t just bad, it’s historically bad, in every way possible.

When journalist Nikole Hannah-Jones published her Pulitzer Prize-winning 1619 Project for The New York Times, some backlash was inevitable. Instead of telling the story of America’s creation through the eyes of the colonial architects of our system of government, Hannah-Jones retold it through the eyes of the enslaved Africans who were forced to help build the nation without reaping the benefits of democracy. Though a couple of historical inaccuracies have had to be clarified and corrected, the 1619 Project is groundbreaking, in that it helps give voice to a history that has long been overlooked and underrepresented in our education system.

The 1776 Report, in turn, is a blaring call to return to the whitewashed curriculums that silence that voice.

In September of last year, President Trump blasted the 1619 Project, which he called “toxic propaganda” and “ideological poison” that “will destroy our country.” He subsequently created a commission to tell the story of America’s founding the way he wanted it told—in the form of a “patriotic education” with all of the dog whistles that that phrase entails.

Mission accomplished, sort of.


The 1776 Report from the commission was released yesterday, and historians have near-universally panned it as an ahistorical piece of political propaganda—and a poorly constructed one at that. (You can read the report here.)

Even just a cursory glance at the table of contents is a clue to the what-the-what foolishness we’re going to find within it.

The introduction to the report states that the 1776 Commission is “comprised of some of America’s most distinguished scholars and historians” and calls the report “a definitive chronicle of the American founding, a powerful description of the effect the principles of the Declaration of Independence have had on this Nation’s history, and a dispositive rebuttal of reckless ‘re-education’ attempts that seek to reframe American history around the idea that the United States is not an exceptional country but an evil one.”

The first problem is that these “distinguished scholars and historians” don’t include a single actual American historian among them. There are a couple of people whose scholarship fields—namely political science and classicism—are somewhat tangentially related to the topic, but if you’re really trying to write a “definitive chronicle of the American founding,” it would probably be good to include some actual experts in American history.

Of course, there’s a good reason that they didn’t include American historians—because finding an actual American historian to sign onto such a distorted representation of history is darn near impossible. It might also be because actual historians generally do their research work through universities, which the report criticizes as “hotbeds of anti-Americanism, libel, and censorship that combine to generate in students and in the broader culture at the very least disdain and at worst outright hatred for this country.”

David W. Blight, Professor of History, of African American Studies, and American Studies at Yale, calls the report “beliefs devoid of history,” a “puerile, politically reactionary document,” and “the final desperate act of MAGA functionaries” which “needs a janitor’s broom.”

He also wrote that the report “may end up anthologized someday in a collection of fascist and authoritarian propaganda,” a sentiment shared by Stanford PhD student Austin Clements, whose studies focus on fascism and the Far Right.

Heather Cox Richardson, an American historian from Boston College who has grown a huge following for her daily documentation of American history in real-time, wrote of the report: “Made up of astonishingly bad history, this document will not stand as anything other than an artifact of Trump’s hatred of today’s progressives and his desperate attempt to wrench American history into the mythology he and his supporters promote so fervently.”

Even Steven Wilentz, a Yale historian who has criticized the 1619 Project, told the Washington Post that the 1776 Project is nothing more than political commentary. “It reduces history to hero worship,” he wrote in an email. “It’s the flip side of those polemics, presented as history, that charge the nation was founded as a slavocracy, and that slavery and white supremacy are the essential themes of American history. It’s basically a political document, not history.”

Professor Jacqueline Antonovich asked historians on Twitter to share their “favorite” part of the report and kicked off the parade by pointing out that there are no citations—no footnote, endnotes, or bibliography—to be found. A high school history paper would be flunked for such an omission.

Columbia history professor, Dr. Karl Jacoby, pointed out that the document lavishes praise on the Declaration of Independence (indeed, it’s a primary focus of the report) but totally ignores the fact that it calls Indigenous people “merciless Indian savages.” As a matter of fact, Indigenous people basically don’t exist in this telling of America’s founding.

Eric Rauchway, history professor at the University of California at Davis, told the Washington Post, “It’s very hard to find anything in here that stands as a historical claim, or as the work of a historian. Almost everything in it is wrong, just as a matter of fact. I may sound a little incoherent when trying to speak of this, because the report itself is not coherent. It’s like historical whack-a-mole.”

One of the criticisms of progressivism in the report is what it refers to as a post-Civil Rights Movement focus on “group rights.” However, Rauchway recalls the formation of the Senate as an example of group rights that long predates modern sensibilities. “Group rights is not anathema to American principles,” he told the Post. “Why do Wyomingers have 80 times the representation that Californians have if not for group rights?”

The way both slavery and the post-Civil Rights Movement era are treated is mind-bogglingly distorted, as Ibram X. Kendi points out.

He also points out the inherent problem with the “Black people have been given preferential treatment for decades” argument, which logically leads to the racist idea that since disparities still exist, Black people must just be inferior.

One of the worst aspects of the report is that it was released on MLK Day,

The problem is that this report will undoubtedly be used by some as the foundation for American education, ignoring the irony that it’s a blatantly biased propaganda document that decries teaching “one-sided,” “activist propaganda.”

Nikole Hanna-Jones has said that she wanted to write the 1619 Project and its accompanying curriculum to get kids to ask questions. Historian Kevin Levin points out that the 1776 Report appears to have the opposite focus, viewing “students as sponges who are expected to absorb a narrative of the American past without question. It views history as set in stone rather than something that needs to be analyzed and interpreted by students.”

And as writer Michael Harriot pointed out, the report is merely a return to the whitewashed history students were taught for generations, putting the founding fathers up on a pedestal from which they could do no real wrong and glossing over the problematic elements of our history that still have lingering effects today.

A nuanced approach to American history is vital, as is acknowledging that two things can be true at the same time. The democratic principles laid out in the founding documents of our nation are exceptional and deserving of praise and the U.S. has yet to truly live up to the ideals they espouse. It is in no way unAmerican or anti-American to be honest and forthright about America’s past and current sins and to strive to form a more perfect union by working toward true liberty and justice for all. Equating a desire to better understand the vast, ongoing impact of historical injustices in our country with “hatred for America” is simplistic and untrue. It’s not only possible to love America and want her to be better, it’s actually a sign of loving America to examine her past fully, to assess her present truthfully, and to imagine her future hopefully.

To pretend that the U.S. is and has always been perfect is an insult to the millions who have suffered at her hands, and this report is an insult to the millions who understand that. Whitewashing history in the name of “patriotic education” is not virtuous. It never has been and it certainly never will be.

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Here’s Everything New On Hulu For February 2021, Including ‘Nomadland’

Hulu’s welcoming the shortest month of the year with a fairly long list of new films and TV shows to its streaming platform.

Chloe Zhao’s Nomadland lands mid-month, and it’s generating a fair bit of Oscar buzz for the director and star Frances McDormand. Another awards contender, The United States vs. Billie Holliday, also drops this month, giving fans a powerful biopic about one of America’s greatest Blues singers. There’s plenty of reality TV and network dramas returning, too, in case your binge-watching schedule looks a bit light.

Here’s everything coming to (and leaving) Hulu this February.

Nomadland(2021) (film streaming 2/19)

Hulu is taking a page out of Warner Brother’s book for the release of this awards contender. The Chloe Zhao-directed drama will drop on the streaming platform and in theaters on the same day this month, so there’s really no excuse not to see it. And you should, see it that is, because along with taking home a handful of prestigious awards during last year’s festival circuit, the movie also features a stunning performance from Frances McDormand as a woman who leaves her small town to explore the American West.

The United States vs. Billie Holiday (2021) (Hulu original streaming 2/26)

This moving biopic from director Lee Daniels sees Andra Day playing the legendary Blues crooner Billie Holiday during the height of her career. The film deep dives into Holiday’s life and the influence of her music while examining how the government launched a smear campaign against her, exploiting her drug addiction to further its own ends.

Avail. 2/1
60 Days In: Complete Season 6
Abducted: The Mary Stauffer Story (2019)
Ancient Aliens: Complete Season 14
Bride & Prejudice: Forbidden Love: Complete Season 2
Forged in Fire: Beat the Judges: Complete Season 1
Kings of Pain: Complete Season 1
Married At First Sight: Complete Season 10
Mommy is a Murderer (2020)
Pawn Stars: Complete Seasons 11 & 12
The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch: Complete Season 1
Tempted by Danger (2020)
The UnXplained with William Shatner: Complete Season 2
9 to 5 (1980)
Affliction (1998)
American Psycho (2000)
American Psycho 2 (2002)
The Bellboy (1960)
Bug (1975)
Cinderfella (1960)
Crimes Of The Heart (1987)
Did You Hear About The Morgans? (2009)
District 9 (2009)
Downhill Racer (1969)
Employee of the Month (2006)
Everything Must Go (2011)
From Hell (2001)
G.I. Jane (1997)
Garfield (2004)
Gargoyles: Wings of Darkness (2004)
Girls! Girls! Girls! (1962)
Grosse Pointe Blank (1997)
Happy Tears (2010)
Haunting In Connecticut 2: Ghosts Of Georgia (2013)
Hello, My Name is Doris (2016)
Hitman’s Run (1999)
Jane Austen’s Mafia! (1998)
Jennifer 8 (1992)
John Grisham’s The Rainmaker (1997)
The Juror (1996)
Mars Attacks! (1996)
Me, Myself And Irene (2000)
Ninja Assassin (2009)
The Omen (1976) (1976)
Damien – Omen II (1978)
Only God Forgives (2013)
The Patsy (1964)
Phase IV (1974)
Possessor (2020)
The Prince Of Tides (1991)
Shirley Valentine (1989)
The Shootist (1976)
Sideways (2004)
Some Kind of Wonderful (1987)
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan (1982)
Star Trek III: The Search for Spock (1984)
Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989)
Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country (1991)
Star Trek: Insurrection (1998)
The Tenant (1976)
Teresa’s Tattoo (1994)
Turbulence (1997)
Van Wilder: Party Liaison (2002)
Waking Ned Devine (1998)
Witness (1985)
X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009)
You Laugh But It’s True (2011)
You’ve Got Mail (1998)

Avail. 2/2
The School That Tried to End Racism: Complete Season 1

Avail. 2/4
12 Hour Shift (2020)

Avail. 2/5
The New York Times Presents: “Framing Britney Spears”: New Episode (FX on Hulu)
Antebellum (2020)

Avail. 2/7
Harrow: Season 3 Premiere

Avail. 2/11
Then Came You (2019)

Avail. 2/12
Into the Dark: Tentacles: New Episode Premiere (Hulu Original)
2067 (2020)
You’re Next (2013)

Avail. 2/13
Hip Hop Uncovered: Documentary Series Premiere (FX)

Avail. 2/15
Cutthroat Kitchen: Complete Season 15
Dragnificent!: Complete Season 1
House Hunters International: Complete Seasons 139 & 140
House Hunters: Complete Seasons 160-162, 164 & 165
Property Brothers: Complete Season 14
Southern Gothic: Complete Season 1
Witches Of Salem: Complete Season 1
Lost Girls and Love Hotels (2020)
The Shape of Water (2017)

Avail. 2/16
Bad Habits, Holy Orders: Complete Season 1
Keeping Up With The Kardashians: Complete Season 19
North Korea: Inside the Mind of a Dictator: Complete Season 1
The Warrior Queen of Jhansi (2019)

Avail. 2/17
Logan Lucky (2017)

Avail. 2/18
Good Trouble: Season 3 Premiere
Sonic the Hedgehog (2020)

Avail. 2/19
Nomadland (2021)

Avail. 2/23
Spring Baking Championship: Complete Season 7
Dredd (2012)

Avail. 2/25
Snowfall: Season 4 Premiere (FX)

Avail. 2/26
The United States vs. Billie Holiday (2021) (Hulu Original)
Florence Foster Jenkins (2016)

Leaving 2/8
District 9 (2009)
Year One (2009)

Leaving 2/10
The Girl Next Door (1999)

Leaving 2/14
Spy Kids 4 (2011)
Stir of Echoes (1999)

Leaving 2/28
3 Ninjas (1992)
American Dragons (1998)
American Psycho (2000)
American Psycho 2 (2002)
Breathless (1983)
Broken Arrow (1996)
Cake (2006)
Carrington (1995)
Changing Lanes (2002)
Con Air (1997)
Cool Blue (1990)
Criminal Law (1989)
Cujo (1983)
De-Lovely (2004)
Desperate Hours (1990)
Deuces Wild (2002)
Dragonball: Evolution (2009)
Employee of the Month (2006)
Enemy at the Gates (2001)
Eyes Wide Shut (1999)
Face/Off (1997)
Fun in Acapulco (1963)
Garfield a Tail of Two Kitties (2006)
Girl Most Likely (2013)
Grosse Pointe Blank (1997)
Hanoi Hilton (1987)
Hemingway’s Garden of Eden (2010)
Here On Earth (1999)
Hud (1963)
Invasion U.S.A. (1985)
John Grisham’s The Rainmaker (1997)
Kiss the Girls (1997)
Last of the Mohicans: Director’s Cut (1992)
Lost In Space (1998)
Love Is All There Is (1996)
Love Potion No. 9 (1992)
Mad Money (2008)
Man of La Mancha (1972)
Me, Myself And Irene (2000)
Mr. North (1988)
Much Ado About Nothing (1993)
Music Within (2007)
Our Family Wedding (2009)
Pieces of April (2003)
Places in the Heart (1984)
Poseidon (2006)
Selena (1997)
Southside With You (2016)
Sunshine (2007)
Teen Wolf (1985)
The Dead Zone (1983)
The Firm (1993)
The Gift (2000)
The House on Carroll Street (1988)
The Hurt Locker (2008)
The Juror (1996)
The Last House on the Left (1972)
The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane (1976)
The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance (1962)
The Mechanic (1972)
The Peacemaker (1997)
The Portrait of a Lady (1996)
The Quick and the Dead (1995)
Things You Can Tell Just By Looking At Her (2001)
This World, Then the Fireworks (1997)
Universal Soldier (1992)
Virtuosity (1995)
Witness (1985)

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Delonte West Is Reportedly Working At The Rehab Center He Attended

It’s hard to imagine, but it wasn’t that long ago that mental health was something of a taboo subject among professional athletes. After all, mental fortitude is a requirement in order to be able to perform at the highest level, under the most difficult circumstances, to achieve greatness.

But that’s changed in the past few years, and several high-profile athletes have come forward to discuss their challenges with mental health, thus clearing the way for others to open up about their own struggles and help reduce the stigma that once isolated so many people unnecessarily.

When it comes to the heartbreaking story of Delonte West, it’s hard not wonder how things might have turned out differently if the climate around mental health would’ve been more supportive. Instead, what we’ve witnessed is the painful decline of a once-successful NBA player. However, we’ve also seen what is hopefully his redemption arc.

After West was spotted panhandling in the Dallas area, Mavs owner Mark Cuban sprung into action and was able to get West admitted to a rehabilitation facility in Florida, where he’s undergone treatment. Now, it appears West is paying it forward as an employee at the center, according to Shams Charania of The Athletic.

Details are sparse, but it’s good to see any positive news on that front. West was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 2008, and he last played in the NBA with the Mavs during the 2012 season before being released by the team.

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A ‘Batman: The Animated Series’ Sequel Might Be Coming To HBO Max, According To Kevin Smith

Kevin Smith just revealed a major Batman rumor that’s sure to grab the attention of long-time fans of the Dark Knight. During the latest episode of his Fatman Beyond podcast, Smith confirmed that he has heard “reliable” talk of a sequel to Batman: The Animated Series coming to HBO Max. The classic cartoon that arrived directly on the heels of Tim Burton’s Batman is often cited as one of the best on-screen adaptation of the Caped Crusader. As Smith notes, reviving The Animated Series seems like an easy “no-brainer” for HBO Max as it continues to build up its content offerings to reel in new subscribers. Via Comic Book:

“How f***ing amazing would that be because you can just literally pick up and keep going. It’s not like, oh we gotta explain why everyone’s older, it’s f***ing animation man so you can go right back to those amazing f***ing stories.” He continued, “That to me is no brainer, you’ve got HBO Max, you’re already doing that amazing Harley Quinn show, you’re printing money if you go back and do Batman: The Animated Series. You can’t f**k up the legacy, that’s for damn sure.”

While Smith is careful to emphasize that talk of a sequel to Batman: The Animated Series is only a rumor, it is worth noting that Smith has been working with Mark Hamill on a He-Man series for Netflix. While Hamill is best known as Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker, he also has a passionate following from his voice work as the Joker on The Animated Series. In fact, Batman fans have even gone so far as to rank Hamill’s version of the Joker as highly as Heath Ledger’s Oscar-winning performance in The Dark Knight. We’re not saying Hamill is Smith’s source for The Animated Series sequel, but if he is, that would definitely qualify as reliable.

(Via Fatman Beyond)