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Reflecting On How ‘Bring It On’ Defined Itself With That Wild Opening Cheer Dream Sequence, 20 Years Later

When Bring It On landed in theaters 20 years ago, it ushered in a different kind of teen comedy. Gone were the John Hughes days of pining after men in red sports cars and forging fragile friendships from days in detention. Instead, high school had become a satirical battlefield where some of the most unfair, outdated social customs were thrown in the trenches, stuffed with grenades, and blown up for the world to view their uglier entrails. Clueless pioneered the art form, and Bring It On perfected it, upending tropes and making cheerleaders (leaders of the social caste at that age) the underdogs. These were people that you rooted for, laughed at, and wanted to be like — not because they were pretty and popular, but because they were strong, driven, and could stick a front handspring step-out round-off back handspring step-out round-off back handspring round-off full twisting layout.

Ranking the cheers of Bring It On is pointless — they’re all flawless — but for the film’s anniversary, we decided to dive into the movie’s opening dream sequence. It’s a routine that sets the film’s very high bar. A masterclass in storytelling. A risk-taking introduction to a film no one believed we’d be talking about decades later. A GIF-able empowerment anthem?

Here’s how Bring It On’s cheeky opening number got made.

The Pitch

Universal

For writer Jessica Bendinger, who’d spent time covering the late ’80s hip-hop scene in New York for Spin Magazine, the genesis of Bring It On was a childhood spent watching ESPN cheerleading competitions on her aunt’s couch and an abiding love for Public Enemy’s Yo! Bum Rush the Show. But getting a studio to sign onto a teenage satire centered on cheerleaders took some convincing. Like, years of convincing. The project languished at Universal for years before getting a pick-up thanks to the interest of names like Tom Hanks and Silence of the Lambs director Jonathan Demme. But that didn’t mean that anyone had high hopes for how the movie would turn out.

Jessica Bendinger (writer): We were in pre-production before we had a director. That’s how little confidence and attention was being paid to the movie.

Peyton Reed (director): Yeah. I got sent the script by my agent. It was called Cheer Fever at the time. I had been looking for a script to do my first feature, and I really loved the idea of doing a high-school movie. I really didn’t know that much about competitive cheerleading, and Jessica had written this thing that just painted such a vivid portrait of that world and that subculture. It was funny, and it was extremely visual, and it was something that I’d never seen in a movie before, and those things all appealed to me.

Bendinger: Thank goodness.

Reed: That whole first three pages, that was the opening cheer, which I think remained almost verbatim within that first draft. I don’t think we changed it much at all. It just grabbed you from the beginning, and it confronted your preconceived notions about cheerleaders, and it introduced all these characters, and it was just funny, and I was like, “Wow. This is different. I haven’t seen this in a movie, and as a movie-goer, this is something I want to see.” I felt like you could really surprise people.

It was only after I read the script and eventually signed on to do the movie that I found out that Jessica had been trying to get this made for a long time. You sent it out to a ton of people, right?

Bendinger: I had 28 pitch meetings and 27 “No”s. Late summer of 1996, in an old Saab with no air conditioning. I drove around studio to studio trying to get somebody to buy it, and I’d pretty much given up by the time I finally ended up at Beacon [the company that would eventually produce the film].

Reed: I think it’s one of those things [where] studios always say they’re looking for something new and different, but the thing that scares them the most is something new and different. Really, Jessica’s perseverance got the thing made.

Welcome To Cheer Camp

Universal

The cast of Bring It On was comprised of a group of largely unknown actors. Kirsten Dunst was brought on as the lead with Gabrielle Union playing her rival and Eliza Dushku as the lovable outsider who introduces audiences to this world of camp and chaos. But the rest of the lineup was untested and unprepared for the physicality of pulling off competition-level routines, so the producers sent them to cheer camp.

Lindsay Sloane (Big Red): When this was being cast, there was another cheerleading movie called Sugar and Spice that was being cast at the same time. It was weird because it was like rival cheerleading films, but being a girl in that age group in L.A. trying to get a job, it just felt like a madhouse, people rushing to try to get into one of these movies.

Nicole Bilderback (Whitney): Oh, that’s right. I believe I [auditioned for] that.

Sloane: When I got cast as Big Red, I remember reading the script and being like, “Oh my God, I’m horrible.” But it’s also why I loved playing this part because I got to be unapologetically who I was and unabashedly sexy and confident. The irony is I literally thought I was getting fired every day from this movie. The fact that I was playing someone that was so badass was such a contradiction to what was happening in my inner soul because I showed up, and there was actual cheer camp to learn these cheers. I showed up a week into all of the girls already being at cheer camp. I just assumed we were all actors that just lied and said we knew how to dance and cheer to get a job.

Bilderback: I was actually a cheerleader when I was younger. I remember I went in and I read for the casting director and for Peyton. We had our slides and we basically just had to perform our scenes. The call back of course was in front of literally all the studio executives and the producers and it’s a huge intimidating deal. We had to not only do the scenes with our lines but then we had to choreograph a two-minute cheer. If I remember correctly, it was pretty badass. I choreographed a cheer dance to “Micky,” which is at the end of the movie. That was not planned.

Sloane: I think in the audition maybe I did a split and maybe I did a cartwheel, but they didn’t really do a thorough investigation of who has the ability and who doesn’t. So I walked into this cheer camp and they had mixed our actors with professional cheerleaders and they had already learned one major cheer by the time I got there, and I walked into the gym and saw the cheer and was like, “Oh shit, I’m toast. They are going to so quickly see that I do not know what I’m doing.” So the entire shoot up until the very last day, as a running joke, I was like, “So do I still have a job?”

Anne Fletcher (Choreographer): She’s so wrong. She was so perfect. I don’t even know what she’s talking about.

Sloane: I showed up, I was like, “Oh, this is real. There are people throwing actors up in the air.” I mean, I wasn’t in any of the stunts, so I got saved that way. There was one girl, I don’t know if anyone has talked about it. I don’t remember her name, but I also wouldn’t say it if I remembered it, but someone did get fired after the first week of dance practice.

Fletcher: I was an assistant choreographer and dancer for years with Adam Shankman. So it was actually my first movie on my own. It just was completely out of my wheelhouse. We were in San Diego when we shot this. We had a handful of younger kids who were the base of both teams — this is what they do is competition cheerleading, and then I would plug in our actors. The cheerleaders themselves, they’re accustomed to that every day. But for the actors, they don’t know anything about this. So it was a lot of fun being with them and watching them fall and figure it.

Bilderback: It was Monday through Friday, every day. We’d wake up early, we’d get picked up, and then we would head to a gym that is specifically for cheerleaders. We started with learning all the dance routines, and then of course we had to train and learn specific stunts before actually putting all the routines together. While we’re doing it mind you, we’re having to learn the lines for the film. It was just full-on. Of course, we’re also all hanging out afterward and drinking, because we’re young and it was like a college experience. So when you’re young and you’re drinking, no matter how late we’re all up the night before, we were still able to get up early in the morning and still function and learn everything. It was a ton of hard work.

Sloane: We thought, “It’s going straight to video so let’s have the time of our lives.”

(Almost) Getting Cut

Universal

The film’s opening cheer sequence plays on the “just a dream trope” but its tongue-in-cheek tone sets up the film in a very singular way. Bendinger and Reed both believed that was the perfect way to kick off the movie, but they faced pushback from studio execs.

Bendinger: Jon Shestack, God bless him, did ask about cutting it. And I said, “Are you fucking kidding me?” First of all, people either love or hate cheerleaders. There’s no middle ground. You have to let them know we’re in on the joke. You’ve gotta talk about performative femininity and internalized misogyny. Obviously, I couldn’t say that back then, but you’re addressing all this stuff that we can now speak about. There were some notes about the lingo from the not-so-cool kids who didn’t get it.

Reed: For me, that opening does three things right off the bat. It’s some of the most efficient screenwriting I’ve read because you are introducing a handful of characters right off the bat, and then secondly, it confronts the audience’s preconceived notions about cheerleaders in a really funny way, and three, it just sort of announces the energy of the movie. It comes at you from the very beginning. It has the energy of a cheerleader. It’s like the movie itself is a cheerleader. That’s what grabbed me from the beginning.

Fletcher: It sets up the camp.

Sloane: Most teen movies were set up the exact same way. I felt like this instantly went into that dynamic. I also think that everyone’s little shout out was a nice little moment, like a glimpse at who they’re going to be in the film. Then you do go into a trope high school movie moment where she’s having the dream that she’s naked, but it just felt representative of much larger stakes. This is not just about a girl who wants to be liked and wants to be popular. This is a girl who wants to be very good at the thing she’s committed a huge chunk of her life to, and she’s strong, and she’s fit, and she wants to succeed. I loved the messaging of it.

Bendinger: I fought for that. The producer of a giant flop, I will not shame him and name the movie, but I will say this. He said to me, “Girls don’t go to movies.”

Reed: That’s one of the most wrong-headed comments I’ve ever heard about the movie business. It’s just wrong.

Bendinger: Thankfully, I didn’t listen to him.

Finding A Comedic Rhythm

Universal

Shooting the opening scene took the cast a full day filled with multiple takes in a crammed auditorium with 100 extras looking on. In the script, Bendinger described the vibe as Clueless meets Strictly Ballroom, but it was up to Fletcher and Reed to interpret the dance, and the foundational tone for the film, in a two-minute frenzy of short skirts, sexual innuendos, and hilariously literal dance moves.

Fletcher: The way Jessica wrote the words and the way the song was orchestrated, it just spoke to me that it had to be literal choreography. There’s obviously cheerleading-esque choreography in the opening number, but If you watch it, it’s literal. The girls are doing the movements of the words, because I’m like, “That’s the only way I can see this being hilarious. It’s so stupid.”

Sloane: I remember all of us, we made up those [quick character intros] on the day. It was like, “What do you want your little move to be?” and us trying to think of a move that represented who we were.

Fletcher: We worked together. Actors will know their characters way more than any even more than the director because that’s their only job. So I always go to them and ask “Do you have an idea? Do you want to try something? Let’s talk about that.”

Bilderback: I remember thinking, “It’d be kind of funny to slap my ass.” I was kidding. I was joking, but then [Anne] was like, “Actually, okay, so show me what you were thinking.” Then Anne came up with the part that I do at the very end with my hands — my fingers sliding across each other.

Reed: I think the opening cheer might have been the first routine that we shot. I’m sure we had like a day. It was very fast.

Fletcher: Trust me. I’ve had directors ask me how I should shoot something as a choreographer, and there’s no shame about that. To shoot dance, it’s a different thing. Peyton never asked me. Peyton is so rock solid. I tried to design it in a way that they could shoot it and have fun shooting it, like the crazy lines, the separations, the overhead shots, the peeling apart of the line. Certain things, I just wanted to make sure that Peyton had fun.

Bendinger: I talked about Esther Williams, which Esther Williams implies overheads because it was all water shots and synchronized swimming. Busby-Berkeley-esque. All that stuff introducing the Toros, the single shots of introducing all the different cheerleaders. That was all in the script. You could feel the energy of it from the page, but he totally met the opportunity and rose to the challenge.

Reed: And that energy was fun. I really did genuinely feel like a camp counselor on that movie, because everybody got along great, but they’re kids. They were teenagers.

Sloane: I remember being in the school gym all day long for that one and having really long breaks, and then you have to reboot and do it all over again.

Bilderback: It’s actually really hard because you’re having to do it over and over again. It is a lot of technicalities that I don’t think people think about.

Sloane: I think we maybe did it for 100 people at one point. We didn’t get the energy of really doing it for a full gymnasium or people. You’re wanting the 100 people to really fill the space and make it still feel like it’s so many but it’s just like, you get one slow clap at the end of it. But we were so enthusiastic that we clapped for each other.

The Legacy

Universal

The film’s sharp takedown of everything from sexism and high-school social hierarchies to cultural appropriation is finally starting to be appreciated, 20 years later. The cast and crew knew they’d made something special once filming was done, but the reaction to the film, and its lasting power was something that no one expected.

Reed: We did do some screenings early on for cheerleaders. I remember it because a couple of our actors put on disguises and snuck into that test screening so they could see the movie before everybody else.

Sloane: I snuck into a test screening because it was in Chatsworth, which is where I grew up and I was just like, “It’s a sign. I have to be there.” So I put on a wig and a baseball hat because I knew that if Peyton saw me, he’d be like, “Sloane, get out of here.” I remember sitting in the front row because it was the only seat that was left, and then all of a sudden this movie starts and it is larger than life and it blew my mind. Everything worked. It was so funny. It was so inspiring.

Reed: I remember going around opening night and driving around the various theaters in Los Angeles all over town and just being thrilled that anybody had shown up.

Bilderback: [At first] we were like, “Okay, we’re doing a cheerleading movie.” But we didn’t care because we knew it was a big studio, we knew that the producers involved were huge. Of course, we’ll do it because we’re getting paid, and we’re actors, and this is what we do. But we had no idea that it was going to be as successful as it was. And then when it was, all of a sudden, we’re like, “Hell yeah, we did a cheerleading movie!”

Sloane: I don’t think that I had the wherewithal in my youth to realize that we were a part of a feminist film and that the message was so inspiring. I love this message of this movie. I was just listening to the words in the opening song and how empowering those words are, “Hate us because we’re beautiful, well we don’t like you either.” We’re not sorry. We’re hot, and we’re good. It’s become like an anthem that people play to lift them up and give them the confidence that they need in life.

Bendinger: I think we were talking about [a lot of] things — whether it’s cultural appropriation or socioeconomic inequality or becoming a better person, going on the journey of being from being shamed and humbled to trying to make something right and still making more mistakes. Growth is not perfect. We learn our moral compass through sometimes being a few degrees off, and to me, I’m very proud that that is there. I hope it’s a powerful proxy for people. It’s not about being perfect, but it’s about engaging in the journey in a meaningful way and being willing to make those mistakes. That’s the heart of the movie that touches me that I’m glad that’s so intact.

‘Bring It On’ celebrates its 20th anniversary on August 22, 2020.

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Three Takeaways From The Clippers’ Pivotal Game 3 Win Over The Mavs

There was a lot of chatter about the Blazers potentially being a nightmare first-round matchup for the Lakers, a narrative that gained traction after a stunning Game 1 win for Portland. But after a blowout victory for the Lakers in Game 2, some of that talk may have been inflated. The real marquee matchup in the opening round might just be between the Clippers and the Mavs.

It’d been a dogfight through the first two contests, with Kawhi Leonard reminding us why he’s one of the best in the game and Luka Doncic quickly and emphatically establishing himself as a historic talent. Beyond the two superstar duos, both squads are loaded, and their respective supporting casts have made a major impact in the series.

But the Clippers seized control of the series on Friday night, taking Game 3, 130-122, behind a monster effort from Kawhi once again, as he finished with 36 points, nine rebounds, eight assists, and one monster flush.

Here’s what else we learned from Game 3 on Friday night.

Stop Me If You’ve Heard This One, But The Clippers Are DEEP

The Clippers led by 14 points at halftime, thanks in part to an 8-point outburst from Lou Williams off the bench in the second quarter and 18 first-half points from Kawhi, who shot 7-for-11 to start the game. But they also got eight points from Marcus Morris, nine points from Ivica Zubac, and eight points from Landry Shamet in the first half, including his vicious jam on Boban Marjanovic.

Shamet was finished, as he drained a buzzer-beater to end the third quarter and give the Clippers a 17-point lead heading into the final frame. He would finish with 18 points on the night.

You never know where it’s going to come from with the Clippers. In most cases, it’s coming from everywhere, all at once. They had seven total players in double-digit scoring, and Los Angeles was just too much on Friday night, on both ends of the court.

Luka Had A Rough One By His Lofty Standards

Luka made history in his first two playoff games, scoring 70 total points, besting Kareem Abdul-Jabbar for the second-highest mark for any player in their first two postseason outings, just behind George Mikan. But even before the injury that caused him to check out of the game early, he somewhat came crashing back to Earth on Friday night.

It was a tough start for Luka in this one, as he went 3-for-9 in the first quarter and 1-for-4 from three. He was also 1-for-5 from the free throw line to start. Credit, of course, goes the Clippers’ stingy defense for making life difficult on Luka and the rest of the Mavs.

But Doncic was getting it done in other ways, and before leaving the game with an injury in the fourth quarter, he posted a triple-double: 13 points, 10 rebounds, and 10 assists. Luka went down late in the third quarter with a leg injury and had to hop to locker room as he was unable to put any pressure on his ankle. He quickly returned and checked back into the game in the fourth quarter, but was visibly wincing, and mercifully exited the game for good after that. The Mavs are still awaiting the x-ray results.

Kristaps Porzingis (34 points, 13 rebounds) stepped up to help shoulder the load, as did Seth Curry, who had a career playoff high 22 points on 9-for-11 shooting and perfect 4-for-4 shooting from downtown.

What’s Up With Paul George?

PG started the game 2-for-10 from the field, including 1-for-5 from downtown. And it didn’t get much better from there.

George has had a nightmare start to the postseason. He finished the game with 11 points on 3-for-16 shooting and 1-for-8 from behind the arc. It’s third straight game that George has shot woefully from the field, and both he and the Clippers have to be wondering what exactly is going on. It’s not worth panicking over yet, but it’ll be something to keep an eye on as this series goes on.

Until then, Los Angeles will have to continue to rely on their considerable roster depth while George finds his shot. The Mavs will try to even the series when Game 4 tips off on Sunday at 3:30 p.m. ET on ABC.

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Travis Scott Has A Vision On His Hypnotic New Song, ‘The Plan’

Earlier this week, Travis Scott delivered great news to fans as the Houston native announced a new song, which his first solo release of the year, would arrive at the end of the week. Keep true to that promising, Travis has arrived with the new song, “The Plan.” The song is set to appear on the soundtrack to Christopher Nolan’s upcoming project Tenet and if Travis’ new track is any indication, the film won’t be short of excitement.

The song arrives after Travis’ GQ profile which is where Nolan first spoke of the rapper’s contribution to his upcoming film. “His voice became the final piece of a yearlong puzzle. His insights into the musical and narrative mechanism [composer] Ludwig Göransson and I were building were immediate, insightful, and profound.” The song also serves as arrives after Travis landed his third career No. 1 single with his Kid Cudi collaboration, “The Scotts.” The song joins Travis’ other chart-toppers, “Sicko Mode” and “Highest In The Room.”

After Chase B confirmed that Travis was working on his upcoming album, Travis revealed in his GQ profile that he and Kid Cudi are indeed working on a joint album. Despite being “hesitant to offer details,” he revealed that he and Cudi have “Some fireness!” in-store for fans on their upcoming album.

Listen to “The Plan” above.

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Luka Doncic Left Game 3 Against The Clippers With An Ankle Sprain

The Mavs and Clippers were back in action in a pivotal Game 3 on Friday night, with their first-round series knotted at 1-1, and each team looking to take the upper hand during a whirlwind opening week in the NBA playoffs in Orlando.

It was a tough battle through the first three quarters, with the Clippers mostly putting the clamps down on the Mavs, and Luka Doncic in particular, as he hasn’t been quite able to find his scoring rhythm in Game 3 or build on his phenomenal performances earlier in the series.

And there was a scary moment in the third quarter for Luka as he went down with an apparent leg injury after coming down awkward in the lane. Luka remained on the ground for several minutes, then headed straight for the locker room.

https://twitter.com/gifdsports/status/129700587350042624

It’s certainly a scary sight for the Mavs to see Luka unable to put any pressure at all on his leg as he hopped back to the locker room.

He did, however, return and was available to check back into the game after making his way back to the bench. But Doncic was visibly wincing as his hobbled up and down the court and eventually left the game for good in the fourth quarter. Eventually, he checked himself out of the game, and soon after, the Mavericks made it official and ruled him out for the remainder of the contest.

We’ll keep you updated on Doncic’s status for the remainder of the series as that information becomes available.

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Master P Says He’s Denying His ‘Ungrateful’ Brother C-Murder Financial Support In Prison

Master P says he’s been supporting his incarcerated brother C-Murder ever since he was sentenced to life in prison in 2009, and according to the rapper, that’s much more than others can say. Born Corey Miller, C-Murder’s incarceration has once again made headlines thanks to Kim Kardashian announcing she’s flexing her attorney skills to reopen open the rapper’s case. Others like Meek Mill have praised the movement, but Master P is skeptical about C-Murder’s newfound support.

Just last week, Master P thanked Kim K for supporting his brother and reminded everyone that overturning his case is “not gonna be easy.” But Master P has now backtracked on his gratitude after stumbling upon C-Murder’s recently-created Instagram account. In a lengthy message posted to his social media, Master P got real about everything he’s done for C-Murder and said he hasn’t gotten any appreciation in return. “You gotta have a heart for people that really helped you. Monica just got divorced last year, so I’m thinking like, that’s your ride or die?” P said, referring to C-Murder’s ex-girlfriend who originally connected Kim K to the case.

Master P went on to say he’s reached his limits with offering financial support to C-Murder. “The ATM, I’m pulling the plug off. Because people that’s ungrateful and don’t appreciate me, even my own family members — they forget. I’m an ATM, I get it. That’s what I am. And now I’m a square because I’m not in the hood? I’m only not in the hood because I did the right thing and I changed.”

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And when a family member is incarcerated or hurt, the whole family is affected. But if you truly believe in God, you know that every man is accountable for their own actions. We also have family members that make poor decisions that result in painful consequences but put the blame on others to avoid taking responsibility themselves. It’s time for me to be truthful with my own family. None of us are perfect but we are not going to grow if we don’t face the truth with each other. We need to stop being afraid to speak up, tell the truth, confront and correct each other in love. Everything is not about money. I’m tired of family members looking at me like an ATM. The Bible says: “Owe no man nothing but to love him.” I have went above and beyond for all of my family members whether they deserve it or not and most of them are ungrateful. My brother is innocent. We have been fighting this case since 2002 and I know that he is frustrated. But he can’t continue to blame his family for his predicament when he has constantly put his trust in his friends. All his co-defendants aka friends, the ones that were in the club with him on the day of the incident, testified against Corey and stated that he was the one that committed the crime so that they could save themselves and get out of jail. He never said anything negative about those friends, wrote any songs about them, talked about them in interviews or wrote any books about them. But he did speak negatively against our family, even against his own mother and father. And WE STILL LOVE HIM and will CONTINUE to fight for him. Whoever wrote the Instagram post that the bloggers and the media are talking about, doesn’t even sound like my brother or something that he would say. And the only reason I am addressing this is because I will not allow him or his friends to make a mockery out of our family that has been dedicated, committed and continue to be here for him even when the fakers and publicity goes away. I’m tired of family members thinking I’m supposed to fix all of their problems. I’m not God. I love my brother and I’m praying for the best for him. God knows the Truth @cmurder @silkktheshocker @monicadenise @kimkardashian

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Watch Master P’s full statement above.

Meek Mill is a Warner Music artist. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Three Takeaways From The Celtics’ Gritty Game 3 Win Over The Sixers

The Philadelphia 76ers faced a number of questions going into Game 3 of their opening-round series against the Celtics. Philly had dug themselves in a deep 0-2 hole against Boston after two uninspired outings this week, the most recent being a 128-101 drubbing in Game 2 on Wednesday despite leading by as many as 14 at one point.

While Jayson Tatum had an off night, Kemba Walker and Jaylen Brown came up big, leaving the Sixers searching for answers about how to get one win back in the series. Of course, there wouldn’t be any easy solutions for Philadelphia, which is just trying to keep its season alive at this point, and following another tough 102-94 loss in Game 3 Friday, the prognosis is as bleak as ever.

Here’s what we learned from Game 3 on Friday in Orlando:

The Sixers Showed A Lot of Heart

Despite the outcome, Philly proved that they still have a little dog left in them. With a daunting 0-2 deficit and no in Ben Simmons in the lineup, it would’ve been easy to roll over and die. But Philly showed some signs of life early, behind 12 first quarter points from Joel Embiid and nine from Tobias Harris to set the tone early.

It was a gritty, back-and-forth affair from wire to wire. Embiid was huge for the Sixers, and he did most of his damage by battling in the paint, getting 14 of his 30 points at the free throw line. And despite horrendous shooting all game long, the Sixers managed staged a 12-4 run late in the fourth quarter to tie the game with just under four minutes remaining. They also competed defensively, which led to Tatum having an off night for the first time in the series. Unfortunately, it wasn’t enough.

The Celtics Have Too Many Weapons

Both teams struggled mightily from the field in Game 3. Philly started the game 1-for-10 from downtown, and the Celtics weren’t much better, missing 10 of 11 shots during that stretch and Tatum picking up a third quick foul that forced him to the bench for the entire second quarter.

But the poor shooting more or less canceled each other out, and the game ultimately came down to individual efforts. With Tatum going just 3-for-11 through the first three quarters, Kemba Walker stepped up big time, putting up 10 of his 24 points in the third to keep the Celtics on top.

Marcus Smart (14 points, eight rebounds) and Jaylen Brown (21 points, seven boards) were able to help buoy their team while Tatum struggled, until he made some key buckets to give Boston a seven-point lead midway through the final period. Tatum finished with 15 points but was just 6-for-19 from the field overall, including 2-for-9 from downtown. Regardless, the Celtics went on a devastating 10-0 run to close Game 3 and take a virtually insurmountable 3-0 series lead.

Ben Simmons Is Sorely Missed

Philadelphia’s offensive woes were on full display in Game 3, as they shot just 29 percent from the field (23 percent from behind the arc). Say what you will about just how much Simmons’ lack of shooting affects their spacing, particularly in crunch time, but without his ability to initiate the offense and create open looks for his teammates, the Sixers have often been stagnant and relied too heavily on iso action to manufacture points.

And isn’t just the offense that suffers. Through the first two games, we saw just how Tatum ran amok without Simmons’ size and length there to at least bother him on defense. Simmons has, justifiably, taken plenty of criticism for his deficiencies, but he has also perhaps not received the credit he deserves for his considerable talents.

The Sixers will try to avoid a first round sweep when Game 4 tips off on Sunday at 1 p.m. ET on ABC.

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Netflix Canceled ‘I Am Not Okay With This’ Despite Quietly Ordering A Second Season

The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on the entertainment industry, from shuffling movie release dates and fall television schedules to abruptly halting production on an until number of shows in various stages of filming and development. Friday brought news that at least two Netflix shows have gotten the axe as the industry reevaluates its properties and lineups moving forward.

The Hollywood Reporter learned Friday that Netflix had canceled two of its original shows — I Am Not Okay With This and The Society — reportedly due to coronavirus-related logistical issues.

The news is particularly cruel for I Am Not Okay With This, which debuted late in 2019 and got positive reviews and was quietly renewed for a second season before it became the latest renewed show to get, well, unrenewed. THR reported that while The Society had not seen scripts written for a second season that will now go unmade, the same was not the case with the teen-centered paranormal series from the makers of Stranger Things and The End Of The F***ing World.

The second seasons of both The Society and I Am Not Okay With This have been scrapped.

YA drama The Society was picked up for a second run in July 2019 and scripts had not yet been crafted for the sophomore run. I Am Not Okay With This had been quietly renewed though not publicly announced, with scripts completed for the sophomore run.

As The Hollywood Reporter noted, sources said the network was “pleased” with both shows, but as the streaming giant reevaluated the logistical hurdles getting both back underway as community spread of coronavirus still exist in many parts of the United States proved to be too much.

While Netflix was pleased with the performance of both shows, sources say the uncertainty surrounding production dates, efforts to balance the needs and scheduling availabilities of a large cast (like The Society) and unexpected budget increases because of the pandemic prompted both cancellations.

I Am Not Okay With This ended its first season on quite a cliffhanger, which had plenty of fans excited for what’s coming next in the show. It’s unclear if things can change with the show’s status in the future, but right now future episodes of both seem unlikely.

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Nas Remembers The Time Tupac Confronted Him About A Diss Track During Their Final Conversation

Nas dropped his highly-anticipated Hit-Boy-produced record King’s Disease Friday. The album marks the rapper’s 13th studio record and as a veteran in the industry, Nas is looking back on his illustrious career. In a recent radio interview, the rapper recalled his final conversation with the legendary Tupac before his untimely death.

Nas detailed the last time the spoke with Tupac in an interview on Ebro In The Morning. According to the rapper, Tupac actually confronted Nas about a verse in a track he thought was directed at him:

“He explained that he thought I was dissing him on the song ‘The Message,’ and I heard he was dissing me at clubs,” Nas said, referring to the line “Fake thugs, no love / You get the slug, CB4 Gusto.” “The last person I was even thinking about when I wrote that record. I was writing, I was just going. It was just going at everybody. So he thought that. […] He was like ‘Yo Nas, we brothers, man. We not supposed to go through this.’ And I’m like, that’s what I’m saying. We had a plan to squash it in Vegas. So I was out there when he was in the hospital, praying for him to come through. Rest in peace.”

While “The Message” may not have been aimed at Tupac, Nas did actually release a diss track ahead of his Ebro In The Morning interview — though this time it was directed at Doja Cat. Nas shaded the singer in his lead single “Ultra Black” with the line: “We goin’ ultra Black, unapologetically Black / The opposite of Doja Cat, Michael Blackson Black.”

Doja, however, remained unbothered about the song and instead chose to put her energy elsewhere.

Watch a clip of Nas’ Ebro In The Morning interview above. King’s Disease is out now via Mass Appeal. Get it here.

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A rescue pit bull is so convinced he’s a cat he even climbs up on the fridge

Pit bulls and cats aren’t exactly nature’s best buddies. Pit bulls are terriers with a very strong prey drive, can be prone to aggression, and are bred to kill rodents.

The difference between a cat and rodent is negligible in the eyes of a pit bull, so they have been known to be aggressive, and even kill, felines.

Of course, it goes without saying, that with the proper training, cats and pit bulls can not only coexist but develop loving bonds with one another.

While a cat and pit bull being besties isn’t exactly newsworthy, there’s a pit bull that gets along with his two cat buddies so well, his owners believe he thinks he’s a cat.


When Bethany and Samantha Callister went to a local pet rescue to adopt a dog, Mako, a pit bull at the shelter, made it very clear that he had just found his forever family.

“We joke that we didn’t really pick him, he picked us,” Bethany told The Dodo. “When we went to the rescue shelter he had his back against the cage so we started petting him and he looked over his shoulder and gave direct eye contact and we just fell in love with the little guy.”

They were immediately smitten with Mako but were a little afraid he’d have a clash of personalities with their two cats, Pecan and Gizmo. The shelter told them Mako would be just fine with the cats, but they had no idea just how great they’d end up getting along.

“We initially kept the cats in a separate part of the house because we wanted to slowly introduce them to the new dog,” Bethany told Bored Panda.

But soon, the dog and the two cats became close friends, and Mako started imitating them, by climbing to places only cats would dare. He would jump on top of tables, cabinets and even make his way to the top of the fridge.

“Whenever Mako sees the boys on the counters or cabinets he hops up to join them,” Bethany said. “He really just wants to be around the cats all the time. If he is not in the room with one of us humans, he’s with the cats.”

The Castillers realized that they had a very unusual dog, but it didn’t matter one bit.

“We went online and found a dog toy that looks like a cat one so we go to the backyard and he chases and jumps after it like the cats,” Bethany said. “He also likes to lay on the tables with my cats and look out the window at the birds with them. When he sees one of my cats lay on their backs for a tummy rub he comes over and does the same thing!”

Mako goes to show that just as you shouldn’t judge a person by their race, you shouldn’t judge a dog by its breed. Heck, you can’t even judge an animal by its species. The Castillers went to the rescue to find themselves a dog and accidentally wound up with a cat.

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Everything You Need To Know Going Into WWE SummerSlam Weekend

If you’re like a lot of people during these late-into-the-pandemic times, you’re probably not watching WWE on a weekly basis — at least that’s what their ratings say. But you may still want to check out the big shows this weekend, and I’m here to help with that. In addition to SummerSlam 2020, there’s also NXT TakeOver, so before things kick off, let’s run down the cards for both.

NXT TakeOver XXX

The first show of the weekend is NXT TakeOver XXX, with the festivities starting on Saturday night at 7 p.m. ET. Regular viewers know that NXT usually puts on a stronger show, at least when it comes to in-ring work, than the main WWE roster. This isn’t the strongest TakeOver card I’ve ever seen, but it should still be a lot of fun.

Finn Bálor vs Timothy Thatcher

WWE

The Deal: Finn Bálor came back to NXT last fall to kick ass and take names. Tim Thatcher debuted early in the pandemic era and has become a staple of NXT in a short time. They’ve crossed paths a few times, and currently they both blame each other for neither of them being in the North American Championship Ladder Match. At least in Finn’s case that blame is well-justified, because Thatcher interfered and cost Finn the win in his qualifying match against Velveteen Dream. Finn would very much like to beat Tim up about it, and the feeling’s mutual.

The Likely Outcome: I think Finn probably wins here. He’s been doing a lot of putting guys over lately, but he loses the prestige to do that if he doesn’t get an occasional win, and this Takeover grudge match is the perfect time.

Adam Cole vs Pat McAfee

WWE

The Deal: Pat McAfee is a former NFL punter who does commentary and pre-show panels for WWE, and he’s picked a fight with former champion Adam Cole for … reasons. McAfee’s the heel in this feud, which makes Cole basically a babyface for the first time in his NXT career. Anyway, they’re having a match because this is WWE, and when you’re an NFL player turned sports personality, all you have to do is show up and act like a jerk and you get a match.

The Likely Outcome: I swear to god Adam Cole had better win this. I’m pretty confident he will. That whole “being a wrestler” thing ought to give him an edge.

NXT North American Championship Ladder Match: Damien Priest vs Cameron Grimes vs Johnny Gargano vs Bronson Reed vs Velveteen Dream

WWE

The Deal: Keith Lee vacated the North American Championship when he won the NXT Championship, and through a complex system of qualifying matches and last-chance re-qualifying matches, these five guys have been selected as the top contenders. The belt will be suspended above the ring, and they’ll beat the hell out of each other on their way up to it.

The Likely Outcome: There’s no way they put the belt on Velveteen Dream, after the backlash to bringing him back. I don’t think Johnny’s winning either — he’s already had bigger accolades, and I think he’s just in the match to be a steady hand. Any of the three newer guys could potentially take it. I’d like to see it go to Bronson Reed, but I know Cameron Grimes could have a lot of fun with it. I personally find Damien Priest kind of boring, but hey, maybe his run as North American Champion is exactly the thing that will win me over.

NXT Women’s Championship Mach: Io Shirai vs Dakota Kai

WWE

The Deal: Io Shirai and Dakota Kai both used to be sweet and lovable. Then Io’s heart turned cold and she became a moody heel. Then Dakota turned heel too, but she didn’t turn cold so much as she turned petty and cruel. At this point Io is back to being as beloved and rooted-for as ever, because nobody can resist a moody goth queen with an absolutely flawless moonsault.

The Likely Outcome: Io’s not dropping the belt here unless there are immediate plans for her to change brands or something like that. I’d like to see Dakota with gold around her waist at some point, but this doesn’t feel like her moment.

NXT Championship Match: Keith Lee (c) vs Karrion Kross with Scarlett

WWE

The Deal: Keith Lee is a big guy who can do all the stuff nobody expects big guys to do, plus he’s a great talker and has charisma for days. He’s only had the championship for a couple of months, and it already feels right at home on his shoulder. Karrion Kross is a big scary bald man who lives to destroy people, and he recently arrived at NXT with his girlfriend/herald of darkness Scarlett in tow. Everything about Kross says “future champion,” so it’s really just a matter of time.

The Likely Outcome: I think Kross wins the belt here, and Lee moves to Raw or Smackdown after SummerSlam. Keith’s been ready for that move for ages, and it’s time to stop waiting for a better time to pull the trigger on stuff. Times may not get better, so let’s just have the best wrestling we can. Plus Karrion Kross will make a great monster champion, and going ahead and putting the belt on him is a stronger choice than finding an excuse for him to lose this match that could hurt his momentum.

SummerSlam 2020

And then on, Sunday night at 7 p.m. ET, comes SummerSlam, WWE’s second-biggest show of the year. Of course it’s made stranger, like everything lately, by the pandemic. Back in April when WrestleMania happened with no live fans, I remember everyone talking about SummerSlam like everything would surely be normal by then. But here we are, and nope! Still, we’re entering the Thunderdome era of WWE, so we’ll see what they can pull off.

Hair vs Hair Match: Mandy Rose vs Sonya Deville

WWE

The Deal: Sonya and Mandy used to be inseparable best friends, but then Mandy fell for Otis from Heavy Machinery, who Sonya thinks is unworthy of her (or something? it was never well explained), so now they’re enemies. Sonya attacked Mandy and cut her hair, so now they’re both putting their hair on the line in one of those traditional lucha matches that hardly ever happens these days.

The Likely Outcome: Pretty sure Mandy’s winning this one, because while she’s gorgeous enough to pull off a bald head, I don’t really see what it could do for her. For Sonya on the other hand, getting a buzzcut could lead to a reinvention of her character into the lesbian badass she ought to be. Then she can leave Mandy behind and become a force to be reckoned with in the women’s division.

Street Fight: Dominik Mysterio vs Seth Rollins

WWE

The Deal: Unhinged messianic weirdo Seth Rollins has been tormenting the Mysterio family for a while now, and at Extreme Rules he (theoretically) poked out Rey Mysterio’s eye in a match where the stipulation was that the goal was to poke out your opponent’s eye, and then everybody was aghast that he did the thing the match said to do (which admittedly was a pretty nasty thing). So now Rey’s son is here for revenge, and presumably to transition into full-time wrestling.

The Likely Outcome: Seth definitely wins this match. The goal here isn’t for Dominik to win, it’s for Dominik to look like a real pro wrestler, and with Seth’s help I suspect he will. And to be honest, I haven’t let go of the theory that Dominik’s going to turn against his father and join Seth’s cult. That might happen here too, but one way or another Seth comes out on top.

United States Championship Match: Apollo Crews (c) vs MVP

WWE

The Deal: MVP’s Hurt Business faction has been butting heads with Apollo Crews, and Crews has fought hard to prove himself a worth United States Champion.

The Likely Outcome: I think Apollo probably wins here, but if he loses it’s not going to be just because MVP beats him clean. If Apollo loses, it will be because someone new joins the Hurt Business and gets around the ringside ban to interfere on MVP’s behalf, something like that.

Raw Tag Team Championship Match: The Street Profits (c) vs Andrade and Angel Garza with Zelina Vega

WWE

The Deal: The Street Profits have been champs for a while, but honestly they haven’t really done much beyond play golf and basketball with the Viking Raiders. Zelina’s boys want those belts, and if they have to result to dirty tricks to get them, they definitely will.

The Likely Outcome: First of all, Zelina will definitely get involved in this match, and there’s a good chance Bianca Belair will show up to counter her. Even so, I think Andrade and Garza probably win the belts here. The Street Profits will probably have the opportunity for better title runs down the road, but I’m afraid this one has gotten stale.

WWE Universal Championship Match: Braun Strowman (c) vs The Fiend Bray Wyatt

WWE

The Deal: Braun Strowman used to be Bray Wyatt’s henchman, then they split up and Braun became a pretty nice guy. Then Bray Wyatt became the Fiend, a terrifying demon clown that lives in the mind of a sweater-clad children’s show host. Then he temporarily turned back into his old cult-leader self to mess with Braun and they fought in a swamp. Now Braun’s more of a monster, the Fiend’s still the Fiend, and Alexa Bliss is involved somehow.

The Likely Outcome: Bray has already succeeded in corrupting Braun, so I think it’s entirely likely that he wins the belt back now. I also wouldn’t be surprised if the two of them team up again for a while. Also Alexa Bliss will probably show up?

WWE Championship Match: Drew McIntyre (c) vs Randy Orton

WWE

The Deal: Drew McIntyre has been a great champion for the pandemic era, but ratings are down, things are weird, and Vince McMahon’s getting panicky, so we’ve got old standby Randy Orton starting a feud with the less experienced champ. Randy Orton isn’t exactly Mr. Excitement, but everybody knows what they’re getting with him, and that seems to be especially important to WWE.

The Likely Outcome: Hopefully Drew retains. It’s one thing to bring Randy in to take a run at the champ, but actually making him champion in 2020 feels like a step too far. Honestly, this match probably has a messy ending so they can fight again (and quite possibly again and again).

Raw Women’s Championship Match: Sasha Banks (c) vs Asuka

WWE

The Deal: Asuka won the Raw Women’s Title in the Money in the Bank match when Becky Lynch was leaving to have a baby. Then Sasha Banks won it from her with the help of her best friend, Bayley. So the two of them are Tag Team Champions, Sasha’s Raw Champion, and Bayley’s Smackdown Champion. It’s a whole thing, and these two have been killing it as heels these past few months. But Asuka has little patience for nonsense, and there’s been a lot of nonsense lately.

The Likely Outcome: Asuka’s got two matches on Sunday, and I’m betting she wins one of them (probably whichever one is first). I’m going to guess, though, that this is the one where Asuka loses, and Sasha retains.

SmackDown Women’s Championship Match: Bayley (c) vs Asuka

WWE

The Deal: Bayley was once the purest of babyfaces, but now she’s the nastiest cockiest heel, and honestly it’s been tons of fun to watch. Asuka was already scheduled for a rematch with Sasha for the belt she recently lost, but then she won a battle royal so she could wrestle for this title too. Asuka knows what she wants, and she’s not afraid to work hard to get it.

The Likely Outcome: You never know, especially since they keep extending this storyline, but I’m betting Asuka beats Bayley for the Smackdown title Bayley’s held for so long, and then loses to Sasha for the Raw title. That moves Asuka to a new brand to freshen things up, and it builds the tension between Sasha and Bayley for the feud we know is coming.

That’s all we’ve got for this weekend (aside from a preshow match or two). Let me know your predictions in the comments, and I’ll be back afterward to discuss everything that happens!