Author: rb809rb

  • ‘Marty Supreme’ and ‘Heated Rivalry’ Both Traffic in Stereotypes. Maybe That’s Not a Bad Thing

    ‘Marty Supreme’ and ‘Heated Rivalry’ Both Traffic in Stereotypes. Maybe That’s Not a Bad Thing

    Beyond the fact that they both technically belong in the genre of “sports,” the Jewish table-tennis-hustler film Marty Supreme and the spicy gay hockey TV series Heated Rivalry seem to have almost nothing in common.

    And yet Josh Safdie’s Oscar contender and Jacob Tierney’s TV phenomenon have riled up parts of their audience in similar ways. Both works, critics say, display uncomfortable stereotypes that have been used to marginalize their respective Jewish and gay populations for a very long time.

    In the case of Marty Mauser, it’s the persona of a grasping, lying shyster who will do anything and sell anyone out for money. For Ilya Rozanov and Shane Hollander, it’s a depiction as psych-textbook caricatures, the two muscularly embodying the narcissistic, decadent compulsion for sex with zero attachment and intimacy. And so for all their acclaim and popularity, the pieces have been slammed by these critics for playing to ugly tropes. Further complicating the sense of betrayal is the fact that Marty Supreme was created by Safdie, who is Jewish, and Heated Rivalry was created by Tierney, who is gay.

    Nor do the characters play to affectionate Hollywood type in any way. Marty is not cultured, colorful and neurotic with a penchant for Yiddish outbursts. Ilya and Shane are not sensitive, stylish and creative and don’t have a drag scene. Instead, Marty lies to everyone, holds a co-worker at gunpoint for his pay and, infamously, makes a shocking wisecrack about Auschwitz. Meanwhile, over years of random, closeted and compulsive encounters, Shane and Ilya barely exchange pleasantries during their hot, impersonal hookups, even calling each other by their last names — half bros, half hos. These are not good Woody Allen Jews or good Tony Kushner gays.

    For critics, these characters evoke a long history of pop-cultural stereotypes. From the predatory Jewish villain Svengali (made famous in the 19th century French best-seller Trilby) to the 1991 “Big Five” Oscar winner Silence of the Lambs (with its predatory queer villain Buffalo Bill), there’s a whole century of coded prejudice that hasn’t exactly vanished from the world.

    But people focusing on these kinds of inhuman portrayals might consider what Safdie and Tierney are doing differently. Both Marty Supreme and Heated Rivalry cleverly use these aspects as starting points to slowly draw back the curtains on their characters’ stifled humanity.

    After a grueling 135 minutes of danger-dealing (in which he finally gets to the world championships and scores a minor moral victory), Marty limps back humbled to New York and goes straight to the hospital to see his newborn son and his (married) girlfriend Rachel, whispering “love you” to her sleeping form, a selfless moment of redemption.

    And in Heated Rivalry, after eight years of brief hotel hookups, Shane spends the day at Ilya’s house. Ilya makes Shane a tuna melt, and, for the first time, they use each other’s first names. When Shane can’t handle it, we see the damaged humanity under the hotness.

    It’s as though both these narratives have set up a long con, where the stereotyped behavior acts as a form of misdirection — and it pays off with a sudden release when the characters’ latent humanity is revealed. This is as much a physics experiment as a drama: Tension is stored as stereotype and ratcheted up, then finally discharged as complexity.

    This technique can be seen in another Oscar contender, Sentimental Value, in which Stellan Skarsgard’s distant father is finally revealed as scarred rather than selfish.

    What all these works suggest is that stereotypes don’t need to be avoided — they can be used strategically as powerful ingredients for characters to defy.

    Yes, there’s a lot to be said for humanity, empathy and the rest of today’s values checklist. But as Marty, Ilya and Shane make clear, that’s not always an inclusive spectrum. Real people are complicated and selfish. Real people want sex and success. Everyone wants to win, not just people stuck in “the patriarchy.” Instead of policing representation as some perfect singular, we should be trying to make it as plural as possible. Both Heated Rivalry and Marty Supreme prove that complicated characters and even stereotypes can be a dramatic vehicle for helping us see and reconcile all kinds of conflicting human urges. Actors want to show range. The world does, too.

    This story appeared in the Feb. 23 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine. Click here to subscribe.

  • 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

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  • ‘Prosecution’ Review: A Slick, Pulpy Drama About a Vigilante Lawyer Investigating Her Own Hate Crime

    ‘Prosecution’ Review: A Slick, Pulpy Drama About a Vigilante Lawyer Investigating Her Own Hate Crime

    Faraz Shariat’s tightly wound “Prosecution” is a courtroom drama immersed in legalese, but rendered with the gripping intensity of a vigilante thriller. It follows a German-Korean woman prosecuting far-right hate crimes and running up against institutional blockades, until she becomes the victim of a targeted assault. This prompts her to push further and harder against these confines — and circumvent them if she must — at any ethical cost, as the herculean task before her fades into view.

    Meticulously researched by co-writers Claudia Schaefer, Jee-Un Kim and Sun-Ju Choi, the story arrives in the wake of a recent uptick in far-right hate crimes in Germany, an apparent universality that Shariat grounds in the hyper-specifics of German law. At the film’s center is Seyo Kim (Chen Emilie Yan), a meek state lawyer looking to make a difference, but who accepts, with begrudging sighs, her department’s 80% rate of dropping hate crime prosecutions as just another part of the job.

    While at home in her scant apartment, she speaks to her father in German while he responds in Korean; she seems disconnected from everyone, except occasionally her girlfriend Min-su (Kotbong Yang), whenever she finally answers the phone. During tightly shot and controlled scenes of her arguing in court, Seyo is subject to the gazes and occasional jeers of neo-Nazi defendants and their supporters, but retains her composure as best she can. After all, as characters repeatedly state throughout “Prosecution,” Germany claims the most objective system of law in the world, and maintaining objectivity is paramount. It’s no wonder that, after she’s knocked off her bicycle in a public park and pelted with Molotov cocktails by men in masks, she proves to be a pressure cooker waiting to explode.

    Seyo’s immediate response is to throw herself into investigating her own attempted murder, even before she’s left the scene. But her largely Caucasian supervisors, like Senior Public Prosecutor Forch (Arnd Klawitter), insist that she keep her distance. However, with the reluctant help of a fellow non-white colleague, Ayten (Alev Irmak), she begins running a parallel inquiry: sneaking into records rooms to peruse old cases while sticking photographs and news articles on her window, practically walling herself off from the world. When her trial finally begins, she also takes over as her own attorney, not only questioning witnesses, but forcing former victims (some of them vulnerable immigrants) out of hiding, in order to make them testify at the risk of their own safety.

    It wouldn’t be a stretch to call Seyo a self-centered protagonist, but her selfishness stems from a lucid sense of self-preservation. However, the film’s ultra-serious character drama is transformed into pulp — of the most ludicrously enjoyable sort — both by Shariat’s tight visual flourishes, which imbue every dialogue scene with oppressive potency, and by the way the initially straightforward Seyo slowly becomes an antiheroine in the vein of Lisbeth Salander from “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo.” The pseudo-goth hair and costume choices speak to an inner rebelliousness that isn’t so much unleashed as forced loose by a system that values the appearance of a mythical impartiality over her humanity, leaving her with little recourse but to step outside the confines of the law.

    The seemingly insurmountable challenge before her is reflected by the double meaning of the film’s German-language title “Staatsschutz,” which roughly translates to “state protection.” When institutions close ranks and downplay threats in the name of neutrality, who is the state truly protecting?

    To be clear, Seyo isn’t an action heroine who employs gadgets or fisticuffs. She’s too physically diminutive for that, which only adds to her desperation. Picture if Marvel’s Daredevil were a lawyer by day, and a lawyer who bends the rules a little by night, and you should know what to expect. Except Seyo’s superhero suit is the everyday attire of a woman driven by anger to violently knock on the doors shut in her face — and kick at them if she must, even if it attracts genuine danger from hate groups and institutions alike. (She does, however, have her own Batmobile in the form of a muscly, matte-black Dodge Challenger, which gets a delicious closing shot.)

    Much of the action involves Seyo rummaging through dusty boxes in rooms she shouldn’t be in, lest a security guard come snooping and scold her, or she be handed professional consequences. A slap on the wrist hardly sounds exciting on paper, but the stakes grow as the film goes on. These sequences of process and investigation are captured with all the verve and nerve-wracking tension of a slick spy thriller, aided by a detailed, thundering soundscape sure to leave you on edge.

    All of this is made further convincing by Yan’s captivating performance, her first for the big screen. She adds great depth to a woman pushing back against the walls closing in around her. Despite her character’s steely resolve, the star isn’t afraid to sketch moments of determination with glimmers of self-doubt, as Seyo becomes increasingly one-tracked, and perhaps loses sight of the difference between personal vengeance and broader, institutional justice, until it nearly breaks her.

    While the resolution to this dilemma ends up somewhat easy, the film remains an alluring liberal power fantasy about challenging systems from within. Which is to say it’s more realistic in its aims than your average, metaphor-laden blockbuster — not everybody can kickflip or attain superpowers — and in the process, it’s sure to draw an especially visceral response from any choir to which its anti-racist sentiments might preach. It may not change the world (after all, few movies do), but it’ll certainly rile you up enough to make change seem far less improbable.

  • Nick Reiner Pleads Not Guilty in Murders of Rob and Michele Reiner

    Nick Reiner Pleads Not Guilty in Murders of Rob and Michele Reiner

    Nick Reiner pleaded not guilty on Monday in the deaths of his parents, Rob and Michele, who were found stabbed to death in their Brentwood home on Dec. 14.

    Reiner, 32, appeared in Los Angeles Superior Court, and spoke only once, agreeing to a future court date of April 29.

    Reiner is facing two counts of murder with an enhancement that could carry the death penalty or life without parole if he is convicted.

    He is being represented by Kimberly Greene, a deputy public defender who took over the case after his initial lawyer, Alan Jackson, withdrew last month.

    No mention was made of Reiner’s mental state during the brief hearing.

    Reiner is being held without bail at the Twin Towers Correctional Facility in downtown Los Angeles. He was arrested around 9:15 p.m. on Dec. 14, hours after his parents’ bodies were discovered by his sister.

    Rob Reiner was one of the greatest filmmakers of his generation,” said District Attorney Nathan Hochman, who called the Reiners’ killings “shocking and tragic.” “We owe it to their memory to pursue justice and accountability for the lives that were taken.”

    Nick Reiner was open about his years-long battle with drug addiction. He told interviewers that he attended 18 rehabs between the ages of 15 and 19. In an interview for Anna David’s recovery podcast, he said he had thrown a rock through a window to prove he needed medication.

    “I was insane,” he said. “And I said, ‘I’m insane.’ And they said, ‘No, you’re not.’ I was like, ‘Well, they’re not taking my word for it. I might as well demonstrate what crazy is.’”

  • Hans Zimmer to Score Netflix Series ‘All the Sinners Bleed’ From Higher Ground, Amblin Television

    Hans Zimmer to Score Netflix Series ‘All the Sinners Bleed’ From Higher Ground, Amblin Television

    Hans Zimmer and his composer collective, Bleeding Fingers Music, are set to score the upcoming Netflix series “All the Sinners Bleed.”

    As previously announced, the show is an adaptation of the S.A Crosby novel of the same name. Joe Robert Cole is adapting the book for the screen and will also serve as executive producer and showrunner in addition to directing multiple episodes, including the first. The Obamas’ Higher Ground Productions and Amblin Television are also executive producing along with Cosby.

    “’All the Sinners Bleed’ lives in the tension between faith, violence and redemption, the kind of moral complexity where music speaks most powerfully,” Zimmer said. “Joe Robert Cole and S.A. Cosby have created a world that is haunting, intimate and unflinchingly human. We’re proud to collaborate with Netflix, Higher Ground and Amblin on a series unafraid to sit with discomfort and truth, allowing the score to breathe in moments of silence as much as in moments of chaos.”

    “All the Sinners Bleed” stars Ṣọpẹ́ Dìrísù alongside series regulars John Douglas Thompson, Nicole Beharie, Daniel Ezra, Andrea Cortés, Murray Bartlett, and Leila George. The official logline for the series states, “Haunted by his devout mother’s untimely death, the first Black Sheriff (Dìrísù) in a small Bible Belt county must lead the hunt for a serial killer that has been preying on his Black community for years in the name of God.”

    “Hans crafts unforgettable themes and immersive scores that root you emotionally in the world of a story,” Cole said. “Our series explores the lighter and darker halves of who we are as people and which side wins within us. I’m incredibly excited to have Hans and the Bleeding Fingers Music composer collective interpreting this core contention through music.”

    Zimmer is widely regarded as one of the greatest film composers alive today and one of the greatest of all time. He is a 12-time Oscar nominee in the best score category, winning the coveted award for his work on both “The Lion King” and Denis Villeneuve’s “Dune.” He has been nominated for and won numerous other accolades, including Grammys, Golden Globes, BAFTAs and beyond. Just a few of his other notable scores include work on “Interstellar,” “Gladiator,” Christopher Nolan’s “Dark Knight” trilogy, and “Inception.”

    He is repped by CAA and Kleinberg Lange Cuddy & Carlo LLP.

  • ‘Blue Moon’ Star Ethan Hawke on His First Lead Actor Oscar Nom, Why the Film Is a ‘Decade-Long Dream’ and His Friendship With Director Richard Linklater

    Ethan Hawke has been making movies for decades. But it took a role his longtime collaborator Richard Linklater dreamed up — born out of years of shared theater trips and a mutual love of the stage — to finally earn him his first lead actor Academy Award nomination.

    “I don’t think anybody else really would’ve thought of me for this character,” Hawke said in Variety’sFor the Love of the Craft: The Nominees” video. “But because he knows me so well, he knew how passionately I would feel about it.”

    Hawke, nominated for best actor for his portrayal of lyricist Lorenz Hart in Linklater’s “Blue Moon,” said he first read the script more than 10 years ago. The two have long bonded over a shared love of theater. They first met when Linklater came to see Hawke in a play and the script felt like a natural extension of that relationship. The long gestation proved to be a gift. “I felt happy that I’ve been able to dream about it for 10 years,” he said. “I didn’t have to rush to be ready.”

    Over that time, Hawke immersed himself in Richard Rogers and Hart’s musical theater world, collecting biographies, seeking out Chet Baker and Bob Dylan covers of their songs and filling what he called his “imaginative tank” at his own pace.

    “Blue Moon” premiered at the Berlin Film Festival a year ago and has built a devoted following since, with Hawke returning to Berlin this week as the awards season reaches its peak. He credits good fortune as much as craft. “It’s so hard to penetrate the zeitgeist right now without a tremendous amount of money in advertising,” he said. “When that happens, you kind of feel this wash of gratitude of being really lucky.”

    On the subject of craft itself, Hawke was characteristically thoughtful, invoking his late friend Philip Seymour Hoffman. “You have to walk a razor’s edge of feeling like it’s the most important thing in the world,” he said, “and simultaneously treat it like it’s a game that is so much fun to play.” He also pointed to Uta Hagen’s “Respect for Acting” and Sidney Lumet’s “Making Movies” as touchstones, framing great performance less as inspiration than as disciplined, learnable trade.

    What will he take away from playing Hart? The eyes of his co-stars — Andrew Scott, Margaret Qualley and Robert Capelli Jr. — and, above all, Linklater’s steadying presence. “Rick’s unflagging friendship,” Hawke said. “That’s what I take away.”

  • 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)

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  • Meet the New Mets Roster, Beltrán & Jones Elected to the Hall of Fame and the Phillies Bring Back a Familiar Face

    Subscribe to Baseball Bar-B-Cast

    The New York Mets struck big last year when they reeled in Juan Soto from the Bronx to headline an eventful winter. However, after a disappointing 2025 campaign, the Amazin’s have been on a mission to retool this offseason, and thanks to David Stearns, they’ll go into 2026 with plenty of new faces and hope for success.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman talk about the retooled lineup that the Mets have assembled, which includes signing Bo Bichette and trading for Luis Robert Jr. from the Chicago White Sox. In addition to the signings of Devin Williams and Jorge Polanco, the new-look Mets are looking forward to a redemption season in 2026.

    Later, Jordan and Jake talk about Carlos Beltrán and Andruw Jones being elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame, why the Houston Astros cheating scandal caused Beltrán to have to wait and the improbable climb for Jones to make it into the Hall. Then the guys discuss the Philadelphia Phillies bringing J.T. Realmuto back to the City of Brotherly Love, Elly De La Cruz rejecting a big contract extension from the Cincinnati Reds and take a look at the LIDOM Championship Series.

    1:12 – The Opener: New-look Mets

    22:09 – Luis Robert Jr. trade

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    33:24 – Hall of Fame results

    54:26 – Around the League: Phillies re-sign Realmuto

    1:03:02 – Three-team trade

    1:06:47 – Elly turns down extension

    1:09:33 – LIDOM Championship Series

    Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images
Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images

    (Photo by Brandon Sloter/Getty Images Photo by Daniel Shirey/MLB Photos via Getty Images)

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  • 2026 Winter Olympics: Lindsey Vonn, Mikaela Shiffrin, Chloe Kim among those named to U.S. Ski & Snowboard team

    Team USA revealed its ski and snowboard roster for the 2026 Milan-Cortina Olympic Winter Games on Thursday.

    Leading figures include Olympic veterans Lindsey Vonn, Mikaela Shiffrin and Chloe Kim. Vonn, who won gold in the downhill at the 2010 Winter Olympics, returned to the sport in 2024 after retirement and a partial knee replacement. Three-time Olympian and two-time gold medalist in snowboard slopestyle Jamie Anderson was not on the 97-person list.

    Shiffrin, the most decorated Alpine skier, will compete in her fourth Olympics. Kim, a three-time Olympian, aims to be the first snowboarder to win a third straight gold in halfpipe.

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    “In many ways, making this team is even harder than the Olympics themselves,” snowboard program director Rick Bower explained in a statement. “The depth of our field is incredible, and selection truly came down to the wire.”

    On the men’s side, the U.S. team will be led by three-time Olympian and 2018 slopestyle gold medalist Red Gerard, snowboard cross racer Nick Baumgartner, and 17-year-old Alessandro Barbieri, who’s seen as a medal contender in halfpipe.

    Four-time Olympian Nick Goepper will head the freeski halfpipe squad, which also includes two-time Olympic medalist Alex Ferreira, Birk Irving and first-time Olympian Hunter Hess. Irving’s sister, Svea Irving, qualified for the women’s freeski halfpipe. Defending Olympic freeski slopestyle champ Alex Hall is also set to compete in his third Olympics.

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    Olympic champion and three-time cross-country skiing medalist Jesse Diggins will participate in her fourth and final Olympics. Chris Lillis is returning for the aerials team. He took gold at the 2022 Games.

    At the 2022 Beijing Games, skiers and snowboarders earned 15 of the 25 medals for Team USA. For the 2026 Winter Olympics, they’ll make up nearly half of all the athletes representing the U.S.

  • Mets Trade for Ace Freddy Peralta, Brewers Eye Future With New Prospects & Yankees Reunite With Cody Bellinger

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    When the New York Mets signed Bo Bichette and traded for Luis Robert Jr., many wondered if President of Baseball Ops David Stearns was finished making major moves this offseason. On Wednesday night though, Stearns had one more big surprise up his sleeve when he acquired someone from his past days in Milwaukee.

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    On this episode of Baseball Bar-B-Cast, Jake Mintz and Jordan Shusterman discuss the big trade that saw the Mets deal for Milwaukee Brewers ace Freddy Peralta and Tobias Myers in exchange for a package of top prospects Brandon Sproat and Jett Williams. With Peralta now headlining the Mets’ starting rotation, does this addition make them a World Series contender again? Also, how will the new additions to the Brew Crew’s prospect pipeline help them in the immediate future?

    Later, Jordan and Jake talk about the New York Yankees and Cody Bellinger reuniting after his impressive 2025 season in pinstripes on a five-year, $162.5 million contract. The move further solidifies the Yankees’ belief in their offense, essentially running it back from last season—but could Brian Cashman and company have one more front-page deal before Spring Training kicks off? The guys then close the show by making their picks for this week’s edition of The Good, The Bad & The Uggla.

    2:03 – The Opener: Freddy Peralta to the Mets

    29:43 – Jordan’s Prospect Hut: The Brewers’ return

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    38:28 – Yankees re-sign Cody Bellinger

    52:00 – Scott Boras Scoreboard update

    54:37 – The Good

    1:01:13 – The Bad

    1:06:44 – The Uggla

    Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images
Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

    Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images

    (Photo by Vincent Carchietta/Getty Images Photo by Vaughn Ridley/Getty Images)

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