ICE has invested another $600 million into Polymarket, fulfilling its commitment made in October.
Rival Kalshi recently raised $1 billion at a $22 billion valuation, outpacing Polymarket’s current valuation.
Prediction markets face mounting regulatory pressure, with lawmakers moving to ban insider trading on the platforms.
New York Stock Exchange parent company Intercontinental Exchange has completed its investment into prominent prediction market platform Polymarket, with the final total landing at $1.6 billion.
ICE said the new funding is part of an equity capital fundraising by Polymarket, and that the firm intends to purchase up to $40 million worth of Polymarket securities from existing holders.
The NYSE parent company made a commitment of up to $2 billion to Polymarket in October 2025 that valued the company at $9 billion. Back then, the company made a $1 billion initial investment. The additional $600 million and the plan to purchase securities from existing investors mean that the firm’s obligations to Polymarket have now been fulfilled.
Polymarket has been locked in a heated competition with rival platform Kalshi, even when it comes to fundraising.
Kalshi just raised $1 billion earlier this month in a round led by Coatue Management, at a $22 billion valuation—double its $11 billion valuation from a December round backed by Paradigm, Andreessen Horowitz, Ark Invest, and Sequoia.
Kalshi has been on a rapid fundraising tear since winning a CFTC court battle in May 2025. That cleared the way for its election contracts to be offered and the company to scale from a $2 billion valuation in June 2025 to its current $22 billion in under a year.
Polymarket recently put together a 3-day Washington D.C. pop-up experience, the Situation Room, which was billed as the world’s first brick-and-mortar destination for monitoring global prediction markets. It got mixed reviews from journalistsinattendance—tech outlet Wired called it “a disaster,” due to the screens being off on opening night thanks to technical difficulties.
There may or may not have been a situation in the Situation Room last night. Reports remain unconfirmed.
However, the situation monitors are now on… & ready to be monitored.
The investment comes as prediction markets face growing regulatory scrutiny in Washington and in multiple states.
Massachusetts Rep. Seth Moulton banned his staff from trading on platforms like Polymarket and Kalshi this week, citing concerns about insider trading. The additional funding for Polymarket arrives a few weeks after bipartisan lawmakers introduced the PREDICT Act to extend similar restrictions to members of Congress, senior officials, and their families.
Separately, senators have proposed bans on sports contracts and war-related markets, following controversy over profitable bets tied to U.S. strikes on Iran and the capture of Venezuela’s Nicolás Maduro. Also on Friday, California Governor Gavin Newsom signed an executive order to ban state officials and governor appointees from betting on prediction markets using insider info.
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A leaked draft post revealed Anthropic’s most powerful AI model, Claude Mythos.
The model also appears to introduce a new tier above Opus, internally referred to as “Capybara.”
Cybersecurity stocks declined after reports suggested the system could accelerate AI-driven cyberattacks.
Claude creator Anthropic is developing a new AI model called Claude Mythos, described internally as the company’s most capable model to date, with draft materials about the system being leaked online this week.
The existence of the model was first reported by Fortune on Thursday after unpublished files tied to Anthropic’s blog were discovered in a publicly accessible data cache. An Anthropic spokesperson confirmed the existence of the model to the publication.
“We’re developing a general purpose model with meaningful advances in reasoning, coding, and cybersecurity,” an Anthropic spokesperson told Fortune. “Given the strength of its capabilities, we’re being deliberate about how we release it. As is standard practice across the industry, we’re working with a small group of early access customers to test the model. We consider this model a step change and the most capable we’ve built to date.”
In an archived development page reviewed by Decrypt, Anthropic called Mythos “the most powerful AI model we’ve ever developed.”
“Mythos is a new name for a new tier of model: larger and more intelligent than our Opus models—which were, until now, our most powerful,” Anthropic wrote. “We chose the name to evoke the deep connective tissues that link together knowledge and ideas.”
According to Anthropic, Mythos scored “dramatically higher” than Claude Opus 4.6 on tests of software coding, academic reasoning, and cybersecurity.
The leak of Mythos appears to have originated from draft materials stored in an unsecured content management system. According to Fortune, Anthropic restricted public access to the data store after being notified that the files were searchable online. The company attributed the exposure to human error in the configuration of its CMS tools.
However, Anthropic’s documents labeled Mythos as version one of the new model, and described version two internally as “Capybara,” which the company also positioned above its current top-tier Opus models.
The draft materials also highlighted concerns about the system’s potential cybersecurity implications.
“Although Mythos is currently far ahead of any other AI model in cyber capabilities, it presages an upcoming wave of models that can exploit vulnerabilities in ways that far outpace the efforts of defenders,” the company wrote.
Because of those risks, the company said it plans to release the model cautiously, beginning with a limited early-access rollout aimed at organizations working on cybersecurity defense.
Anthropic did not immediately respond to Decrypt’s request for comment.
While Anthropic took down the blog post, news of the leak quickly spilled into financial markets.
Shares of several cybersecurity firms dropped after the reports surfaced, including Palo Alto Networks (PANW), which fell about 7%, and CrowdStrike (CRWD), which dropped roughly 6.4%. Meanwhile, Zscaler (ZS) declined around 5.8%, and Fortinet (FTNT) slipped about 4% during Friday trading, according to Yahoo Finance.
The selloff reaction echoes a similar market response to the reveal of a new Anthropic product. In February, Anthropic unveiled Claude Cowork, an AI system designed to automate complex workplace tasks—including contract review and compliance—which triggered a broad sell-off across software and professional-services companies.
That sell-off erased roughly $285 billion in market value as investors reassessed the long-term impact of AI agents on enterprise software businesses.
“The market’s response was a signal, not that AI agents will immediately replace these businesses, but that investors are finally pricing in the structural risk that foundation model providers can now compete directly with the software layer,” Nexatech Ventures founder Scott Dylan told Decrypt at the time. “That’s a polite way of saying if Anthropic can build a legal workflow tool in-house, what’s stopping them from doing the same for finance, procurement, or HR?”
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Eli Roth‘s The Horror Section and Mass Appeal, the entertainment company founded by Grammy-winning rapper Nas, have entered into a strategic partnership. Through the partnership, which includes an investment from Mass Appeal into The Horror Section, the two entities will collaborate across many aspects of the business, including having Roth and Nas co-develop film and television projects. The alliance will kick off with Nas and Mass Appeal CEO Peter Bittenbender boarding Roth’s upcoming film “Ice Cream Man” as executive producers. Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.
“Nas is one of the most influential storytellers and cultural voices of all time and we bonded instantly over our mutual love of horror,” said Roth in a statement. “We are thrilled to partner with Mass Appeal with its unmatched pulse on culture and what truly resonates. I look forward to collaborating with Nas, Peter, and the entire Mass Appeal team, starting with bringing ‘Ice Cream Man’ to theaters worldwide and creating cultural events in the horror space for audiences everywhere.”
Mass Appeal said the deal will allow the company to dive deeper into feature films, specifically in the horror genre, which is a specialty of Roth, the director of “Hostel” and “Knock Knock.”
“I’m proud to come together and partner with Eli to bring these films to life and push the boundaries of what horror can be, both culturally and creatively,” said Nas in a statement. “Eli and I shared the same vision from the beginning and partnering with him and The Horror Section feels natural. I’m excited to take the genre in an exciting new direction, and ‘Ice Cream Man’ is just the beginning.”
“Ice Cream Man” is Roth’s first film under The Horror Section’s banner, following the company’s launch in March 2025. The film follows a summer town descending into madness when an ice cream man serves kids sweet delights with horrifying results. The Horror Section recently announced it acquired “Stiletto,” the latest horror feature from director Samuel Gonzalez Jr. starring Gigi Gustin, Charlotte McKinney, Colleen Camp, Meghan Carrasquillo, Stephen Blackehart, and Hannah Hueston.
Nas and Mass Appeal most recently spearheaded the “Legend Has It…” series celebrating and spotlighting some of the most important Hip Hop artists of all time. The series included a year-long run of releases from influential artists, including Slick Rick, Raekwon, Ghostface Killah, Mobb Deep, Big L and De La Soul. Nas and DJ Premier brought the series to a close with the release of their long-awaited collaborative album “Light-Years” via Mass Appeal.
Roth is represented by WME. Nas is represented by The Lede Company.
He’s Ezio Auditore da Firenze from the “Assassin’s Creed” franchise. He’s Chris Redfield in “Resident Evil.” He’s Kyle Crane of “Dying Light.” He’s Raphael from “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.” He’s Batman in “Arkham Shadow.”
He’s Roger Craig Smith, and he’s been the voice of dozens of iconic video game characters over the past two decades. But this year, he’s celebrating the 35th anniversary of what is inarguably his biggest role: Sega’s Sonic the Hedgehog.
“Not a day goes by where — and part of this is because we get to do these fan convention circuits now, where you go out and you travel the world literally, and meet people from all over the world that bring you their Sonic fan art,” Smith told Variety. “They bring you their stories about what that game and what that character meant to them from way back in their childhood. And it started landing for me a few years ago, when I’d have somebody in their 30s go, ‘Bro, you’re like the voice of my childhood.’ And I thought, but you’re 30? And then all of a sudden I’ll be like, that’s right, I’ve got these white whiskers showing up now. And it was because they started playing when they were 15 or 16, and I’ve been voicing Sonic for 16 years now. And so I have to pinch myself every day to think, it’s one thing to have somebody like yourself want to talk to me about something that I’ve done for 20 years in a very cutthroat and challenging industry, to have had a career of over 20 years and still be staying busy is lightning striking more than once, in that regard. But then to also say, I’ve voiced iconic game characters and things that have had an influence on people throughout the years, it’s very surreal. It never gets old.”
Jen Rosenstein
JEN ROSENSTEIN
Smith notes that “there’s never been a better time” to be working as the blue hedgehog, as the Sega IP is at peak popularity with Ben Schwartz voicing Sonic in the Paramount film franchise and Deven Mack leading the Netflix animated show. And as Sonic turns 35 this year, Smith has more in the works than ever, including an upcoming appearance at gaming event IGN Live, running June 6-7 in Los Angeles.
“What I know that I can say is that I’m extremely excited to be a part of this,” Smith said, when asked if he’ll be joining IGN Live to reveal something tied to Sonic’s big birthday. “It is such a cool event, and I cannot wait to get out there and be a part of the energy that’s in that room, and get to participate in whatever way they want us to participate. It’s gonna be a very, very fun event. I wish I could give more details and that kind of thing, but I think that’s for IGN to spill the beans on, and I will play it safe and just go: I’m excited, I can’t wait to be in Los Angeles and be a part of this massive, massive event. It’s the worst thing about my job, I would violate all the NDAs. There’s exciting stuff coming down the pike and I am so stoked for the 35th anniversary of Sonic the Hedgehog. There couldn’t be a better time to be a part of something like that. So I’m tight lipped but expressing my intrigue and my excitement, we’ll leave it there.”
What’s that? You aren’t familiar with Sonic? Oh, then Smith has a first runnerup answer to the question of his most impactful role: The narrator of TLC’s “Say Yes to the Dress.”
“There’s something very funny about what I do for a living where it’s like, if you and I sat on a plane next to each other and suddenly, if I even bothered to say, ‘Oh yeah, this is what I do,’ — very often, the next question is, ‘Anything I would have heard of?’” Smith said. “And depending upon the age or the background, it could be anything, right? I’m like, ‘Are you a big gamer? Or do you like anime?’ But it seems like across the board, if somebody’s not heard of Sonic the Hedgehog, or Kyle Crane, or any of these other characters or things that I’ve done, if I mentioned that, somebody always goes, ‘Oh!’ Or my favorite is the tough guy who always goes, ‘I don’t watch that show, but my girlfriend watches,’ or my wife, and then, like, five minutes later they go, ‘So wasn’t there an episode where the grandma got stuck in the parking lot?’ Oh, yeah, you don’t watch.”
As “Say Yes to the Dress” maintains its relevance through old clips turned into viral videos circulating on TikTok, Smith will happily claim the credit with pride — just don’t ask him what he learned from it.
“Fourteen seasons, multiple different series,” Smith said. “They had the Atlanta show and all these different spinoffs that they had done. And it was a blast. And to this day, I think people think I know things about wedding dresses, and I assure you, I know nothing about wedding dresses.”
Microsoft’s Copilot is getting even better at research thanks to a new feature that combines the power of both OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Anthropic’s Claude. In a blog post announcing Copilot Cowork‘s availability, Microsoft debuted the Critique feature that will be used in Microsoft 356 Copilot’s Researcher tool. Unlike the standard Copilot, Researcher is designed to tackle more complex tasks with multiple steps.
Now, Researcher is getting even better at that with the Critique feature that uses GPT responses, which are then refined by Claude. In a blog post, Microsoft said that, “this architecture creates a powerful feedback loop that delivers higher-quality results across factual accuracy, analytical breadth, and presentation,” adding that Researcher’s process is similar to what you see in “academic and professional research settings.” Microsoft claims the upgrade scores somewhat higher (compared to the most recent Perplexity Deep Research models) on the Deep Research Accuracy, Completeness, and Objectivity benchmark. On its own, Anthropic has a Research feature that can use multiple Claude agents to provide a comprehensive response to more complex requests.
If you prefer doing research with a little more autonomy, Microsoft also added the Model Council feature that’s available as an alternative option for Researcher. With Model Council, you’ll get side-by-side responses from both Anthropic and OpenAI, with a report that shows where the models agree and disagree. Both features are currently available in Microsoft 365 Copilot’s Frontier program, which acts as a early access space for the company’s AI innovations.
Bitcoin price moved higher Sunday night into Monday after remarks from Donald Trump indicating the United States is engaged in discussions with a new leadership structure in Iran and that progress toward a potential agreement is underway.
The comments helped lift risk appetite across digital assets after a weekend dip that briefly pushed bitcoin price toward the $64,000 area.
The rebound added to a broader pattern of rangebound trading, with bitcoin holding between roughly $65,000 and $70,000 as markets continue to digest geopolitical developments, macroeconomic signals, and shifting liquidity conditions.
The latest move followed a period of uneven price action marked by late-week weakness and early-week stabilization.
Geopolitical risk tied to Iran remains a key driver of sentiment. Tensions around energy infrastructure, shipping routes, and potential escalation scenarios continue to feed uncertainty across global markets, with crypto responding to headline changes alongside equities and commodities.
The conflict between Iran and Israel has escalated sharply, with U.S. and Israeli strikes hitting Iranian targets while Iran has responded with missile and drone attacks across the region, including strikes that affected Kuwait and other Gulf states, pushing the regional death toll above 1,900 in Iran and over 1,200 in Lebanon.
President Donald Trump has alternated between claiming diplomatic progress and issuing severe threats to destroy Iran’s energy infrastructure, including oil facilities, desalination plants, and the strategic Kharg Island export hub if a deal is not reached soon.
The fighting has widened regionally, with Gulf countries such as Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates intercepting incoming missiles and drones, while tensions over shipping routes in the Strait of Hormuz continue to raise global energy concerns.
Diplomatic efforts remain uncertain, with Pakistan attempting to mediate indirect talks involving regional powers, even as leaders like U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio suggests regime change in Iran may be underway.
Bitcoin price reaction
Bitcoin price has been stuck in a tight range around $70,000 since mid-February because multiple forces are offsetting each other. On one side, institutional investors have been selling covered call options on their Bitcoin holdings to earn extra income, which shifts “gamma” exposure onto market makers.
Those market makers then hedge by buying when prices fall and selling when prices rise, which naturally dampens volatility and reinforces range-bound trading.
At the same time, macro factors like safe-haven demand and rising U.S. yields are pulling Bitcoin price in opposite directions, keeping it trapped between roughly $65,000 and $75,000.
Investors continue to rotate toward yield-bearing and lower-volatility assets while reducing exposure to risk assets tied to global uncertainty. Crypto markets remain reactive to headlines rather than driven by sustained inflow momentum.
Despite softer institutional demand, underlying activity has not fully reversed. Prior weeks of inflows remain significant in scale, suggesting continued longer-term allocation interest even as near-term positioning shifts.
For now, bitcoin price remains anchored in a tight trading band shaped by geopolitical developments, ETF flow trends, and expectations around upcoming U.S. economic data.
This post Bitcoin Price Teeters on Iran Talks as Geopolitics and Options Flows Trap Price in Narrow Range first appeared on Bitcoin Magazine and is written by Micah Zimmerman.
Siren ($SIREN) price has surged 109% in 24 hours to a $1.21B cap, up 9,095% from its low, as traders on X argue over “real DeFi” versus a coordinated pump.
Siren’s $SIREN price has exploded into the top‑60 crypto assets by market capitalization after a 109% single‑day gain, putting the project at the center of one of this week’s most polarizing debates on X. CoinGecko data show $SIREN changing hands at about $1.75, with a market cap around $1.21 billion and 24‑hour trading volume of roughly $164.5 million, numbers more commonly associated with established DeFi names than relative newcomers. At current levels, the token is up an eye‑catching 9,095% from its March 2025 all‑time low, prompting some traders to draw comparisons with earlier cycle hyper‑performers that went from obscurity to multi‑billion‑dollar valuations in a matter of months.
On X, one of the main threads tracking the move has framed the question bluntly: “Is this an actual DeFi protocol gaining traction, or just another coordinated pump?” That split tone captures the mood in trading circles, where some accounts point to rising on‑chain activity around $SIREN’s contracts and liquidity pools, while others note that a large share of volume is concentrated on a small number of venues—often a red flag in past episodes of aggressive, short‑term speculation. For now, concrete protocol metrics remain sparse compared to more established DeFi platforms, leaving traders reliant on price, volume and address growth rather than audited revenue or fee data.
🚨ONCHAIN: EMBERCN SAYS WHALE HOLDS 88% OF $SIREN SUPPLY@EmberCN claims that @genius_sirenBSC’s recent price surge was caused by sudden accumulation by one whale entity.
They say that some 88.5% of $SIREN is held by the whale which owns 52 out of the token’s 54 top holder… pic.twitter.com/HmrIWwPsKJ
— BSCN (@BSCNews) March 24, 2026
$SIREN is marketed as a DeFi‑focused token, with community advocates describing it as part of a new wave of permissionless trading and liquidity tools rather than a meme coin or simple governance wrapper. That puts it, at least thematically, in the same broad category as tokens tied to platforms like Uniswap or GMX, where value is supposed to accrue from trading fees, liquidity incentives and protocol usage. But where those projects publish detailed dashboards and historical metrics, the information around $SIREN’s underlying economics and roadmap is still patchy, which helps explain why the X debate has tilted so sharply toward the “pump versus traction” framing.
In previous crypto.news coverage of sudden DeFi rallies, similar patterns have emerged: thin float, concentrated holdings and aggressive social media campaigns can combine with low liquidity to produce triple‑digit daily moves, only for prices to retrace once early buyers take profits. Another crypto.news story on whale‑driven breakouts documented how large wallets moving into and out of small‑cap tokens can amplify these swings, especially when retail traders are chasing green candles without clear fundamentals. A separate crypto.news story on market structure highlighted how fragmented liquidity and high funding rates in derivatives can further magnify upside and downside in these episodes.
With $SIREN now sitting near $1.75 and a $1.21 billion market cap, the immediate question is whether the token can sustain its top‑60 status or whether it will follow the pattern of past parabolic moves that faded once attention shifted elsewhere. Traders will be watching for signs of organic growth—such as rising unique users, protocol fees and total value locked—rather than just continued spikes in volume and social mentions. If $SIREN does evolve into a genuine DeFi protocol with durable usage, this week’s 109% jump could be remembered as the moment it was “discovered.” If not, it risks joining the long list of tokens whose charts tell the story of a spectacular, but ultimately short‑lived, pump.
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Turner plays Lara Croft in the Prime Video series, which hails from Fleabag creator Phoebe Waller-Bridge. The show is based on the Tomb Raider video game franchise, which follows the adventures of the famed archaeologist and adventurer.
“Sophie Turner recently experienced a minor injury,” Amazon MGM Studios said. “As a precaution, production has briefly paused to allow her time to recover. We look forward to resuming production as soon as possible.”
The nature of the injury is unclear. The crew will continue to be paid while production is paused, sources said.
The cast also includes Sigourney Weaver, Jason Isaacs, Martin Bobb-Semple, Jack Bannon, John Heffernan, Bill Paterson, Paterson Joseph, Sasha Luss, Juliette Motamed, Celia Imrie and August Wittgenstein.
Waller-Bridge is creator, writer, executive producer and co-showrunner alongside Chad Hodge, who is co-showrunner and executive producer. They are joined by Jonathan Van Tulleken, who will serve as director and executive producer.
The series is executive produced by Amazon MGM Studios, Crystal Dynamics, Waller-Bridge and Jenny Robins through Wells Street Films, Dmitri M. Johnson, Michael Lawrence Goldberg, Timothy I. Stevenson, and Dallas Dickinson through Story Kitchen, Michael Scheel and Legendary Television. Matt McInnis is co-executive producer, and Jan R. Martin is producer.
The series is produced by Story Kitchen, Crystal Dynamics and Amazon MGM Studios.
Amy Seimetz never fully turns off her directing brain while acting. “My goal as an actor is always to not get cut out of the television show,” she says with a laugh. “A lot of things that are really helpful for me, in line delivery, are more technical on the filmmaking side: What are you cutting to next? Where are you playing this out? Is this a closeup? Wide? How are you editing this?” The approach has nothing to do with maximizing screentime or superseding her actual director, but modulating her performance within a broader context. “These questions can sound like I’m overstepping, but I actually am aware as an actor, ‘Oh, if I look over here, they can cut to this to help them out in some capacity.’”
This yields rich rewards in The Testaments, Hulu’s upcoming sequel series set 15 years after the end of The Handmaid’s Tale (premiering April 8), and featuring Ann Dowd reprising her Emmy-winning turn as Aunt Lydia. Seimetz portrays Paula, the obsessive matriarch grudgingly raising Agnes (Chase Infiniti), which is the Gilead name for Hannah, the now-teenaged daughter ofHandmaid’s protagonist June (Elisabeth Moss). With imposing, sometimes comic intensity, Seimetz captures the anxieties of a woman on the verge of unraveling whenever life seems out of order — even the misplacement of a dish.
“She wants everything pretty, she wants everything perfect — and so anything that’s out of place, that’s where my eye goes,” she says. “It is very rare to get the opportunity to play someone so sort of insidiously bad. But I didn’t want to go for the arch-villain archetype.”
The performance ought to bring Seimetz some attention, a reminder of the piercing perceptiveness she’s brought to projects including the acclaimed film Upstream Colorand her own directorial project, The Girlfriend Experience. Already, she’s up for an honor at the forthcoming SeriesMania. The indie darling, who’d steadily grown her hybrid acting-directing career in the 2010s, has been out of public view for the last few years. Part of this has to do with a shift in priorities — “It’s very rare that I act these days,” she says — and part of it has to do with swift larger industry shifts, the long-gestating nature of getting anything off the ground right now. And of course, there was the frenzy surrounding The Idol — the HBO series co-created by Sam Levinson, Reza Fahim and Abel “The Weeknd” Tesfaye that Seimetz had directed nearly a whole season of, only for her version to be ultimately, shockingly scrapped for an entirely new take (more on that shortly).
So why was The Testamentsthe project to lead to her largest acting role — and, presumably, press circuit — in years? Indeed, she went so far as to audition for it. “It has to be something where I’m like, ‘I don’t know if I can do this, this is maybe not in my wheelhouse’ — if I look at it and I go, ‘I’ve never done that before,’ then I know I want to try,” she says. “They all sort of feed each other in a way — directing, writing, and acting. When I get tired of being bossy, I crave having people tell me when to hit a mark and what to say. When I get tired of being told where to hit a mark and what to say, I want to be bossy again.”
Seimetz came into the project a huge Margaret Atwood fan — the show is based on Atwood’s novel of the same name, which was written during The Handmaid’s Tale’srun on Hulu and builds off of the original series’ events as much as her original book — and with connections to Infiniti, her main co-star. “My very good friend is Sara Murphy, so we had mutual friends — there was an easy in,” she says, referring to the Oscar-winning producer of One Battle After Another, which featured Infiniti’s breakout role.
Seimetz’s icy chemistry with Infiniti is instantaneous and surprisingly light on its feet, reflective of the show as a whole despite the heavy themes. “I wouldn’t say I was playing for comedy, even though Chase would probably argue that I was,” Seimetz says. “But the idea that this is allowed to be devilishly funny in a very, very dark — almost too-close-to-reality — universe pushed me really hard to make it so, because I knew that my character was being told through the lens of Chase’s character.”
“I would try to push as far as I possibly could,” Seimetz adds, “and then just trust the director to pull me back a little bit.”
Amy Seimetz in ‘The Testaments’
Disney/Russ Martin
***
Three years ago, Seimetz was traveling around New Zealand’s South Island with a friend, on break from filming her most recent acting role in Netflix’s Sweet Tooth, when she got a call from her publicist: Rolling Stone was asking for comment on “whatever chaos they were writing about” regarding The Idol. She lost signal; her friend asked whether they should turn back or continue on with their off-the-grid adventure. “I was like, ‘No, I want to do what we planned and go snorkeling with dolphins’ — and by the way, that was the best fucking decision I’ve ever made,” Seimetz says.
She brings this up first to reiterate she still has no comment on what went down on that set or what happened to the show — which was critically derided — once she had been replaced (Levinson directed the final product). Rolling Stonereported that Seimetz was “set up to fail” and that she exited a “shitshow”; HBO later told The Hollywood Reporter in a statement that her version “did not meet HBO standards so we chose to make a change.”
“It doesn’t serve me to dwell on it, it doesn’t serve me to really comment on it,” Seimetz says. “If anything, it is great that I don’t feel the need to — and I really, truly don’t.” She pauses, then connects her Idol saga to the biggest project she’s taken on since: “The best I could say is a Handmaid’s quote: ‘Don’t let the bastards grind you down.’ I’m only half joking.”
Did Seimetz feel discouraged, though, coming out of an experience we can at minimum call not ideal? “It doesn’t really matter how I felt,” she says twice. “This is Hollywood. [Steven] Soderbergh actually said this to me: ‘You’re not a real filmmaker until you have that notch on your belt and you keep going.’” For the record, Seimetz looks back fondly on The Idol that she made, even though it’ll never see the light of day. “I really, really loved what I was doing, and they ended up making the show they wanted to make, but that’s just the way it goes,” she says. “I loved working with Lily [Rose Depp]. I think she’s brilliant. At least with the work that we were doing together, she’s a comedic genius, next-level — I don’t know if people know that.”
Behind the scenes, Seimetz forged ahead with vigor, helming multiple episodes of the acclaimed Mr. & Mrs. Smith series adaptation out of the gate. She’s now got multiple high-profile projects in the works as a writer-director, which she’s reasonably confident will move forward — even if they take years. She’s also shooting a hybrid documentary on a rolling basis with one of her best friends, Jillian Mayer, down in Florida. “Jillian’s from Miami and I’m from Tampa, and so whenever I go home, I drive down and reshoot these little pieces of it,” she says. The dynamic has echoed the making of She Dies Tomorrow, Seimetz’s electric 2020 horror-thriller.
“I really fell in love with that process, which is: Start some ideas, and you don’t necessarily need to know where it’s going,” Seimetz says. “Once I realized that I don’t have to wait around for a big project to be there or for anyone to tell me I can direct something…I just went ahead and bought cameras, and now shoot pieces of things.”
She’s learned to navigate a rapidly changing industry through the example of Soderbergh, who first asked Seimetz to turn his feature The Girlfriend Experience into a series a little over a decade ago — even though they’d never spoken beforehand. “He’s so savvy about the changing landscape…. He really saw an opportunity when TV was starting to drop binge-watching: He went to Starz and he was like, ‘What is the number at which you would make a television show and leave us alone?’” Seimetz says. “They gave him a number, and it was very low, and then we made it.” The first season starred Riley Keough in a breakout turn and drew wide critical acclaim, going on to run two more seasons in an anthology format.
“I’ve tried that tactic again on multiple things,” Seimetz says now of how Soderbergh pushed their auteur-driven drama through. “But it is just a forever-changing landscape.” Again though, she sees Soderbergh’s prolific slate over the last five years — even as, for many, it’s felt like getting anything made is harder than ever — and takes inspiration from the nimbleness. “Everyone’s scared to make things,” she says before paraphrasing him: “I’m just going to figure out a way that I can make a bunch of these.”
Amy Seimetz at the ‘Pet Sematary’ premiere at SXSW in 2019
Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images for SXSW
***
Taking on her first regular TV role since the pandemic, Seimetz wound up away from home in Toronto for six full months last year, echoing her intensive time making The Girlfriend Experience up in Canada a decade earlier. The main difference is that here, she was playing a supporting role in an expansive storytelling tapestry. She did not direct on The Testaments either — “I am not able to really be in a performance while directing; I know that about myself enough to say ‘No, thank you’” — and thus had many days to herself.
“It’s almost like a meditation of being in that person because you’ll have breaks and you’re like, ‘What would this person do?’” Seimetz says. “And I can’t say that I relate to Paula.”
She does relate to Atwood, however — she speaks of the author as in sync with her own philosophy of filmmaking and storytelling. “Under these dire circumstances, yes, there are heroes, and yes, there are people that are oppressed, but she allows the emotions to be really messy,” Seimetz says. “She allows the heroes to make mistakes and gets into the psychology and the decision making of what happens under these circumstances. And she plays in this world of gothic darkness with a wicked sense of humor.”
Seimetz then turns to how The Testaments came about in the first place: Atwood seized an opportunity, expanding upon her groundbreaking book right as the Handmaid’s adaptation hit a fever pitch of popularity. Seimetz clearly admires artists’ ability to find their moment. “She’s another one that’s extremely adaptable to the way that the world works,” she says. Seimetz can count herself among that group, too.