Author: rb809rb

  • Fangoria Studios Boards Luke Barnett’s ‘Goodbye, Monster’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Fangoria Studios Boards Luke Barnett’s ‘Goodbye, Monster’ (EXCLUSIVE)

    Fangoria Studios has partnered with filmmaker-actor Luke Barnett on the upcoming horror short “Goodbye, Monster,” starring Barnett and Kue Lawrence with voice performances by Patton Oswalt and Tina Majorino. The film marks one of the first projects from the studio’s expanding slate of original genre projects.

    The horror short is written and directed by Barnett. Per an official synopsis, “‘Goodbye, Monster’ centers on Wilson, a 12-year-old boy who receives one final visit from the creature under his bed. The short continues Barnett’s signature blend of empathy, emotional storytelling, and genre craft.”

    “Luke is someone we’ve watched make incredible choices over the past few years with his shorts, and we knew we wanted to be part of what he’s creating,” Tara Ansley, co-owner of Fangoria, said in a statement.

    “Goodbye, Monster” was shot using practical effects, with creature makeup designed by Dan Crawley (“The Curious Case of Benjamin Button,” “Terrifier 3”). Vince Masciale and Natalie Masciale produced the short alongside Barnett. Executive producers include Tara Ansley, Armen Aghaeian, Abhi Goel, Jake Morgan and Cole Travis. Co-producers are Jake Bootz, Adam J. Losoya and Michael Brodner.

    “For anyone who loves horror, Fangoria is sacred ground,” said Barnett. “They’re champions of practical effects, fearless storytelling, and filmmakers who take big swings. It’s a dream come true to collaborate with a team so passionate about the art form. Long live practical effects.”

    Barnett recently appeared in the anthology drama film “Sunfish (& Other Stories on Green Lake),” which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2025. His script “Epilogue” was announced last year, with Mike Flanagan attached as executive producer and David Dastmalchian and Kate Siegel set to star.

    “Goodbye, Monster” is currently in post-production and will premiere on the festival circuit later this year.

  • ‘The Madison’ Trailer: Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell Star in Gorgeous Family Drama From ‘Yellowstone’ Creator

    Michelle Pfeiffer and Kurt Russell lead Taylor Sheridan‘s new series “The Madison,” about a family struck by tragedy as they move from New York City to central Montana.

    Paramount+ released the trailer for the show, which is described as the “Yellowstone” creator’s “most intimate work to date,” and a love story and family drama about grief, resilience and transformation.

    “Mine is not a family designed to withstand tragedy,” Pfeiffer says in the trailer, which contains sweeping shots of Sheridan’s favorite Western state.

    The first three episodes of the six-episode series will debut on Paramount+ on March 14, with the final three episodes airing the following week on March 21. “The Madison” has already been renewed for a second season.

    In addition to Pfeiffer and Russell, the series stars Beau Garrett, Elle Chapman, Patrick J. Adams, Amiah Miller, Alaina Pollack, Ben Schnetzer, Kevin Zegers, Rebecca Spence, Danielle Vasinova, Matthew Fox and Will Arnett. The series takes place within the “Yellowstone” universe, with Vasinova appearing in both “1923” and “The Madison.” (Details about her role have yet to be revealed.) Other series in the creative universe include the prequel “1883” and the spinoff “Marshals.”

    “The Madison” is produced by Paramount Television Studios, 101 Studios and Bosque Ranch Productions. Executive producers are Sheridan, David C. Glasser, John Linson, Art Linson, Ron Burkle, David Hutkin, Bob Yari, Christina Alexandra Voros, Michael Friedman, Pfeiffer, Russell and Keith Cox. Voros directs all six episodes of the debut season.

    Watch the trailer for “The Madison” below.

  • Former Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Donates $5 Million to Ukraine Charity (EXCLUSIVE)

    Former Netflix CEO Reed Hastings Donates $5 Million to Ukraine Charity (EXCLUSIVE)

    Netflix co-founder, chairman and former CEO Reed Hastings is continuing his long-standing support of Ukraine and aid for its war efforts. As Ukraine’s war with Russia enters its fourth year, Hastings just donated $5 million to White Stork, a charity that will use the funds to support combat medics along the frontline with anti-drone jamming systems and other help.

    Hastings previously donated $2 million last year to White Stork, and before that, gave $1 million to Razom for emergency relief.

    White Stork, which is named for the national bird of Ukraine, bills itself as the largest non-governmental organization supplying individual first aid kits and anti-drone jamming systems to Ukraine. That’s key because Russia is flying weaponized first-person view drones into casualty evacuation vehicles.

    “The resource needs of Ukrainian combat medics are shifting as technology evolves on the battlefield. While evacuating wounded soldiers, medics must navigate a gauntlet of killer Russian drones that are persistently monitoring, and relentlessly targeting, anything that moves along the front line,” said White Stork head of mission William McNulty, who is also a U.S. Marine Corps veteran. “With Reed’s gift, White Stork is increasing production orders to 80 jamming systems per month. I am grateful for his enduring support to democracy in Ukraine.”

    The anti-drone jamming systems, which blast electromagnetic noise at the radio frequencies that the drones use to operate, cost up to $7,000.

    White Stork has delivered more than 174,000 combat first aid kids and 471 jamming systems since the start of the war. The aid organization notes that 100% of jamming systems expenses and 67% of individual first aid kid component costs are invested into Ukranian manufacturers, in order to build up Ukraine’s domestic production capacity and reduce its reliance on foreign hardware donations.

    “I have discussed with Reed our need to maintain the technological edge on the battlefield. His donation provides Ukrainian soldiers with lifesaving technology and helps build up our defense industry through domestic production,” said Alexander Kamyshin, Ukraine’s presidential advisor for strategic affairs. 

    Other aid supplied by White Stork include de-mining equipment, kevlar blankets, trench shovels, flame resistant flight suits and body armor.

    Hastings has been known for his generous donations over the years, including $50 million to fund AI research for the humanities at Bowdin College; Netflix shares worth $500 million to Silicon Valley Community Foundation; $7 million to Kamala Harris’ presidential campaign; $20 million to San Francisco’s Minerva University; $10 million to Mississippi’s Tougaloo College, as well as $120 million to other historically Black colleges and universities; $1 million to police reform research group Center for Policing Equity; and $30 million to nonprofit immunization org Gavi Alliance, among others.

  • Noah Cyrus Debuts Bluegrass-Inspired Track ‘Light Over the Hill’ for Colleen Hoover’s ‘Reminders of Him,’ Her First Song for a Movie (EXCLUSIVE)

    Noah Cyrus Debuts Bluegrass-Inspired Track ‘Light Over the Hill’ for Colleen Hoover’s ‘Reminders of Him,’ Her First Song for a Movie (EXCLUSIVE)

    Every time Noah Cyrus drives by a billboard for the upcoming Universal movie “Reminders of Him,” she gets giddy. It’s not because she’s a Colleen Hoover super fan per se, but Cyrus plays a key part in the project: the Grammy nominee penned the end credits song “Light Over the Hill” — her first track for a movie.

    “I feel like I’m on that billboard, even though I’m not,” Cyrus tells Variety, practically bubbling over with excitement. “I’m just so proud of it. Every time we pass the billboards, I say, ‘Oh my god, there’s my movie!’ It really is such a loving project; everything just feels so light and authentic about it.”

    Writing a song for a film had been one of Cyrus’ goals for years. (“There are two things you can’t do without music, and that’s fashion and movies and TV. They all go together,” she says.) So, when “Reminders of Him” director Vanessa Caswill reached out to discuss the prospect of writing a piece for the end credits, Cyrus was elated.

    Caswill wanted to show her the movie, starring Maika Monroe as Kenna, a young woman who returns to her hometown in Wyoming after serving five years in prison for a tragic mistake and hopes to reconnect with Diem, the daughter she’s never known. Everyone is intent on keeping them apart, but Kenna grows a bond with local bar owner Ledger (Tyriq Withers), who has become an important part of Diem’s life. Rudy Pankow (Scotty, Kenna’s first love and Diem’s late father), Lauren Graham, Bradley Whitford, Nicholas Duvernay and Grammy winner Lainey Wilson round out the ensemble cast.

    Cyrus hadn’t read Hoover’s bestseller before the private screening, just her and Caswill, so she was able to react to all the story’s twists and turns in real time. “I’m a movie-before-book person. I have bad ADHD,” Cyrus says. “When I was a little girl, and I saw ‘Twilight’ for the first time, I watched all the [movies] and then read the books.”

    That said, Cyrus’ mom, Tish Cyrus-Purcell, is a huge Hoover fan, so she’s a touch jealous that her daughter got a sneak peek at the big-screen adaptation, which hits theaters March 13. (“Oh my gosh, my mom was like, ‘I wish you would have told me. I would have gone,’” Cyrus says, laughing.)

    “We watched the film and I took my notes,” Cyrus says. She was particularly touched by the story’s themes about rebirth, which she’d recently explored on “New Country,” a song from her sophomore album. “I had this overwhelming emotion of how freeing it is to make a new start and the chance to rebuild yourself and make a better version of yourself for the people that you love. That inspired me.”

    After chatting with Caswill, Cyrus took her notes to the recording studio and got to work with her co-producer and co-writer, PJ Harding. “I was just trying to channel what the movie made me feel,” she says. “We felt this fresh lift of energy and hopefully of having love and family and the chance of a new start. The representation of light and that new beginning.”

    As such, the instrumentation on the track became a folky-bluegrass blend. “Everything is so organic. It’s so light and airy [because] that’s what I felt from watching the film from start to finish.”

    The song’s title, “Light Over the Hill,” represents a few things. “The light is Scotty. The light is hope. The light is love. The light is moving forward,” Cyrus says. “That’s what life is: every day we wake up and the sun is shining, that’s another blessing.”

    Working with Caswill was a dream. “She gave me the artistic freedom to go where I wanted with the song,” Cyrus says. “We had some focal point on what we might want to touch on or specific words that could evoke feelings. But I wanted to create a song that sonically put you in the location and the community they live in, and music that the people in the movie would have liked.”

    But writing a song for someone else’s art is a bit different than writing for one’s own vision. “As much as this was my song, I wanted this to complete their film. So, if it wasn’t going to be this song, I was ready to write another song,” Cyrus says. Fortunately, the filmmakers were thrilled with what she’d delivered. “They were just like, ‘This is it. It was everything we all imagined and more,’” she recalls. “We were all very aligned through the whole process. I’m so grateful this was my first opportunity, and it just left me so hungry to do more work with film and TV.”

    Coincidentally, Cyrus’ older sister, Miley Cyrus, was recently on the same path, contributing the end credits song for December’s “Avatar: Fire and Ash.” But Cyrus didn’t ask big sis for advice about writing for the screen; in fact, they didn’t even realize they were both in the studio on the same mission.

    “We are so not the family that, like, goes to each other and is like, ‘I’m doing this this week. I’m doing that this week,’” Cyrus says. “I totally didn’t know she was doing the ‘Avatar’ song until it was broadcast on my feed. Then we talked about how cool it was that we both had songs coming out in movies.”

    She adds, “I really believe in gifts and blessings and things from the universe that just align, and I think that’s really one of them. It’s been a really, really cool thing to see my sister do her thing, while I also feel like I’m really getting a hold of mine.”

    Right now, the younger Cyrus is eagerly anticipating her movie moment. She won’t see the final cut of the “Reminders of Him,” with her song as its coda, until the Los Angeles premiere next month. (And yes, she’s going to make sure her mom sees the movie too.)

    “I ran into [Withers], and he was like, ‘I just saw [Caswill] and she was telling me about the song. She is so freaking excited!’ I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, do you want me to send it to you?’ and he’s like, ‘No! I don’t want to hear it until it’s in the movie.’” Cyrus says, grinning. “So, we’re all gonna see it in the movie together for the first time at the premiere. It’s gonna be such an amazing experience that I’m so, so honored and delighted to be a part of.”

  • Netflix’s ‘Pride and Prejudice’ Series Teaser Gives Us First Look at Emma Corrin and Jack Lowden as Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy

    Hold onto your bonnets — Netflix has given us a first look at Emma Corrin‘s Elizabeth Bennet and Jack Lowden‘s Mr. Darcy in their upcoming Pride and Prejudice series.

    The six-part adaptation will air in the fall, the streaming platform confirmed.

    The teaser trailer shows Corrin as Jane Austen’s beloved protagonist sitting atop her house in the early 19th century, and glimpses of the brooding Darcy from behind a doorway and riding his horse. Corrin, who uses they/them pronouns, is best known for their stint as Princess Diana on The Crown and most recently starred in Robert Eggers’ Nosferatu. Lowden, meanwhile, will be a familiar face to Slow Horses fans. Olivia Colman, Rufus Sewell, Freya Mavor, Jamie Demetriou, Daryl McCormack, Louis Partridge, Rhea Norwood, Siena Kelly, Fiona Shaw, Hopey Parish and Hollie Avery will co-star in Pride and Prejudice.

    In a year rife with regency drama for loyal fans, the series will “join the yearn-aissance in the autumn to faithfully bring Jane Austen’s iconic story back to life for audiences that cherish it, whilst inspiring a new generation to fall in love with it for the first time,” said Netflix.

    Everything I Know About Love author and writer-executive producer on the show Dolly Alderton added: “Once in a generation, a group of people get to retell this wonderful story and I feel very lucky that I get to be a part of it. Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice is the blueprint for romantic comedy — it has been a joy to delve back into its pages to find both familiar and fresh ways of bringing this beloved book to life.”

    “With Euros Lyn directing our stellar cast,” Alderton added, “I am so excited to reintroduce these hilarious and complicated characters to those who count Pride and Prejudice as their favourite book, and those who are yet to meet their Lizzie and Mr Darcy.”

    Eagle-eyed fans in the U.K. took to social media last week as they spotted the teaser playing on the big screen ahead of watching Wuthering Heights.

    Watch the first teaser for Netflix’s Pride and Prejudice below.

  • Adrianne Curry Reluctantly Defends Tyra Banks in ‘Top Model’ Uproar: “Being a D***head Isn’t Illegal”

    How badly is Tyra Banks getting slammed online after Netflix‘s Reality Check: Inside America’s Next Top Model documentary? Badly enough that season one winner Adrianne Curry has put aside her open dislike for Banks to defend the embattled host and executive producer.

    Curry posted a lengthy pushback against the “HOA Karen Cancel Mob” going after Banks in the wake of the three-part documentary, in which Banks came across largely unsympathetic amid the filmmakers’ attempts to portray the long-running reality hit as utterly cruel and dehumanizing (here are the seven biggest revelations in Reality Check).

    “Ugh, I hate that I have to do this,” began Curry, who refused to participate in the documentary. “I don’t think Tyra should be canceled. I don’t think being an asshole merits the hate and HOA Karen cancel mob she is getting. I was deeply hurt by Tyra and [executive producer] Ken Mok … but people trying to ‘hurt’ them does absolutely nothing to make me feel better. It feels the opposite. It makes me feel uncomfortable. I forgive them. I am grateful for everything I did get from that experience…and take the bad stuff as the ultimate learning curve in how Hollywood operates. LIE, cheat, manipulate, repeat … It’s what they do … humiliate … exploit. It’s the name of the game. Reality TV stars are glorified Jerry Springer guests.

    “People act like what Tyra did is worse than Bill Gates and Epstein,” she continued. “It isn’t. She and Ken acted exactly as everyone else in Entertainment does. It’s not a place that is going to protect you or care about you. Reality TV producers exploit and humiliate you based off what you give them. They froth at the mouth for you to make a mistake that they can then monetize.”

    After detailing the humiliation suffered by Verne Troyer on The Surreal Life, Curry circled back to Reality Check and Banks.

    “I can’t believe I have to come to her defense … but Naomi Campbell beat heads in with phones and people didn’t hate her as much as I see people hating Tyra,” she alleged. “Being a dickhead isn’t illegal, people. Let the girls on the show have their anger … or their gratefulness … and hopefully, their forgiveness of themselves and these people. Forcing people to apologize for crap they are not sorry for is a damn struggle session and it feels…evil.”

    Curry concludes, “Wherever Tyra and Ken are … I am both grateful and disappointed [in] how things went down. I forgive being stricken from the show’s history, erased from its memory. I forgive things not being what we were told they’d be. I’m humbled and grateful I got what I did. I don’t think what the public is doing … this Karen Accountability Struggle Session is right … but I’m not going to label you two angels. Thank you and f%ck off, respectfully.”

    Before Reality Check aired, Curry wrote that judging the show by modern cultural standards is “absurd.”

    “I think people psychoanalyzing it over 20 years later with a woke lens is absurd,” she wrote. “I don’t trust people to not manipulate things I say for TV so I decline everything. Also, the public is cult-like and cruel, so the last thing I want is a bunch of eyeballs on me … I have [zero] trust in any producers, no desire to be really public in this day and age … and am hard retired from Hollywood.”

    Here are seven biggest revelations in Reality Check: Inside America’s Next Top Model, from allegations of fat shaming to accusations of racism, where we similarly suggested the documentary was trying too hard to turn the show into a “cultural war crime.”

    Banks had no immediate comment. Curry’s comments above have been slightly edited for punctuation.

  • Divisional fantasy preview + Prop Bets + DFS: The matchups, players & bets you CAN’T ignore this weekend

    Subscribe to Yahoo Fantasy Forecast

    Divisional round weekend is right around the corner and we have Matt Harmon and Joel Smyth here to get you ready. The two preview each game and provide their favorite matchups and prop bets along the way. Smyth also shares his favorite DFS lineup for Divisional weekend.

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    (5:00) #6 Bills @ #1 Broncos

    (21:50) #6 49ers @ #1 Seahawks

    (37:35) #5 Texans @ #2 Patriots

    (49:00) #5 Rams @ #2 Bears

    (1:01:50) Joel’s Divisional Round DFS Lineup

    Divisional round weekend is right around the corner and we have Matt Harmon and Joel Smyth here to get you ready. The two preview each game and provide their favorite matchups and prop bets along the way. Smyth also shares his favorite DFS lineup for Divisional weekend.

    Divisional round weekend is right around the corner and we have Matt Harmon and Joel Smyth here to get you ready. The two preview each game and provide their favorite matchups and prop bets along the way. Smyth also shares his favorite DFS lineup for Divisional weekend.

    (Jason Jung)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or yahoosports.tv

  • Kyle Tucker Goes to the Dodgers, Red Sox Bring In Ranger Suárez and the Yankees & Diamondbacks Make Trades

    Subscribe to Baseball Bar-B-Cast

    The Los Angeles Dodgers did it again. The defending back-to-back World Series champions have had yet another big-time offseason. After adding star closer Edwin Díaz, they went out on Thursday night and brought top free-agent outfielder Kyle Tucker into their already star-studded lineup, solidifying them even more as the Evil Empire of baseball.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman talk about the shocking—at least to some—move of Los Angeles once again bolstering their roster as they look for the first three-peat in baseball since the New York Yankees’ 1990s dynasty. With the Tucker deal coming in at four years, $240 million, should Commissioner Rob Manfred start to worry about the perception the Dodgers are giving off to opposing fans with their free agent spending?

    Later, Jordan and Jake discuss the Boston Red Sox adding one of the big-arm free agents, Ranger Suárez, to their already crowded starting pitching depth chart and why he will be an interesting fit in their rotation. They then get into the Yankees trading for Ryan Weathers and the Arizona Diamondbacks acquiring Nolan Arenado from the St. Louis Cardinals before giving an update on Team USA’s newest roster additions. The guys close the show by making their picks for this week’s edition of The Good, The Bad, and The Uggla.

    1:39 – The Opener: Kyle Tucker to the Dodgers

    20:36 – Red Sox sign Ranger Suárez

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    43:29 – Scott Boras Scoreboard update

    46:10 – Around the League: Trade news

    1:01:48 – Team USA roster update

    1:08:09 – The Good, The Bad & The Uggla

    Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    (Photo by Mary DeCicco/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at yahoosports.tv

  • NBA trade deadline hot topics & unhappy teams with Jason Timpf + NFL Playoffs talk with Justin Boone

    Subscribe to The Kevin O’Connor Show

    Kevin O’Connor is joined by Jason Timpf to check in with unhappy fan bases across the NBA. They discuss whether the criticism of Karl Anthony-Towns is fair and offer solutions to the problems in New York. Then, they break down the root of Atlanta’s issues since the Trae Young trade. Plus, what’s going on in Los Angeles and can it even be fixed?

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    Next, KOC shares why Collin Murray-Boyles could be the next Draymond Green and why the Celtics-Pistons matchup is the game of the week. Who should the Pistons target before the trade deadline? KOC gives his picks! Plus, is Ja Morant’s stock rising? Do the Timberwolves need to make a trade to find success this season?

    Later, Justin Boone joins to discuss why the Buffalo Bills parted ways with Sean McDermott, recap the wild NFL divisional games and preview the upcoming championship weekend.

    (0:15) Jason Timpf joins

    (1:23) Unhappy fan bases: New York Knicks

    (9:18) Unhappy fan bases: Atlanta Hawks

    (15:49) Unhappy fan bases: Los Angeles Lakers

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    (25:16)  Collin Murray-Boyles = Draymond Green

    (29:13) Celtics vs. Pistons preview

    (41:56) Is Ja Morant’s stock rising back up?

    (49:19) Do Timberwolves need to make a trade?

    (1:06:23) All-Star starters announced

    (1:10:26) NFL 6 Points! with Justin Boone

    Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts during the game against the Phoenix Suns at Madison Square Garden on January 17, 2026 in New York City.  (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    Karl-Anthony Towns #32 of the New York Knicks reacts during the game against the Phoenix Suns at Madison Square Garden on January 17, 2026 in New York City. (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Evan Bernstein/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on the Yahoo Sports NBA YouTube channel

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family athttps://apple.co/3zEuTQj or atyahoosports.tv

  • 4 KEY offseason moves for Bills, Bears, 49ers, Texans + Saleh to Titans & latest coaching hire reactions

    Nate Tice & Matt Harmon react to the latest NFL coaching hire news before determining what went wrong for playoff losers and what each team can do to get further next season. The duo start with their thoughts on the latest coaching hires, including the Miami Dolphins hiring Jeff Hafley, the Tennessee Titans getting Robert Saleh, the Detroit Lions hiring OC Drew Petzing and the Kansas City Chiefs hiring OC Eric Bieniemy.

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    Next, Nate & Matt deep dive on the four Divisional Round losers, determining what direction each team needs to take to retool and get even closer to a Super Bowl next season. The duo cover the post-Sean McDermott Buffalo Bills and their need to nail the next coaching hire, the Chicago Bears and how they can fix their defense, the Houston Texans and next steps to fix C.J. Stroud and the San Francisco 49ers, who are entering a sketchier offseason than you may realize.

    (5:00) – Titans hire Robert Saleh

    (14:10) – Dolphins hire Jeff Hafley

    (20:30) – Key OC hires: Petzing to Lions & Bieniemy to Chiefs

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    (41:00) – Bills deep dive

    (1:00:45) – Bears deep dive

    (1:06:45) – Texans deep dive

    (1:20:15) – 49ers deep dive

    DENVER, CO - JANUARY 17: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills reacts after a play against the Denver Broncos during the second half of an AFC Divisional Playoff game at Empower Field At Mile High on January 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    DENVER, CO – JANUARY 17: Josh Allen #17 of the Buffalo Bills reacts after a play against the Denver Broncos during the second half of an AFC Divisional Playoff game at Empower Field At Mile High on January 17, 2026 in Denver, Colorado. (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    (Photo by Cooper Neill/Getty Images)

    🖥️ Watch this full episode on YouTube

    Check out the rest of the Yahoo Sports podcast family at https://apple.co/3zEuTQj or at Yahoo Sports Podcasts