Tag: Entertainment-HollywoodReporter

  • ‘Bob’s Burgers’ Voice Actor Eugene Mirman Suffers Serious Injuries Following Car Crash

    ‘Bob’s Burgers’ Voice Actor Eugene Mirman Suffers Serious Injuries Following Car Crash

    Bob’s Burgers star Eugene Mirman is facing “serious injuries” following a Tuesday car crash in New Hampshire.

    On Tuesday, a 2026 Lucid Gravity crashed into the Bedford Toll Plaza, with Mirman later being identified as the vehicle’s driver, per a press release from New Hampshire police. The accident was described as a single-vehicle crash.

    A veteran State Trooper assigned to Governor Kelly Ayotte’s security detail responded to the crash, and noticed that the car was on fire with a passenger still inside. Mirman was pulled from the vehicle while it was burning through a window, as Governor Ayotte and other witnesses as the scene assisted the Trooper.

    Mirman, 51, was taken to a nearby hospital with “serious injuries.” The press release indicates that no charges have been filed at this time, though all aspects of the crash are under investigation.

    “Certainly, their actions were heroic in what they did,” Colonel Mark B. Hall said in a statement. “Without hesitation, they put themselves in danger to render aid to someone who was in need of it.”

    Governor Ayotte took to X on Tuesday after the crash, writing, “I want to thank the Trooper on my security detail and the bystanders who stepped up to help at the scene of the crash for their brave lifesaving efforts today. Joe and I are praying for the full recovery of the driver who was injured today.”

    The Hollywood Reporter has reached out to Mirman’s reps, but did not hear back by the time of publication.

    Mirman joined the cast of Bob’s Burgers in the show’s inaugural season, where he voices Gene Belcher. He has appeared in all 16 installments of the animated Fox series.

    His additional credits include Confess, Fletch (2022), Teenage Euthanasia (2023), Apple & Onion (2016-2021) and Delocated (2009-2012). Mirman has also lent his voice acting talents to The Bob’s Burgers Movie in 2022, and a 2018 episode of The Simpsons.

    Mirman is also a stand-up comedian. His latest special, entitled Here Comes The Whimsy, dropped on Veeps on Feb. 5, which he celebrated on his Instagram.

  • Netflix’s New Releases Coming in April 2026

    Netflix’s New Releases Coming in April 2026

    The continuing adventures of Kitty Song-Covey; a genre film from Tommy Wirkola involving hurricanes and sharks; an all new cast of angry people in the next season of Beef; Kevin Hart and his friends seeking out the next comedy star; the sophomore season for basketball drama Running Point; an animated spinoff of Stranger Things; Charlize Theron trying to escape a deranged serial killer in the Australian wilderness; and Yahya Abdul-Mateen II starring as John Creasy in the TV adaptation on Man on Fire are among the highlights of the new film and TV series launching on Netflix in April.

    The incredibly popular XO, Kitty returns for its third season on April 2, with Anna Cathcart’s character Kitty Song Covey entering her senior year at KISS in the South Korean capital Seoul. This season, which consists of eight episodes, sees Valentina Garza stepping in as showrunner. Returning cast members include Minyeong Choi, Gia Kim, and Sang Heon Lee as Kitty navigates mounting secrets, scandals, and the inevitable insecurities that come with senior year.

    The next title to look out for in April, falls into potentially-awesome-but-likely-terrible category. On April 10, the survival thriller Thrash makes its debut on Netflix after moving from a planned theatrical release. Directed and written by Silent Night filmmaker Tommy Wirkola, the film stars respected actors Phoebe Dynevor, Whitney Peak, and Djimon Hounsou, so that’s definitely a plus. The plot follows a coastal town decimated by a Category 5 hurricane, where the resulting storm surge brings with it a terrifying influx of hungry sharks. Nailed on classic?

    The second installment of Netflix’s multi-Emmy-winning rage porn anthology Beef premieres on April 16. Created by showrunner Lee Sung Jin and produced by indie powerhouse A24, the new season features a fresh cast including Carey Mulligan, Oscar Isaac, Charles Melton, and Cailee Spaeny. The story centers on a blackmail war that ignites at an elite country club after two young employees witness an alarming fight between their boss and his wife.

    On April 20, Kevin Hart returns with Funny AF with Kevin Hart, a new stand-up competition series aimed at discovering the next big name in comedy. In what looks like a less mean version of Kill Tony, Hart and a rotating panel of guest judges — including Keegan-Michael Key, Tom Segura, and Nikki Glaser — feature in this unfiltered series which will culminate in live episodes where the audience helps crown a winner who will receive their own Netflix special.

    Running Point tips off its second season on April 23, with Kate Hudson returning as Isla Gordon, the president of the Los Angeles Waves. Executive produced by Mindy Kaling and Ike Barinholtz, the new season sees Uche Agada and Justin Theroux join the main cast as regulars. As the championship looms, Isla must manage chaos in the locker room and the boardroom while navigating a complicated love triangle.

    Also arriving on April 23 is another spinoff from the ever-expanding Stranger Things universe, the animated series Stranger Things: Tales From ’85. Directed by Phil Allora and showrun by Eric Robles, the series is set during the winter of 1985 in Hawkins. Featuring a voice cast that includes Odessa A’zion, the show explores fresh mysteries and bridges the events of the original series’ second and third seasons. Probably one for the die-hard fans (but there are lot of them).

    April is a blessed month for genre fans, because as well as Thrash, Netflix is gifting us with another potentially-awesome-but-likely-terrible film with the survival thriller Apex, which premieres on April 24. Starring Charlize Theron, Taron Egerton, and Eric Bana, the film was shot on location in the Australian wilderness and features Theron as a grieving woman on a solo adventure who becomes the target of a cunning killer (Egerton) in a twisted game of cat-and-mouse. Apex is directed by Baltasar Kormákur (Beast, Everest, 2 Guns) and written by Jeremy Robbins.

    Capping off the month, and heavy emphasis on capping, on April 30 is the series premiere of Man on Fire, an all new reimagining of A.J. Quinnell’s novel series. You may be thinking that the cult classic Denzel Washington movie adaptation was not that long ago but that film opened in theaters all the way back in 2004. For this series version, Yahya Abdul-Mateen II takes on the role of John Creasy, a skilled former mercenary plagued by PTSD who is drawn back into action during a quest for redemption. Written and showrun by Kyle Killen, the series also stars Scoot McNairy as Creasy’s CIA contact.

    Movies added to Netflix in April include The Age of Adaline, Along Came Polly, American Gangster, Atonement, Bohemian Rhapsody, Everest, Hotel Transylvania 2, Kindergarten Cop, Lucy, Madagascar, Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted, Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa, Mission: Impossible, Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol, Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation, Mission: Impossible II, Mission: Impossible III, Money Talks, Penguins of Madagascar: The Movie, Smokey and the Bandit, Smokey and the Bandit II, The Wiz, Scream (2022), A Quiet Place Part II and Him.

    Missed what came to Netflix last month? Check out the March additions here.

    Read on for the complete list of titles hitting Netflix in April.

    April 1

    Eat Pray Bark (DE)
    The Giant Falls (AR)
    It Takes a Village (PL)
    Love on the Spectrum: Season 4
    Sarah Millican: Late Bloomer
    The Age of Adaline
    Along Came Polly
    American Gangster
    Atonement
    Bohemian Rhapsody
    Everest

    Happy’s Place: Season 1
    Hotel Transylvania 2
    Kindergarten Cop
    Lucy
    Madagascar
    Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted
    Madagascar: Escape 2 Africa
    Mission: Impossible
    Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol
    Mission: Impossible – Rogue Nation
    Mission: Impossible II
    Mission: Impossible III
    Money Talks
    Penguins of Madagascar: The Movie
    Smokey and the Bandit
    Smokey and the Bandit II

    St. Denis Medical: Season 1
    The Wiz

    April 2

    Agent from Above (TW)
    Alkhallat+: The Series: Desert Rules (SA)
    The Bad Guys: The Series: Season 2
    The Ramparts of Ice (JP)
    Sins of Kujo (JP)
    XO, Kitty: Season 3

    April 3

    Bloodhounds: Season 2 (KR)
    Feel My Voice (IT)
    Gangs of Galicia: Season 2 (ES)
    High Tides: Season 3 (BE)
    Maamla Legal Hai: Season 2 (IN)
    The Truth and Tragedy of Moriah Wilson

    April 7

    Beast (2022)
    Sheng Wang: Purple
    Untold: Chess Mates

    April 8

    Trust Me: The False Prophet

    April 9

    18th Rose (PH)
    Bandi (FR)
    Big Mistakes
    IF

    April 10

    Scream (2022)
    Temptation Island: Season 2
    Thrash
    Turn of the Tide: Season 3 (PT)

    April 11

    A Quiet Place Part II
    Tyson Fury vs. Arslanbek Makhmudov
    (GB)

    April 12

    At Home With The Furys: Season 2 (GB)

    April 13

    America: Our Defining Hours
    American Godfathers: The Five Families
    The Booze, Bets and Sex That Built America
    Halloween Ends
    The Men Who Built America: Frontiersmen
    Noah Kahan: Out of Body

    April 14

    Crooks: Season 2 (DE)
    Untold: Jail Blazers

    April 15

    Fake Profile: Season 3 (CO)
    Made with Love (ID)
    Million Dollar Secret: Season 2
    The Law According to Lidia Poët: Season 3 (IT)

    April 16

    Beef: Season 2
    Ronaldinho: The One and Only (BR)

    April 17

    180 (ZA)
    A Gorilla Story: Told by David Attenborough (GB)
    Alpha Males: Season 5 (ES)
    Roommates

    April 18

    Denial
    We Are All Trying Here
    (KR)

    April 19

    Him

    April 20

    CoComelon Lane: Season 7
    Funny AF with Kevin Hart

    April 21

    Unchosen (GB)
    Untold: The Shooting at Hawthorne Hill

    April 22

    Lainey Wilson: Keepin’ Country Cool
    Million Dollar Secret
    : Season 2
    Santita (MX)
    Sold Out on You (KR)
    This Is a Gardening Show

    April 23

    Flunked (FR)
    Running Point: Season 2
    Stranger Things: Tales From ’85

    April 24

    Apex

    April 26

    Supernova:Genesis (MX)

    April 27

    Straight to Hell (JP)

    April 29

    Je m’appelle Agneta (SE)
    Million Dollar Secret: Season 2
    Should I Marry A Murderer? (GB)

    April 30

    Man on Fire

  • Simu Liu and Melissa Barrera’s Hacker Thriller ‘The Copenhagen Test’ to Air on Channel 4 in the U.K.

    Brits will be able to watch Simu Liu‘s new hacker thriller on Channel 4.

    The Copenhagen Test will launch April 8, the network unveiled on Wednesday, alongside the release of the show’s trailer.

    The series follows first-generation Chinese-American intelligence analyst Alexander Hale (Liu), who realizes his brain has been hacked, giving the perpetrators access to everything he sees and hears. “Caught between his shadowy agency and the unknown hackers,” a plot synopsis reads, “he must maintain a performance 24/7 to flush out who’s responsible and prove where his allegiance lies.”

    Melissa Barrera, Sinclair Daniel, Brian d’Arcy James, Mark O’Brien, and Kathleen Chalfant also star in the Peacock Original. Its lead, Liu, is best known for his roles in the MCU’s Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings, as well as Greta Gerwig’s Barbie.

    The series is produced by UCP, a division of Universal Studio Group. Thomas Brandon is the creator and serves as executive producer, writer and co-showrunner. Jennifer Yale is co-showrunner, writer and executive producer. Executive producers include James Wan, Michael Clear and Rob Hackett for Atomic Monster, along with Simu Liu, Mark Winemaker and Jet Wilkinson.

    The Copenhagen Test was acquired for Channel 4 by Polly Scates, head of acquisitions. “We are excited to bring this high-stakes espionage thriller to our viewers and to continue bringing great international drama to Channel 4,” said Scates. “The [show] combines a stellar cast with a sharp, twisty premise that will grip audiences from the start.”

    NBCUniversal Global TV Distribution is handling global sales for the series. Watch the trailer below.

  • Dan Levy on What’s Brought “Great Comfort” After Shock Loss of ’Schitt’s Creek’ Star Catherine O’Hara

    Dan Levy on What’s Brought “Great Comfort” After Shock Loss of ’Schitt’s Creek’ Star Catherine O’Hara

    After appearing at Max & Helen’s on Monday night alongside co-creator Rachel Sennott to discuss their new Netflix series Big Mistakes, Dan Levy turned up on the East Coast Tuesday to promote the crime caper on The Tonight Show With Jimmy Fallon.

    The promo tour marks Levy’s first since the passing of Catherine O’Hara, an “extended family” member and beloved Schitt’s Creek co-star. Fallon noted that the first time Levy appeared on his show was with his Schitt’s Creek family including O’Hara. “I’ve just gotta say I’m so sorry about the passing,” said Fallon.

    “Listen, it’s like a collective loss, I think,” Levy said in response. “She was the greatest. She’s irreplaceable. The great comfort for me has just been to see how loved she was — the outpouring. Everyone felt like they kind of knew her.”

    Fallon praised her as “one of the funniest comedians I’ve ever seen. Can do characters. Gorgeous.” Levy added, “Unbelievably talented at improvising. One of the great, great, great queens.”

    O’Hara passed away at 71 in January following a brief illness. In the wake of her death, many of her friends and former co-stars took to social media to share the love and offer condolences to her family. “What a gift to have gotten to dance in the warm glow of Catherine O’Hara’s brilliance for all those years. Having spent over fifty years collaborating with my Dad, Catherine was extended family before she ever played my family. It’s hard to imagine a world without her in it. I will cherish every funny memory I was fortunate enough to make with her,” Levy posted at the time. “My heart goes out to Bo, Matthew, Luke and every member of her big, beautiful family.”

    His father, Eugene Levy, shared at the time, “Words seem inadequate to express the loss I feel today. I had the honor of knowing and working with the great Catherine O’Hara for over fifty years. From our beginnings on the Second City stage, to SCTV, to the movies we did with Chris Guest, to our six glorious years on Schitt’s Creek, I cherished our working relationship, but most of all our friendship. And I will miss her. My heart goes out to Bo, Matthew, Luke, and the entire O’Hara family.”

  • Kathleen Kennedy Just Told an AI Conference She’s Not So Sure About AI

    Kathleen Kennedy Just Told an AI Conference She’s Not So Sure About AI

    Over her more than four decades in in the film business, Kathleen Kennedy has been at the vanguard of tech, whether via her work on the Star Wars universe or all those Steven Spielberg ones. Jurassic Park alone makes you a pioneer.

    You might expect the uber-veteran, then, to be similarly enthused about AI in filmmaking. But Kennedy sounded a more skeptical note Tuesday — even while speaking to an AI founder at an event he hosted.

    “Taste is so fundamental to the process of creating things,” she said, in an on-stage conversation with Runway co-funder Cristóbal Valenzuela as part of an AI summit that the New York-based startup hosted in Manhattan Tuesday. “It’s life experiences; it’s educational. The best directors of films and photography came out of art, they studied art,” she said. She suggested AI-driven films by definition couldn’t have that experience.

    Kathleeen Kennedy and Cristobal Valenzuela at the Runway AI Summit on Tuesday March 31, 2026. Kennedy has some thoughts about AI.

    Steven Zeitchik

    The event saw a litany of high profile personalities talk about the promise of AI in cinema, a cause Runway has dedicated itself to pursuing. Valenzuela gave a keynote titled “normalizing magic” to a packed ballroom of hundreds, and executives from Adobe, Promise AI and Paramount all hailed the artistic potential of the tech with thoughts like “Human creativity will [now] not be constrained by time,” (Adobe’sVP of GenAI New Business Ventures Hannah Elsakr).

    Kennedy, who left her role as head of Lucasfilm in January, didn’t entirely dismiss the technology, saying it could help for the kind of nuts-and-bolts tasks that nearly everyone agrees it could be useful for — 
    “previz, planning, budgeting, scheduling.” But this was faint praise as she questioned more sweeping applications.

    “Once you get into execution,” she said, a model could falter at the essence of filmmaking. “What are you trying to do? What’s the painting you’re trying to create?” Kennedy said. “There’s [beautiful] unpredictability in the creative process that’s going to be tricky to preserve because AI is so predictable.”

    At one point she also stood up for the Hollywood creative community, leveling a charge, if mutedly, against parts of the tech world for how it was carrying forth the AI movement.

    “I think what’s missing in the discussion right now is transparency,” she said, “I think people [in Hollywood] feel that there’s a lot they don’t know about what’s going on. When there’s conversation around how these language models are being trained, for instance…. I think if we can reach a point where there’s more transparency in those discussions —  and, frankly, more transparency, consequently, in people using these tools,” she added, “then I think that will help greatly to dissipate [the distrust].”

    Valenzuela mostly deferred to Kennedy and did not challenge her, even as the AI community of which he’s a part believes there has been transparency and largely sees AI-skeptic filmmakers as hyper-traditionalists who need to get on board. He sometimes did bring up popular counterpoints, such as the idea that AI tools will lower the barrier to entry for filmmakers.

    Companies like Runway see themselves as a bridge between the Silicon Valley hypesters and Hollywood skeptics, catering to filmmakers with tools and eschewing social applications like ByteDance’s Seesaw (The Brad Pitt-Tom Cruise fight people).

    Kennedy did embrace some potentially novel use cases of AI in filmmaking, like getting simulated opinions from a host of actors on a script without needing to pry it from them (the idea would be to get new points of view on material). She also said that, thanks to AI, “we are on the precipice of something that might look and feel quite different than a two-hour movie experience…or television,” likely in short-form.

    But she largely seemed wary of integrating AI into the filmmaking process, even raising an eyebrow at 3D printing, saying that it didn’t create props as durable as those made by conventional human means. 

    “The interesting thing that happened with the props is that after about take 3 many of them started to break, and we realized that when so many things we do are hand-done, then the materials that are used and choices that are made…was something decided by a human being. And when we were doing this with the new technology, we didn’t have the benefit of that.”

    Kennedy’s most philosophical response to the AI camp came when she described the value of human experience in film.

    “I’m going to sound like a traditionalist,” she said, “but I have a deep appreciation for learned experiences that then contribute to the collaboration and the creative process. And it’s just like when we’re working with a composer, if you know that somebody’s classically trained, but they’re still doing a very modern rock-and-roll type score, you’re just going to get a depth to the decisionmaking along the way that I think is really valuable.”

    Ditto, she said, with lighting.

    “It’s one of the trickier tools in art because it permeates everything we do,” she said. “And you need to see many examples in order to do it the right way.”

  • Megan Thee Stallion Hospitalized in New York After Exiting ‘Moulin Rouge’ Performance Mid-Show

    Megan Thee Stallion Hospitalized in New York After Exiting ‘Moulin Rouge’ Performance Mid-Show

    Megan Thee Stallion is hospitalized in New York City after falling ill during a showing of Moulin Rouge! The Musical and exiting the show mid-performance.

    “During Tuesday night’s production, Megan started feeling very ill and was promptly transported to a local hospital, where her symptoms are currently being evaluated,” her representative, Didier Morais, tells The Hollywood Reporter. “We will share additional updates as more information becomes available.”

    Her hairstylist and close friend, Kellon Deryck, who has been working with her at the show, also confirmed the hospitalization with a post on X.

    The Grammy Award-winning rapper made her debut in the show last week at New York’s Al Hirschfeld Theatre in the role of The Zidler, marking not only her first ever Broadway performance but also the first time a woman has performed the role in the beloved and long-running jukebox musical. Boldfaced names that have been seated for her performances have included Queen Latifah and Tiffany Haddish, among others. The show has also featured Meg performing her songs “Savage” and “Body.”

    According to a post on X, Tuesday’s show began as normal with Meg featured in opening scenes but the performance was stopped mid-show as theater officials apologized to the audience and asked them to “stay inside and seated.” Megan then exited the performance and was reportedly replaced by another performer for the rest of the show.

    Megan Thee Stallion steps into the role of Zidler, which has previously been filled by the likes of Boy George, Wayne Brady, Tituss Burgess and most recently Bob the Drag Queen. The role of Zidler was originated by Danny Burstein, a veteran Broadway star who won a Tony for his performance. “I’ve always believed in pushing myself creatively,” Megan Thee Stallion said in a statement about joining the show. “And theater is definitely a new opportunity that I’m excited to embrace.”

  • Writers Guild West Staffers to Lose Health Coverage Soon Amid Strike

    Writers Guild West Staffers to Lose Health Coverage Soon Amid Strike

    Seven weeks into their strike, unionized staffers at the Writers Guild of America West will lose their health care benefits on Wednesday.

    WGA West staffers can be covered by the Producer-Writers Guild of America (PWGA) Health Plan, the same plan that is offered to the Hollywood union’s members. Staffers accrue coverage on a month-to-month basis as long as they work 31 hours per week the previous month.

    Staffers unionized with the Writers Guild Staff Union (WGSU), who have been out on strike since Feb. 17, say they learned on Tuesday that they will lose eligibility starting Wednesday.

    Missy Brown, the co-chair of the WGSU, said in an interview that union members didn’t learn until Tuesday afternoon about the loss of coverage, and that was only after she found a PWGA Health Plan staffer who would speak with her. “I just find this very crazy that we weren’t notified of this,” she says.

    Brown said that she left repeated voicemails with multiple staffers at the PWGA Health Plan offices over the last few days to determine the future of striking members’ coverage. She eventually “begged a receptionist to please find me a human being” at the offices and the staffer she was connected with then informed her that she and other striking guild members will be losing coverage April 1.

    The WGA West confirmed the loss of coverage on Tuesday. “Striking employees can elect COBRA continuation coverage if they wish to be covered by the PWGA Health Fund in April. The WGAW cannot make contributions on behalf of staff employees who did not work in March and have no earnings,” the union said in a statement.

    In addition to the alleged lack of communication around their loss of coverage, WGSU members are lamenting that their employer has not tried to rectify the situation. In an Instagram post, the union stated that “during the 2023 writers strike, WGAW and AMPTP negotiated to extend health coverage for writers throughout the strike.”

    There has been no such extension for striking WGSU members, though they are in a different position than the writers in 2023 — the PWGA Health Plan is jointly administered by studio and union leaders and staffers are only negotiating with the union side. The WGA West negotiated its health coverage extension as part of its strike settlement agreement, rather than mid-strike.

    Contends Brown, ”I’m sure there was something that could have been worked out to retain our healthcare.”

    The latest dispute marks an escalation of already-high tensions between the WGSU and the WGA West. For weeks the staff union has been picketing outside the building where WGA West negotiators are locked in high-stakes negotiations with studios and streamers. A video published by Variety on March 27 showed protestors chanting “shame!” as WGA West negotiating committee members and leaders entered the building for negotiations.

    Meanwhile, the WGA West and the WGSU remain at loggerheads over key elements of the union’s first contract. The two sides are stuck on issues like the role of seniority in layoffs and a wage scale for union members.

  • Milly Alcock on Inevitable ‘Supergirl’ Backlash: “I Can’t Really Stop Them”

    Milly Alcock on Inevitable ‘Supergirl’ Backlash: “I Can’t Really Stop Them”

    Milly Alcock, who is leading the upcoming Supergirl film, is opening up about how she prepares herself for backlash.

    As someone who previously starred on HBO’s House of the Dragon, she has some experience with an intense fandom. And that’s only helped her prepare for the inevitable backlash she’ll face as a woman leading a superhero blockbuster.

    “It definitely made me aware that simply existing as a woman in that space is something that people comment on,” Alcock recently told Vanity Fair of what she learned from working on the Game of Thrones prequel series. “We have become very comfortable having this weird ownership of women’s bodies. I can’t really stop them. I can only be myself.”

    The Sirens actress previously told Nylon in 2022 that she tries not to engage with online discourse regarding her projects “because it doesn’t benefit me.”

    “It just makes me incredibly anxious,” she added at the time. “Me seeing my face constantly is straining. No one should have to do that. It fuckin’ sucks, man. I don’t know how the socialites of the world can do that. It’s kind of driving me off the wall. It’s an incredibly difficult space to navigate.”

    Elsewhere in her interview with VF, Alcock was also asked about legendary directors Martin Scorsese and Ridley Scott’s criticism of the superhero genre. Scorsese previously said those types of films are “not cinema” and compared them to “theme parks,” while Scott has called them “boring as shit.”

    “I get it,” she responded. “They’ve been around for fucking ever making phenomenal films. … Not every film is for everyone. The beauty of art is that you can be selective.”

    Supergirl hits theaters on June 26. It follows Alcock’s Kara Zor-El, aka Supergirl, as she joins forces with an unlikely companion on an interstellar journey of vengeance and justice when an unexpected adversary strikes too close to home.

  • Tiger Woods Says He’s Seeking Treatment After DUI and SUV Rollover Crash

    Tiger Woods Says He’s Seeking Treatment After DUI and SUV Rollover Crash

    Tiger Woods has announced he is seeking treatment after he was arrested for a DUI last Friday.

    “I know and I understand the seriousness of the situation I find myself in today. I am stepping away for a period of time to seek treatment and focus on my health,” the golf pro wrote in a statement shared to X on Tuesday. “This is necessary in order for me to prioritize my well-being and work toward lasting recovery.”

    “I’m committed to taking the time needed to return in a healthier, stronger, and more focused place, both personally and professionally. I appreciate your understanding and support, and ask for privacy for my family, loved ones and myself at this time,” Woods’ statement concluded.

    The golf star was arrested in Florida on Friday, March 27, following a crash near his home in Jupiter after he rolled over his SUV, per the local sheriff’s office. Sheriff Alex Villanueva with the Martin County Sheriff’s Office told press on Friday that before 2 p.m., a truck pulling a small trailer on South Beach Road in Jupiter Island was turning into a driveway when the driver looked in his rearview mirror and saw Woods’ Land Rover overtaking him at “high speeds.”

    “He saw it coming, so he tried to edge off to the side of the road. But this is a small two-lane road, and there was no shoulder for this pressure-cleaner gentleman to get off the side of the road,” Sheriff Villanueva said. “He was trying to move to the side of the road. The Land Rover overtook him at the last minute, swerved to avoid a collision but clipped the back end of the trailer of the pressure-cleaner apparatus, then rolled on the driver’s door.”

    Woods crawled out of the passenger side of the car, and when DUI investigators arrived to the scene, they administered a breathalyzer test, but he was not under the influence of alcohol at the time of the crash, as the test registered 0.0, per police. Authorities at the scene still determined Woods was impaired at the time of the crash. He refused a urine test at the time.

    This is the third crash Woods has been a part of. In 2021, he was involved in a rollover crash in Los Angeles, and police found an empty pharmaceutical bottle in the backseat of his vehicle. Earlier in 2017, the pro golfer was found asleep at the wheel in Florida and arrested for drunk driving. Ambien, Vicodin and THC were found in his system at the time, and he checked into a rehabilitation clinic that year.

  • Netflix Sets Korean Romance Series ‘Long Vacation’ From ‘Crash Landing on You’ Director Lee Jung-hyo

    Netflix Sets Korean Romance Series ‘Long Vacation’ From ‘Crash Landing on You’ Director Lee Jung-hyo

    Netflix has begun production on Long Vacation, a new Korean romance series from Lee Jung-hyo, the director behind the global mega-hit Crash Landing on You, and writer Jung Hyun-jung, one of Korea’s most prolific romance scribes. The streamer shared a few images on Wednesday from the show’s first day of table reads in Seoul (above and below). 

    The project unites two of Korea’s fastest-rising young stars. Choo Young-woo, who won the Baeksang Award for best new actor last year thanks to recent hits like The Tale of Lady Ok, The Trauma Code: Heroes on Call and Head Over Heels, stars in Long Vacation as Demon 3375, a powerful being who has lived for centuries without understanding love. Versatile actress Lee Se-young (The Red Sleeve, What Comes After Love), meanwhile, plays Deul-pan, a capable hotel room attendant whose everyday life is anything but easy. When the two keep crossing paths at a seaside hotel, an unlikely relationship begins to emerge, shaking up everything the demon thought he knew. 

    Lee Se-young at the ‘Long Vacation’ table read.

    Netflix

    Netflix has high hopes for the series, given the pedigree of the talent behind the camera. Lee Jung-hyo has become one of the company’s go-to Korean hitmakers. Following Crash Landing on You — one of the most-watched K-dramas in the platform’s history — he helmed original series Doona! (2023) and the Jeon Do-yeon thriller The Price of Confession (2025). Jung Hyun-jung’s writing credits span more than a decade, including hits like I Need Romance, Romance Is a Bonus Book, Lovestruck in the City and Discovery of Love.

    The series adds to what is shaping up to be another formidable year for Korean content on Netflix. The streamer unveiled a 33-title Korean slate in January that featured everything from a new season of Singles Inferno to rom-com Boyfriend on Demand —starring Blackpink’s Jisso — and Lee Chang-dong’s Possible Love, the revered auteur’s first film in eight years and a likely contender at this fall’s major festivals. Korea continues to play an outsized role as one of Netflix’s most important content engines outside the United States, a reality underscored just last week by the BTS comeback concert broadcast live from Seoul’s Gwanghwamun Square, which drew 18.4 million viewers and hit No. 1 on Netflix in 24 countries.

    Choo Young-woo at the ‘Long Vacation’ table read.

    Netflix