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Big Brother 28 Is Back & the Season Premiere Threw a Legend Into a Volcano, “McCarthy”: Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Episode 3, BB Live Feeds & Dee Valladares Wins the Fire Puzzle

The Live Feed Revolution: How to Watch Everything This Season, Season’s Most Divided Hour — and Also Its Most Honest, Big Brother 28 Is Back, More Chaotic Than Ever!

Big Brother 28 Is Back, More Chaotic Than Ever, and the Season Premiere Just Threw a Legend Into a Volcano

Big Brother' star Rachel Reilly killed by dinosaur in season 28 premiere

Big Brother has never been confused about what it is, and Season 28 arrived on CBS on July 9, 2026, with the specific energy of a show that has been doing this for twenty-six years and has decided, on the occasion of its 1,000th original episode, to go absolutely unhinged. That milestone, the 1,000th episode of any primetime show, is genuinely historic, and honestly, I for some reason thought other shows had more. The only thing the show used to do was start in late June. We were at the farmers markets a few times, including the first time, when the participants entered CBS Studios next door. Evidently, after checking on these stats, that is a number no other program in the genre has reached, this was the occasion CBS chose for premiering what may be the most maximally chaotic season opener in the franchise’s history. Dinosaurs. A volcano. A legend murdered by a velociraptor. I went from being so excited that the show brought this legend back to watching them get rid of her just minutes later. Jeff Probst in a cameo. A Survivor winner running the first Head of Household competition. And a cast of seventeen that the network assembled by reaching into its CBS and Paramount vault and pulling out every returning player who could theoretically justify a “Time Trip” framing.

Welcome back to the Big Brother house. History is being rewritten. Or in Rachel Reilly’s case, permanently ended by a prop dinosaur on a jungle set in Los Angeles.

The 1,000-Episode Milestone and What CBS Did With It. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


“McCarthy”: Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness Episode 3 Is the Season’s Most Divided Hour — and Also Its Most Honest

Life, Larry And The Pursuit Of Unhappiness' Trailer: Larry David Turns  American History Into HBO Comedy

The third episode of Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness, titled “McCarthy,” arrived on July 11 with the specific burden that all middle chapters carry, “McCarthy” has to stand on its own as four sketches, the strength of whatever specific combinations it produces, and the increasingly pointed question that critics and viewers alike are asking after three episodes of the same format, how far can four sketches of Larry David behaving badly in historically significant settings stretch before they start repeating themselves rather than expanding?

The answer Episode 3 provides is, it depends entirely on which sketch you are watching. “McCarthy” is the season’s most inconsistent episode and, counterintuitively, its most revealing, because the gap between what lands and what labors tells you something precise about where the format’s true strengths and real limits actually live. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


Russell Crowe Turns Nightclub Owner Into Cartel Target in Derrick Borte’s Neon-Lit Crime Comedy

Russell Crowe has spent the back half of his career quietly building one of the most entertaining second acts in modern movie stardom, trading the weighty prestige dramas that once defined him for a string of gleefully unpredictable genre swings, and his latest, The Get Out, slots comfortably into that run. Released in select theaters on June 26, 2026 before moving to digital and video-on-demand platforms just four days later, the film reunites Crowe with director Derrick Borte for a neon-soaked Los Angeles crime story that trades the white-knuckle road rage of their previous collaboration for something looser, funnier, and considerably more chaotic. The result is a film built almost entirely around Crowe’s easy charisma, one that critics have described as a mixed bag on the whole but a showcase for an actor clearly enjoying himself in a genre he has quietly mastered over the past few years. Read More!


Big Brother 28 Live Feed Week 1 Spoilers: Dee Valladares Is Running the House, Mallory Just Saved Herself, and the Season Is Already on Fire

Big Brother 28' Spoilers: Who Won The Power Of Veto (Week 1)?

Fair warning before you read a single word further, everything below this sentence comes from the Big Brother 28 live feeds, which are days ahead of what has aired on CBS. If you are watching exclusively through the televised episodes on Sunday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights and you want to be surprised, stop here. Come back after Thursday’s live eviction, when the television broadcast catches up to what has been happening inside the house since the feeds went live on Friday, July 10. For everyone else, the feed watchers, the spoiler seekers, and the people who consider live feed access an essential companion to the broadcast — here is a complete accounting of Week 1, what Dee Valladares has done with her power, what went wrong with her original plan, and where things stand as of Saturday night.

It has been five days. The season is already fascinating. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


Dee Valladares: Playing for History From Day One

Survivor' Winner Dee Valladares Makes Reality TV History With Shocking 'Big  Brother 28' Twist - AOL

Before getting into the Week 1 mechanics, it is worth sitting with what Dee Valladares is actually attempting. When she entered the house on Friday’s Big Brother: Unlocked broadcast as the season’s 17th and final houseguest, she told the cameras exactly what she wanted: “I want to be the first person to win Survivor and Big Brother.”

That sentence is not an ambition. It is a historical statement. No person has ever won both franchises. Rick Devens, her fellow veteran competitor in the house, came close , he was the dominant story of Survivor 38, made it to the final four, and lost in firemaking rather than the jury vote, a result that the Survivor fanbase still debates. Angela Murray, the other returning veteran, is a Big Brother champion from Season 26. Neither of them is playing for the historical achievement that Dee is. She is in this house to do something that has never been done, and she is not pretending otherwise. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


Inside Sam Raimi’s Wickedly Twisted Return to Form with Send Help (2026)

Seventeen years is a long time to wait for a filmmaker to come home to the genre that made him famous, but that is precisely the gap Sam Raimi closed with Send Help, the pitch-black survival comedy that has quickly become the standout theatrical event of 2026. Equal parts corporate satire, jungle survival thriller, and gleefully gruesome horror comedy, the film marks a genuine full-circle moment for the director who first terrified audiences with a cabin in the woods decades ago and now strands two office rivals on a nightmare island instead. The result is not a tidy return to any single lane. It is something stranger, funnier, and considerably bloodier than a simple nostalgia play, and it has given Raimi one of the most talked-about and financially successful films of his career. Read More!


Big Brother 28 Episode 3 Recap: Dee Valladares Wins the Fire Puzzle, Builds Two Alliances, and Puts the House on Notice

Big Brother Season 28 Episode 2 Recap: First HOH, Nominations Revealed

Sunday night’s 90-minute broadcast of Big Brother 28 picked up where the season premiere left off, with Angela Murray, Rick Devens, and the newly arrived Dee Valladares standing at their respective fire puzzles, platforms wobbling beneath them, while fourteen strangers held on to ropes and tried to figure out which veteran they wanted to help win the first Head of Household competition of the summer. By the time the episode ended, the season’s opening power structure was firmly established, three houseguests were in tears, and Dee Valladares had confirmed something that anyone who watched her win Survivor 45 probably already suspected, she came to Big Brother to win, and she is not waiting for anyone to catch up.

The HOH Competition: “Time to Build” and the Fire Puzzle That Ended the Debate. The competition that carried over from the Big Brother: Unlocked premiere on Friday was called “Time to Build,” and its mechanics were both physically demanding and strategically loaded in ways that became clearer as the episode progressed. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


The Nomination Ceremony: One From Each Group, and Three Reactions

Dee’s stated rationale for her nominations was clean and consistent: she picked one person from each of the three teams that competed in the HOH competition, framing the choice as the most equitable approach available to someone who had been in the house for only a few days and had not had enough time to form independent impressions of fourteen new people.

That framing is partially true and partially protective cover. Mallory Aurichio was her genuine target — a read supported by the live feeds, where Dee had already identified Mallory as a threat after Mallory attempted to pitch herself to Dee in the HOH room and the conversation went badly for Mallory. Taylor Brown was a secondary nomination, a pawn who got caught in the crossfire of the team structure. Yash Patel, who had been on Dee’s rope-team and had helped her win the HOH competition, was nominated in part because his lower level of interaction with Dee in the days before the ceremony registered as suspect rather than neutral. Yash’s post-nomination reaction — telling Rome that Dee made a mistake by nominating someone who helped her win, and that he was confident he could get himself off the block — captured the specific frustration of someone who did something useful and was rewarded with a nomination. Read The Full Article on ther Sunset Daily Substack!


Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: How Larry David Just Rewrote 250 Years of American History — And Got Away With It

There is a version of America’s 250th birthday that involves soaring orchestral music, Ken Burns-style dissolves between sepia photographs, and a narrator who sounds like he is personally apologizing for the passage of time. And then there is the version where Larry David crashes the party, refuses to sit where he’s told, complains that nobody used a coaster on the wooden table of liberty, and accidentally derails the entire democratic experiment.

Guess which version HBO chose.

Life, Larry and the Pursuit of Unhappiness: An Almost History of America arrived on June 26, 2026 — today, on the very cusp of the nation’s Semiquincentennial — and it is exactly as audacious, as bizarre, and as only-on-HBO as that premise suggests. Seven episodes. Four historical sketches per half-hour. One relentlessly cantankerous protagonist. And an official logline that reads like a warning label: “Those who don’t know history are doomed to watch Larry David repeat it.”

Welcome to the most unexpected birthday present America has ever received.

The Origin Story: When the Obamas Called Larry David….Read More!

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