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  • Olivia Munn Says Male Co-Star Refused to Film Scene Being Saved By Woman: “She Can’t Save Me”

    Olivia Munn Says Male Co-Star Refused to Film Scene Being Saved By Woman: “She Can’t Save Me”

    Olivia Munn is getting candid about her experience working with a difficult male co-star on a past project.

    During a recent appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show, the actress recalled an unnamed actor refusing to film a scene in which her female character saved his.

    “There have been a few times where I’ve been filming something — and my character was either like CIA, or a cop, or something — and there’s been scenes where my character has been the one to save the other character,” Munn explained.

    In this specific instance, the Your Friends & Neighbors star said they were filming a gunfight scene in an underground bunker.

    “If you read the script, it was that he was guarding his side, I was guarding my side, then we switch sides and then there’s a guy that was coming for him — was gonna shoot him in the back — so I shoot him,” Munn recounted. “And then we’re about to shoot and, somehow, I guess he didn’t read the script and in that moment, he realized, ‘Wait, wait, wait. Hold on. She can’t save me. No, no. She can’t save me.’”

    That’s when her co-star paused production and even got “combative with the director” over the scene. When reflecting on the incident and his behavior, she added, “There was no insecurity about being obnoxious and everyone hearing this and being like, ‘She can’t save me! We’re not doing this.’”

    After nearly an hour of back and forth, the X-Men: Apocalypse actress decided to interject with an idea.

    “Finally, after like 45 minutes of just stopping down, I said, ‘OK, how about instead of my character saving you, it’s just that we switch because it’s time for us to switch and so this is my guy to get,’” she said. “And he was like, ‘OK.’”

    However, Munn admitted to host Drew Barrymore‘s audience, drawing laughter and cheers from them, “Now here’s the interesting thing: nothing changed. It’s just what he thought. I was doing the exact same thing.”

    The actress has previously opened up about other negative experiences she’s had with men in Hollywood. Last year, Munn recalled a visiting Newsroom director giving her bad notes, which she didn’t take, and she later found out that he bad-mouthed her to keep her from getting another job. She still booked the role.

    During a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Munn opened up about what she’s learned from that experience and trying to stand up for herself in the industry.

    “It’s playing the game a bit more,” she said. “And I should be able to speak up for myself and I should be able to draw the line, but we cannot. I can’t change the world and I cannot change how women have been portrayed and received for however long we’ve been on earth. So I’ve realized that I’m going to handle this situation in a way that is going to be the best outcome for me.”

    Munn added, “I used to see so many other actors do it, and I’d think, ‘Why are you not taking the note? I can’t believe you’re being so indignant.’ Then I realized it’s a way to protect your art and your choices with a character. I hope I have helped more actresses learn this.”

  • ‘Abbott Elementary’ Shocker: Creator Quinta Brunson Explains That Relationship Twist

    [This article contains spoilers from episode 19 of season five of Abbott Elementary]

    Last Wednesday’s “April Fools” episode of Abbott Elementary was all fun and (stressful) pranks, but this week, there were noticeably fewer laughs between everyone’s favorite teacher couple at the school.

    Episode 19 of season five began with Gregory (Tyler James Williams) and Janine (Quinta Brunson) attempting to plan their first couple’s trip after moving in together earlier in the season, but differences over their individual philosophies around money and time quickly turned the process from pleasant to painstaking, with Gregory wanting to book an Airbnb and make an eight-hour trek in a car to the Outer Banks to save money and Janine preferring direct flights, a hotel and spa treatments.

    The pair initially decide to change their vacation destination to Atlantic City as a happy medium, but Janine later approaches Gregory during the workday with a compromise she deems “a bit more compromise-y,” telling him she went ahead and bought their flights to the Outer Banks herself since money was the issue. Gregory calls the purchase “a waste,” Janine says Atlantic City was a “cheap idea,” and the argument spills over into the couple’s home life, leading Janine to question how they can make their relationship work if they can’t even figure out a simple trip. Gregory says they won’t if they can’t get on the same page, and Janine responds by saying maybe the two should break up.

    Viewers don’t exactly know what happens next, as both Janine and Gregory are left stunned into silence. However, Jacob (Chris Perfetti) receiving a text from Janine the next day that sends him hurling into a garbage can in front of Mr. Johnson (William Stanford Davis) appears to be confirmation that the two did indeed split.

    Below, Brunson talks with The Hollywood Reporter about Janine and Gregory’s breakup, whether this could lead to any romantic developments with Dominic, the newest teacher at Abbott Elementary, played by Luke Tennie, and preparing to hit the 100-episode mark of Abbott with the recent news of the ABC sitcom’s season six renewal.

    ***

    My first question is quite broad: Why?

    (Laughs.) I’m sorry, that really cracked me up. I’m trying to get an answer together. Did you have more to that?

    Why a breakup… why now?

    Because no one saw it coming. I think that’s a great time to throw a stone at the settled earth. It was something I thought about from the beginning of this season. They’ve been in a relationship for a while now, and we’ve seen them be really great and go through the honeymoon phase, but I wanted to get under the surface a little bit about what could be going on with these characters and how, in relationships, things like this happen. We see it every day — couples who look kind of perfect from the outside. There can be things going on in that we don’t know about, that they discover within their relationship.

    A few episodes before this one, when Janine and Gregory were deciding to move in together, I thought for a second that could be their undoing, but then they compromised pretty well and got a new place together. How did you decide a trip would be the impetus for their separation?

    Because it was such a seemingly small thing. It felt like one of those things that can get so big, and you don’t even know why. We talked about this a lot in the room about relationships and past relationships, current relationships, how you never know. It could be this one little thing that leads you into an argument. I’m in my room, so I’m just looking around, but, for instance, if one person likes to sleep with the TV on and the other person doesn’t, this seems like a small thing, but before you know it, it could get really big and it’s like, “wait, why are we fighting right now?” This small thing was actually a catalyst for possibly some larger discussions that need to happen between two people who are trying to spend a lot of time with each other and possibly their lives together.

    To that point, I wondered if, when Janine says, “Well, maybe we should break up,” did she really mean that?

    From watching, you can see that she surprised herself. I’m not going to say whether she means it or not, but I think she surprised herself in saying it and wonders if she means it. But when she doesn’t hear anything from Gregory, it makes her feel like, “Whoah, okay.” I think she was sitting there waiting for a protest, but didn’t get one, which reinforced the fear that maybe it’s true. Maybe we shouldn’t [be together].

    Were there any other scenarios you considered instead of the trip possibly leading to a breakup between them?

    I don’t remember. We landed on this, and I liked it. We probably kicked pitches around, because at that point we talked about this episode coming sooner. But this was the one [concept] I liked the most. It felt small enough and big enough at the same time.

    Having talked about introducing this moment earlier, how did you decide where to place the breakup in the season?

    Sometimes in network TV, it’s a balancing act when it comes to what your show actually is about. Abbott is a show about teachers in a public school going through situations and making it happen every day for their students, and we want to stick to that engine. That’s the engine that makes the show go. And there’s also a balance of, “I can’t hold you when you can get locations, when you can get guest cast, when you can get how many days you have to shoot.” All of this is a part of the production process. Also, scheduling. We were affected by a lot of scheduling this year.

    The Olympics were on; that pushes network TV to have an interesting schedule. I also didn’t want this to happen at a time when we were then going to be off the air for three weeks. And I didn’t want to come back to this either because that didn’t feel fun to come back with this story. I wanted to have some fun first. I can’t say enough of the real balancing act of figuring out when and where stories should come, and this felt like too big a one to be haphazard with and I didn’t want it to last. For instance, if this was going on since episode eight, I don’t think people would be having a good time right now.

    Yeah, we wouldn’t.

    Clearly. Your energy is so funny on the other end of the phone. I’m cracking up. You’re not happy with me.

    I’m just invested. That’s all.

    Okay. I love it.

    What can you tell us about episode 20? The title is “Night Out” which could go a lot of different ways after a breakup.

    One thing that’s going to happen is we’re going to revisit one of the iconic locations of the show, which I think is really fun. It was fun for me anyway, and for us telling the story. You’re going to see some very different sides of many of our characters, not just Janine and Gregory. I hope people enjoy it. I hope they just have fun. Let’s just have fun, guys. Right?

    Well, speaking of fun, the unanimous opinion online is that last week’s April Fool’s Day episode was fantastic. Did you see the uproar over the April Fool’s joke on social media about Janelle James not returning?

    I did. First of all, I hate it because I hate pranks. I’m actually very much Gregory in the show. I don’t enjoy pranks. But the fact that people were so upset by it is just a testament to how important Janelle is to this show. Nobody would ever want to see that. And everyone who was tricked by it, was, rightfully so, upset as they should be. That is not happening. But it just goes to show you how much people love the character of Ava. And I agree with everyone. Ava is highly important to this show, just like everyone is in my eyes. They’re all my children. It was a hoot. I’ll say that.

    We don’t know how Janine will navigate singleness from this point on, but on a scale of one to 10, what are the odds of her getting back with Tariq [Zack Fox]?

    Oh, my goodness. That’s crazy. But hey, with Janine, I would say a five. You never know sometimes with that girl.

    I’m also curious about Dominic. Could there be anything romantic there, and will we see him again before the end of the season?

    You will see Dominic again before the end of the season. We absolutely adore having Luke Tennie. He is wonderful. He’s the hardest-working man in show business right now. The boy is everywhere. It was so funny when he first showed up, he was like, “Yeah, I’m on The Pitt too,” and I was like, “Damn, you really are working.” But what’s great is he deserves it. He’s so fantastic, just an absolute joy to work with. And I’m so happy that he is getting nothing but more exposure in this industry, so you will see him again. That’s all I’ll say, you’ll see him again.

    How did Luke come to be on the show?

    What’s crazy is we wrote the character of Dominic, and Luke auditioned, and the minute I saw his face, I barely needed to look at the audition tape. I was already a huge fan of him on Shrinking. I knew that he would have what it took to pull this role off. He’s incredible to me. I opened his audition tape and was like, “Yeah, I don’t even know why I opened this.”

    You mentioned the show being an engine, which is something you told THR in the past, that it’s “always been your goal to just maintain an engine that keeps rolling and keeps providing a high-quality comfort sitcom.” Has coming up with fresh, new ideas gotten harder five seasons in, or do you feel like you have more possibilities now?

    I think season five felt more like, “Okay, we’ve built a lot over four seasons.” And I felt like it was safe to say that we were going to get a season six, so it felt like, “How do we not pack everything into season five and save some good for season six?” I got a lot of good stuff that I want to do, stories to tell, but we’ve got to stretch this out because 22 episodes is a lot, and I want to save some good for down the line. So that’s what got hard. What stories do we want to tell this season, and what stories do we want to tell the following season?

    That’s a good problem to have.

    It is. I’m very grateful for that problem.

    The season six renewal news is now public, and that will put you at the 100-episode mark. How do you feel, and are you already thinking about how you might commemorate that moment?

    Oh man, I’m going to be so happy. We’re going to do a cake. That’s the only thing I can think of right now, is the cake. I don’t know why I don’t have any other thoughts, but the cake is really exciting to me. I’m probably not even going to eat it. I just want to see the 100-episode cake.

    ***

    Abbott Elementary airs new episodes Wednesdays at 8:30 p.m. on ABC.

  • 3 things to watch in Clippers-Thunder on League Pass

    3 things to watch in Clippers-Thunder on League Pass

    Shai Gilgeous-Alexander posted 32 points in a 122-101 win over the Clippers on Dec. 18.

    The LA Clippers (41-38) host the Oklahoma City Thunder (63-16) at Intuit Dome on Wednesday. The Thunder have won both games over the Clippers this season, and seven straight in this series. Both of those victories were by at least 19 points apiece. 

    Here are three key storylines to know heading into today’s matchup.


    1. Thunder eyeing best record in NBA…again: Oklahoma City had the best record in the NBA last season and rewarded its fans with their first title. That’s what the Thunder are looking to achieve this season, and they’re only one win away from securing the best record in the league and home-court advantage throughout the postseason.

    Oklahoma City is just shy of its 68 wins from last season, but it’s headed into the playoffs with some serious momentum. The Thunder have won 17 of their last 18 outings, have only lost two games since Feb. 13 to the Detroit Pistons and Boston Celtics and they are a remarkable 40-9 against the Western Conference this season. To put into perspective how dominant they’ve been, OKC ranks top 5 in points scored, field goal percentage, free throw percentage, turnovers, blocked shots, defensive efficiency and net rating. 

    2. The Clippers historic turnaround: The fact that the Clippers are guaranteed to finish .500 or better is astounding when you consider how far they’ve come. LA was 6-21 on Dec. 19, but they’ve posted a 35-17 record since then. Kawhi Leonard has performed at an All-NBA level all year, averaging 28 ppg, 6.3 rpg, 3.6 apg and 1.9 spg. Darius Garland has also been massive since the James Harden trade, averaging 21.5 ppg, 2.2 rpg, 6.7 apg and 1.2 spg since entering the starting lineup on March 7. The duo will have to carry them throughout the SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament, which LA is poised to participate in next week. 

    3. A potential first round preview: If the season ended today, the Thunder would hold the No. 1 seed in the West and face the No. 8 seed that emerged from the SoFi NBA Play-In Tournament. Meanwhile, the Clippers at No. 8 would have a chance to avoid OKC by winning its first Play-In game (No. 7 vs. No. 8) to earn the No. 7 seed in the playoffs. But if LA lost its opening game, it would be in a single-elimination game for the No. 8 seed and a first-round matchup with the defending champion Thunder.

  • NBA Fantasy: Best picks by round for 2025-26

    NBA Fantasy: Best picks by round for 2025-26

    The Hawks’ Jalen Johnson outperformed his ADP by one round in 9-cat and two rounds in High Score.

    If you nailed your fantasy basketball draft, you probably landed at least one of the players below. We’re talking the players who either met or greatly exceeded their draft slot. It’s the offseason for the vast majority of fantasy hoops leagues, so let’s reflect on the single best pick from each round, based on Yahoo ADP.


    Round 1

    Best Pick: Shai Gilgeous-Alexander (ADP: 3.8)

    The first round was riddled with injuries, so I picked SGA. Gilgeous-Alexander appeared on 27.6% of Yahoo’s top-500 public leagues, signaling you likely had a contending team if you rostered him. Despite missing 10 games around the All-Star break, he returned in March for the fantasy playoffs and finished the season ranked third overall in 9-cat and fourth in High Score. He played more games than any other first-round pick, proving his reliability.


    Round 2

    Best Pick: Tyrese Maxey (ADP: 18.1)

    Maxey delivered first-round value most of the season, finishing top-five in 9-cat and top-seven in High Score. He hit career highs in six of nine categories and ranked as the fifth-most rostered player on Yahoo’s top-500 teams. As the Sixers’ leader, Maxey is on track to be a top-12 pick next season.


    Round 3

    Best Pick: Jalen Johnson (ADP: 24.9)

    Johnson played at a first-round level for much of the season, making a huge leap as a passer with a career-best 8.0 assists per game. He finished with 13 triple-doubles, tied for second-most this season with Josh Giddey. Johnson’s versatility and improved offense made him a game-changer, outperforming his ADP by one round in 9-cat and two in High Score.


    Round 4

    Best Pick: Jamal Murray (ADP: 36.5)

    Murray finally earned his first All-Star bid after a phenomenal season in which he played over 70 games, posting career-best marks in scoring, assists, FG% and 3s per game. His spike performances of 50 and 40-plus point efforts swung matchups, but his consistency stood out from what we’ve seen in past seasons. Murray exceeded expectations by a considerable margin, ranking 15th in High Score and closing out 9-cat formats as the 10th-best player on a per-game basis.


    Round 5

    Best Pick: Kawhi Leonard (ADP: 45.9)

    I told you to fade Kawhi — my mistake. Few expected him to return to his 2019 form, play back-to-backs and produce at this level. He did it all for the Clippers and nearly hit 50/40/90 shooting splits. Leonard became one of the best value picks after finishing top-five in 9-cat and top-15 in High Score. Board man got paid — and so did his fantasy managers.


    Round 6

    Best Pick: Jalen Duren (ADP: 56.9)

    Duren’s growth as a scorer raised his fantasy stock. He increased his field-goal attempts, improved his FT shooting and became one of the most efficient big men near the rim this season. He’s elevated his bag offensively from far more than an effective pick-and-roll guy into a player who can operate in the post and get to different spots with ease using his size and physicality. The sixth-round ADP was always too light, and while I’d like to see more opportunities with him as a creator/playmaker, we haven’t seen what his ceiling looks like. I think he’s the modern-day Chris Webber. Time will tell, but he was a beast this season.


    Round 7

    Best Pick: Julius Randle (ADP: 63.4)

    I was between Brandon Ingram and Randle here. Ingram had a strong bounce-back campaign where everyone essentially wrote him off, but I went with Randle because he ranked higher in 9-cat and High Score by season’s end. Randle was quietly very good the entire year, averaging 21-7-5 with 1 steal per game on 48% shooting from the field. In an era where rest is expected, Randle has played in every game thus far. He’s only three games away from playing in all 82, which would be the second time in his career that he’s accomplished that feat. Randle finished a tad higher than his ADP in 9-cat, but in High Score, he finished as a top-40 player.


    Round 8

    Best Pick: OG Anunoby (ADP: 71.2)

    Anunoby anchored the Knicks and fantasy teams in 9-cat, finishing 32nd — four rounds ahead of his draft spot. He offers strong all-around value, with efficient stats and a balance of offensive and defensive contributions. He’s better for 9-cat, as his under-20 ppg and low assists aren’t as valuable in High Score, where he ranked 83rd.


    Round 9

    Best Pick: Donovan Clingan (ADP: 88.9)

    Cling-kong was a dud in Week 23 (speaking from experience). Still, Clingan improved as a sophomore. He played more minutes (27 per game), averaged a double-double (12.1 points, 11.6 rebounds), led the league in offensive rebounds (4.5) and ranked fifth in blocks (1.7). He even attempted three 3-pointers a game. He finished 77th in High Score, averaging 34.8 fantasy points. In 9-cat? A top-50 option. Solid!


    Round 10

    Best Pick: Onyeka Okongwu (ADP: 98.8)

    Okongwu was another quiet beast who surpassed market expectations. For Okongwu to be one of the final picks of the 10th round is pretty wild considering his competition early in the season was Kristaps Porziņģis, who barely played this season and was eventually dealt. Okongwu’s a fixture of this new-look Hawks team and fits very well with fantasy managers seeking a balanced, well-refined player. He’s great for roto and 9-cat because he’s both efficient and doesn’t hurt you across categories. A low turnover rate, hits 3s, gets stocks, gives you 15 points a night with a solid 7 boards and a few assists. What more can you ask for?! Okongwu finished the year 37th in 9-cat and 74th in High Score. An all-around great season for the big man who finally got a chance to cook.

  • The Athletic: OG Anunoby, Derrick White highlight All-Perimeter Defense First Team

    The Athletic: OG Anunoby, Derrick White highlight All-Perimeter Defense First Team

    OG Anunoby leads this season’s All-Perimeter-Defense First Team.

    Editor’s Note: Read more NBA coverage from The Athletic here. The views on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of the NBA or its teams. 

    ***

    OG Anunoby could tell the future.

    No, the New York Knicks’ all-defensive wing didn’t know a pass would drift into his hands. He didn’t predict the exact fashion of yet another steal or the fast break that followed. But he could detect where the Denver Nuggets were heading next.

    Clairvoyance came during an early-March decimation of the Nuggets. As Nikola Jokić walked up the court, directing his teammates, Anunoby picked him up. The three-time MVP stood upright, pointing at cutters. But Anunoby was already in his chest — because he understood what was about to happen.

    The Nuggets run this play often.

    “He wants to catch (at the top of the key),” Anunoby explained in a recent conversation with The Athletic. “And then, it’s a back screen action or (dribble handoff).”

    The trick, as Anunoby puts it, is to “get him early.” Jokić has four inches and more than 40 pounds on him. But Anunoby is used to defending all types of players, one of the many reasons he headlines my All-Perimeter-Defense First Team. The Second Team was published last week.

    In this game, alone, he guarded Jokić, high-flying forward Aaron Gordon, spot-up threat Cameron Johnson and 6-foot-4 everything-player Bruce Brown. When the Knicks played the Nuggets at Madison Square Garden earlier in the season, he was the primary defender on All-NBA probable Jamal Murray, a quick-twitch point guard with sweet shooting touch.

    People talk often about players who can guard all five positions, but usually those comments are in reference to guys who switch onto any type of player — not who will begin possessions on an All-NBA behemoth like Jokić and also an All-Star guard like Murray.

    Such is why the Knicks chose to build their defense, which has risen into the NBA’s top 10 and has ranked second in points allowed per possession over the past two-and-a-half months, around their perimeter stopper.

    Beyond the tools, Anunoby is studious enough to anticipate without getting too risky. On this play, because he was in Jokić’s chest, the pass couldn’t come to the top of the key. He knows a screen from Christian Braun will follow.

    “I see it’s coming, and I know I’m not gonna switch it,” he said. “I’m just gonna get around that.”

    So, he jukes around Braun, a necessary move with the tinier Jalen Brunson in the action, then gets even more physical with Jokić.

    This is one of Anunoby’s staples, the way he “fronts” larger post players, cutting off passing lanes but also disallowing an over-the-top lob. When guys are far from the hoop, such as Jokić is here, he’ll shove them toward the sideline. He successfully pulls off the same strategy when he mans former MVP Joel Embiid.

    “It’s really just getting low, pushing him out with my legs,” Anunoby said. “Being strong, pushing him out but keeping on his body so he doesn’t spin out or anything.”

    The supposed mismatch is too enticing for the Nuggets. Brown tries to wedge a pass into Jokić, who never touches the basketball. And Anunoby recovers one of his many steals.

    With the NBA’s actual All-Defensive teams no longer including positions and thus filling up with a disproportionate number of centers, it’s time to give the wings and guards their proper appreciation.

    Anunoby leads this season’s All-Perimeter-Defense First Team. Here are the other four players:

    Derrick White, Guard, Boston Celtics

    White has one mission whenever he meets a potential scorer at the basket.

    “I just try not to foul,” he said in an interview with The Athletic.

    At only 6-foot-4, White is the NBA’s shortest rim-protector, someone who the Celtics have used in a new way this season — and with roaring success.

    Never before has White defended dribblers so little. Instead, Boston stations him away from the basketball, the keeper of the weak side, free to flick away passes, kill screening actions with switches and, somehow, block shots. Now, it’s as if he’s the guard version of prime Giannis Antetokounmpo.

    White is averaging 1.3 blocks a game. When the season closes this weekend, he will become the only the second player of his height in history, joining Dwyane Wade, to do so. But he doesn’t just get a hand on the ball.

    He swats shots in transition, speeding from the rearview to slap away finger rolls. He slides over as a helper, sprawling upward with two hands straight in the air, as if he believes himself to be Rudy Gobert. Opposing players are shooting just 55 percent on dunks and layups when White is the nearest defender, 13th in the NBA and first among guards by a landslide, according to Second Spectrum.

    “Sometimes, you kinda panic, and you either foul or get out of the way,” White said. “You don’t (want that). My timing is pretty good. Just a little bit of both of that combines to hopefully them missing more than they make.”

    Of the 26 qualifying players with a block rate as high as White’s this season, no one spent less time in foul trouble, according to Bball-Index. But sometimes, White will take a risk. Often, it will pay off, such as on this stampede he halted a month ago.

    The thwarting of the Charlotte Hornets, one of the NBA’s fastest squads, is the quintessential White play. Naturally, White is the first player back on defense. He stays equidistant from Hornets forward Miles Bridges and center Moussa Diabate. After the pass comes to Bridges, who detonates passersby at the basket regularly, White goes straight up, though with a little more oomph than usual.

    “Just be in the right position,” White said. “Sometimes, you get lucky.”

    Of course, this was more than good fortune.

    Bridges contorts his body, and jacks up an errant layup, but the play isn’t done there.

    Look how quickly White goes from defending the rim to searching for the next open Hornets player. The closeout on LaMelo Ball, as confident a shooter as exists, is classic White, too.

    Underrated is White’s ability to slow down quickly, a skill that makes him an elite shot-contester. In a moment, he’s sprinting at Ball. In another, he’s stutter-stepping without actually running into the shooter. He stops just short of Ball, who thinks twice about the jumper before launching a difficult 3-pointer, which falls short.

    White doesn’t technically block a shot. He doesn’t force a steal. But in just five seconds, he takes away what should have been an easy layup and then what should have been a smooth triple.

    The Celtics defense is 10.3 points per 100 possessions better when he’s on the court, according to Cleaning the Glass.

    Scottie Barnes, Forward, Toronto Raptors

    Most defenders, even great ones, need to approach the basketball to make an impact.

    Not Barnes.

    The fifth-year forward was a questionable member of the All-Perimeter-Defense team only because of his versatility. When the Raptors lost starting center Jakob Poeltl for a long stretch this season, they went small. In those times, Barnes would often line up against big men. Did he really qualify as a perimeter player this season?

    The answer: Yes, he did. It’s not Barnes’ fault that, like Anunoby, he can guard everyone. After all, the Raptors constructed their defense around that concept.

    Toronto’s goal is to string along offenses late into possessions, when the Raptors don’t have time to run second actions or create open shots. Their opponents average 15.1 seconds per possession, the slowest pace in the league this season, per Second Spectrum. They get there by switching nonstop.

    No one does it better than Barnes — and not just because of his diverse physical tools. His communication is on another level, too.

    Take this seemingly mundane possession from a mid-March game against the Phoenix Suns. It might appear as if nothing happens, a quick pick-and-roll from Jalen Green, which leads to a turnover. But look closer, and you’ll find Barnes’ savviness.

    He begins the possession on Suns guard Jordan Goodwin. Immanuel Quickley is on Collin Gillespie. RJ Barrett takes Green, who starts a pick-and-roll that Barnes recognizes immediately as unconventional.

    The Suns are about to stagger two screens, one from Gillespie and a second from Goodwin. Barnes knows it’s best to keep smalls defending their peers. So, he calls for what some teams call a “triple switch,” switching with the other screener’s defender before Goodwin gets to Green, keeping Barnes out of the action altogether.

    The Raptors, Barnes especially, have excelled on these types of switches all year.

    Barnes’ highlights around the basketball are obvious. He’s pulled off more game-winning stops than anyone else in the league in 2025-26. Clutch Player of the Year tends to go to whichever guy leads the NBA in points per minute at the ends of tight games. Maybe the sheer number of victory-clinching blocks Barnes has committed this season should place him in the conversation, too.

    He’s averaging 1.5 swats and 1.5 steals on the year, which no one has done in tandem since Anthony Davis in 2019-20. He’s an elite retriever of the basketball. But on the above play, the Suns cough it up, even though Barnes isn’t anywhere near.

    With 20 seconds on the shot clock, you can see him directing his teammates. Like Anunoby in the Jokić play, he too knows what’s coming.

    Quickley and Barrett then switch defenders when Goodwin screens for Green. Barnes drifts to the corner with his new man, Gillespie. Green makes no progress.

    It’s seven wasted for the Suns — until Quickley pokes the ball loose and causes a turnover, which happens across the court from the man who helped create it.

    Ausar Thompson, Wing, Detroit Pistons

    More than one call irked Thompson.

    Not even three minutes into his first-ever playoff game in 2025, the feisty up-and-comer picked up his first postseason foul. This one came on an innocent prod at the basketball, a tap that occurred a solid 85 feet away from the hoop on which his assignment, Jalen Brunson, hoped to score.

    Thompson tried to pressure Brunson for the rest of the series, which ended in the Pistons’ defeat. Sometimes, he made him uncomfortable. Other times, he reached.

    “I didn’t think they were fouls,” Thompson said.

    But that didn’t change his summer routine.

    He worked on his ball-pressure after the Pistons fell in that first-round series, hoping he could learn to keep his hand out of the cookie jar. Thompson’s fouls were a problem last season. That needed to change.

    Now, it has.

    “I haven’t got as many fouls (this season),” Thompson said before smirking and keeping himself in check. “So, I guess I was fouling.”

    The foul rate has tempered to a career low without any of Thompson’s patented aggression falling by the wayside.

    He still presses anyone who can dribble. He leads the NBA in steals and deflections per game. He is second in the league in Bball-Index’s ball-screen navigation analytic and fourth in its off-ball chasing one. Only one other player even sniffs the top 10 in both stats: his twin brother, Amen, a member of the All-Perimeter-Defense Second Team.

    Detroit’s defense, which ranks second in points allowed per possession, builds from the inside out. Its big men bully guys down low. But its perimeter defenders shove opponents around, too. And that starts with Thompson, who is only getting better.

    Cason Wallace, Guard, Oklahoma City Thunder

    There is no evidence of Wallace saying please. Only of his theft.

    He fits right in with the Thunder.

    Wallace is Oklahoma City’s version of White, a gutsy guard capable of guarding the ball, yet who makes most of his impact away from it. The Thunder will suffocate anyone they face. Lu Dort mans the other team’s best player most often. Alex Caruso, who may be the best defensive guard in the sport but doesn’t play enough to qualify for the 65-game rule (and thus, is not on either All-Perimeter-Defense team), wreaks havoc. The rest of the crew follows suit.

    So, Wallace disrupts passing lanes in a way that most people his size cannot.

    He’s in a virtual tie with Thompson, a 6-foot-7 wing, for the league lead in deflections per game, even though he’s four inches shorter. He’s right there with Thompson in steals, too.

    If Wallace were on any other team, he would be its on-ball hound. And he would make even more plays like the one below, where he picks Anthony Edwards’ pocket.

    Of course, Wallace already rips the ball away from dribblers more than anyone else.

    Seventy-six of his steals this season have come while defending the basketball, the most in the NBA, according to Second Spectrum. Many of those are in the backcourt, results of his 94-foot pressure.

    His most recent victim was the Utah Jazz’s Kennedy Chandler, who received a hasty inbounds pass with 2.3 seconds to go in a quarter, only for Wallace to meet him in a defensive stance, swipe the rock away and splash in a buzzer-beating floater. He’s robbed dribblers in the backcourt eight times just since the start of February. And he’s never said thank you, either.

    ***

    Fred Katz is a senior NBA writer for The Athletic. Follow Fred on Twitter @FredKatz

  • Partner of Trump-Backed World Liberty Linked to Sanctioned Cambodian Scam Company: Report

    Partner of Trump-Backed World Liberty Linked to Sanctioned Cambodian Scam Company: Report

    In brief

    • An OCCRP investigation linked the AB network project to individuals later sanctioned over alleged scam operations.
    • World Liberty Financial said it conducted due diligence and denies any association with sanctioned figures.
    • U.S. data shows online scams surged in 2025, with nearly $21 billion lost.

    A company partnered with World Liberty Financial—the crypto project backed by President Donald Trump—has been linked to individuals connected to a sanctioned Cambodian conglomerate accused of running global scam operations, according to an investigation published Monday by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project and Guardian Australia.

    The investigation found that a planned “blockchain theme resort” in Timor-Leste tied to the partner, AB network, involved three individuals who were later sanctioned by the U.S. Treasury as part of a crackdown on the Cambodia-based Prince Group. The project, promoted as a luxury destination for cryptocurrency innovators, was backed by a local development company established with $10 million in capital.

    Corporate records show that the majority shareholder of the development company was Yang Jian, a Cyprus-based businessman sanctioned in October for allegedly working with Prince Group CEO Chen Zhi on a separate resort project described by U.S. authorities as a “predatory investment.”

    The three sanctioned individuals were removed from the Timor-Leste project shortly after the sanctions were announced, and there is no evidence that illicit funds flowed into the development, or that AB network is directly connected to the Prince Group.

    The AB network announced its partnership with World Liberty Financial in November, granting it the right to use the company’s U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin USD1 on its blockchain. The collaboration followed a series of high-profile announcements by AB, which has promoted ties to global political figures and listed former world leaders among advisers to its Irish-registered nonprofit arm.

    World Liberty Financial, founded in 2024 by partners including companies affiliated with the Trump and Witkoff families, said it had carried out due diligence on AB and was not made aware of the resort, or of individuals linked to the Timor-Leste project. Lawyers for the company told investigators it is “committed to responsible practices and compliance” and said claims of links to sanctioned figures are “unfounded and untrue.”

    According to the FBI’s 2025 Internet Crime Report, Americans alone lost nearly $21 billion to online scams last year, with more than 1 million complaints filed. Cryptocurrency-related fraud accounted for the largest share of losses, totaling more than $11 billion across 181,565 complaints.

    The Prince Group, a Cambodia-based conglomerate led by Chen Zhi, has been accused by U.S. authorities of operating one of the world’s largest online scam networks, allegedly generating tens of billions of dollars annually through fraud schemes run out of compounds across Southeast Asia.

    The U.S. government last year seized $15 billion worth of Bitcoin from Chen in what it described as its largest forfeiture action against online scammers. The company has denied wrongdoing. Cambodian authorities arrested and then extradited Chen to China in January.

    The AB network’s corporate structure has remained opaque. It describes itself as a decentralized ecosystem comprising an Irish nonprofit, a Cayman Islands foundation, and blockchain-based entities governed by token holders. The OCCRP‘s reporting identified two previously undisclosed figures—software developer Sui Chenggang and entrepreneur Lin Xiaofan—as key actors within the network.

    Lin, who said he played a leading role in the Timor-Leste resort project, denied any connection to the Prince Group. He also said he introduced Sui to World Liberty executives.

    Promotional material for the Timor-Leste development was removed from AB’s websites after OCCRP reporters began making inquiries. Lin said the project remains active but that AB is no longer involved, and provided documentation showing the partnership was terminated in November.

    Despite distancing itself from the sanctioned individuals, AB continues to promote its partnership with World Liberty Financial and its network of political advisers. The collaboration has so far produced limited uptake of World Liberty’s stablecoin on AB’s blockchain, with a max total supply of around $3.6 million and just over 3,000 holders.

    World Liberty Financial did not respond to additional requests for comment.

    Editor’s note: This story was updated after publication to move up context about the partnership.

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  • Potential Insiders Made $600K Predicting US and Iran Ceasefire on Polymarket: Bubblemaps

    Potential Insiders Made $600K Predicting US and Iran Ceasefire on Polymarket: Bubblemaps

    In brief

    • A group of accounts made more than $600,000 on Polymarket on trades related to the U.S./Iran ceasefire.
    • The accounts belong to a cluster identified by on-chain analytics firm Bubblemaps, which has previously profited on contracts related to military operations.
    • Prediction markets have come under scrutiny this year thanks to allegations of insider trading on the platforms.

    A group of suspected insiders scored big on Polymarket on Tuesday, profiting more than $600,000 in combined trading contracts related to the U.S. and Iran ceasefire, according to on-chain analytics firm Bubblemaps. 

    Accounts belonging to the cluster, a trio of which were active in the ceasefire markets, profited even more on markets related to Israeli and U.S. strikes on Iran in late February, Bubblemaps reported, raking in $1.2 million largely on the back of timely strike bets. 

    “This cluster has been betting and winning on military markets since 2024 using multiple  accounts, some recently created, some older,” a representative for Bubblemaps told Decrypt, adding that the accounts “predicted multiple independent surprise military operations.” 

    Polymarket accounts now named “djijaij83jdo4jdlwjflsg,” “Elonfax89678,” and “Skoobidoobnj,” have been identified by Bubblemaps as belonging to the profitable cluster, collectively notching around $611,000 on Tuesday upon Trump’s conditional ceasefire announcement.

    Those profits largely came via markets that had the ceasefire taking place prior to April 7 and April 15. However, the accounts did not hit on all their wagers, collectively losing just shy of $50,000 on trades regarding a ceasefire prior to March 31. 

    While the wager size is large, Bubblemaps says that it doesn’t necessarily point to the accounts having privileged information about the actions. 

    “People can only wager the capital they have. We don’t know the income or net worth of individuals trading on Polymarket,” a representative for the firm told Decrypt. “We can only definitively say that these bets were large and well-timed.” 

    The firm also stated publicly that it cannot say for certain the Polymarket accounts in question belong to insiders. 

    “Their win rate on ceasefires is not perfect, and some positions, such as March 31, did not play out,” it posted on X. “Still, their track record of correctly calling surprise attacks on Iran suggests they may have access to better information than most.” 

    Alleged insider trading on prediction markets has drawn tremendous scrutiny of late, particularly as it relates to potential insiders within the Trump administration. 

    For example, recently California Governor Gavin Newsom alleged that “Trump’s Washington is riddled with ethical failures and insider profiteering,” ultimately signing an executive order that banned political appointees and those associated with them from profiting on prediction markets with inside information.

    The prediction market platforms themselves have been active in trying to deter the act, as well. Polymarket and Kalshi both made moves last month to improve their response to insider trading behaviors, with the latter implementing preemptive screening that would proactively ban politicians from trading on markets related to them. 

    In January, well-timed bets on the ousting of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro triggered scrutiny when a trader profited more than $430,000 on Polymarket. Shortly thereafter, two Israelis were arrested and charged with using military secrets to trade and notch profits on the platform. 

    Last month, Kalshi fined and suspended a video editor for YouTube personality MrBeast, who used inside information to profit on markets. The editor was later fired by Beast Industries, following an internal investigation.

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  • Social media influencer Cash Cartier gets 40 years for girlfriend’s death he blamed on dog

    Social media influencer Cash Cartier gets 40 years for girlfriend’s death he blamed on dog

    A Texas influencer who tried to convince authorities his dog was responsible for his girlfriend’s death has been sentenced to decades behind bars in connection with her death.

    Kaleb Mickens, known online as “Cash Cartier,” confessed to assaulting and drugging his girlfriend, Sheila Cuevas, who died from the attack on Oct. 8, 2023, the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office announced Tuesday. He was sentenced to 40 years in prison after pleading guilty to first-degree aggravated assault family violence.

    Mickens was also hit with another 20 years on a probation revocation for an aggravated assault causing serious bodily Injury, as well as 15 years for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in Dallas County.

    On the day of Cuevas’ death, 34-year-old Mickens called 911, telling dispatchers she was unresponsive after being attacked by his dog, Soldier.

    “The dog was taken and euthanized by animal control but later determined by animal control to have nothing to do with Ms. Cuevas’ injuries and death,” the DA said, per the release.

    Mickens, a prominent figure in the Multi-Level Market, IM Academy, used his wealth and status to manipulate men and women into joining his “training team,” promising them that participants regularly make thousands of dollars. Prosecutors said he relied on a his pristine online persona to hide “his very violent private persona.”

    At his peak, Mickens was making around $20,000 a week, according to Fox 4, though his income had declined significantly by the time of Cuevas’ death.

    “In a full courtroom Monday, several women delivered impact statements that included details of torment, torture, manipulation, and sexual assault,” the release read. “Each shared their message of survival and personal devastation that Ms. Cuevas did not survive.”

  • Is Your Windows 11 Start Menu Search Broken? Microsoft Is Rolling Out a Fix

    Is Your Windows 11 Start Menu Search Broken? Microsoft Is Rolling Out a Fix

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  • L.A. Drug Linchpin Who Sold Matthew Perry Ketamine Sentenced to 15 Years

    L.A. Drug Linchpin Who Sold Matthew Perry Ketamine Sentenced to 15 Years

    The North Hollywood drug linchpin who pleaded guilty to selling the ketamine that killed Matthew Perry was sentenced on Wednesday to 15 years in prison.

    With the sentencing, Jasveen Sangha became the third defendant of the five people who’ve pleaded guilty in connection with Perry’s death to be issued time in prison. She’s the only one whose plea deal included an explicit acknowledgment of causing the overdose.

    For years, Sangha operated a drug trafficking business out of her Los Angeles home, marketing herself as an exclusive dealer who catered to high-profile Hollywood clientele. According to court documents, she learned in 2023 that Perry was interested in ketamine through an acquaintance of the actor’s personal assistant. She offered a sample, later supplying 50 vials, one of which killed Perry.

    After she heard of the overdose, Sangha moved to destroy evidence of her involvement in the crime, prosecutors said. She told a coconspirator to “delete all our messages,” according to court filings.

    Prosecutors painted Sanga as an unrepentant drug trafficker who “didn’t care” about Perry’s death and “kept selling” even after discovering the ketamine she supplied the actor may have killed him. They stressed that she sold drugs to another man, Cody McLaury, in 2019 that also caused his death. When law enforcement raided her house, they discovered more than 1.5 kilograms of pressed methamphetamine pills.

    In court filings, Sanga pushed back no her portrayal as a large-scale drug dealer and that she didn’t cause the chain of events that ultimately killed Perry. She emphasized that she simply obtained ketamine from an upstream source and resold it.

    Sanga pleaded guilty last year to five federal charges connected with Perry’s death: three counts of distribution of ketamine; one count of distribution of ketamine resulting in death; and one count of maintaining a drug-involved premises.

    U.S. District Judge Sherilyn Peace, who delivered the sentence, complied with the government’s request to issue a sentence of 15 years followed by three years of supervised release. Sangha faced a potential sentence of up to 65 years in prison.

    Debbie Perry, the actor’s stepmother, urged the court in a victim impact statement to deliver the maximum possible prison sentence. She wrote that Jasveen caused the pain of “hundreds maybe thousands” that is “irreversible.” She added, “There is no joy” and “no light in the window.”

    Last year, Salvador Plasencia, the doctor who pleaded guilty to charges related to supplying Perry with 20 vials of ketamine over two weeks in the period directly leading up to Perry’s death, was sentenced to 30 months in prison. Mark Chavez, who operated a ketamine clinic and sold the drug to Plasencia, was sentenced to three years of probation and eight months of home detention.