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Regé-Jean Page Joins Cast of ‘Dungeons & Dragons’

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Regé-Jean Page, one of the stars from the Netflix series Bridgerton, has landed his next role! The Hollywood Reporter has revealed that Page will take a leading role in the upcoming Dungeons & Dragons film from Paramount. There’s no word yet on which character Page will play.

Page joins the previously announced Chris Pine, Justice Smith, and Michelle Rodriguez in the film. Jonathan Goldstein and John Francis Daley are currently set to direct, and they also wrote the latest version of the screenplay from a draft by Michael Gillio.

Dungeons & Dragons is based on the popular and well-loved fantasy role-playing game where players can step into the role of a variety of different characters and go on campaigns, treasure hunts, and more, hosted by a Dungeon Master. The game setting combines humans, elves, and other creatures.

Page is also set to host Saturday Night Live on Saturday, February 20. You can watch him in Bridgerton now streaming on Netflix.

Aimee Garcia on This Week’s Episode of ‘Kings of Con: The Podcast’

A new episode of Kings of Con: The Podcast is out today!

This week, Rob, Rich and Tina talk to Aimee Garcia who is currently playing the beloved Ella Lopez on the Netflix show Lucifer. Tune in to listen to them discussing how they met each other, filming the last season of Lucifer, studying French and more:

Aimee Garcia (George Lopez, Lucifer) graces our podcasts and spreads her positivity and lovely energy.  Rich and Rob discuss the first time they met Aimee, and Aimee describes singing the National Anthem and Kicking Fears Butt!!

Check the announcement on Twitter:

Kings of Con: The Podcast is available to listen on Apple Podcasts and wherever you listen to podcasts. Be sure to subscribe to be notified a new episode is released. If you want to support the show, Patreon subscribers can listen to the new episodes the day before release and get exclusive contents each week.

‘9-1-1: Lone Star’ Recap: The 126 Have “Difficult Conversations” in Season 2, Episode 5

Last week’s 9-1-1: Lone Star ended on a cliffhanger no one saw coming: That Gwyneth was pregnant! In this week’s episode, Owen and Gwyn come to terms with their unexpected news and go over options since the pregnancy is a high-risk one. Meanwhile, Judd struggles with telling Grace something about her father and the others have trouble telling Mateo something about his new tattoo.

Keep reading for a recap of 9-1-1: Lone Star season 2, episode 5 “Difficult Conversations.”

FOX

At the doctor’s office, Owen and Gwyneth are waiting in silence, besides Owen’s constant leg tapping. Dr. Evans comes into the room, saying Gwyn is pregnant, and they really beat the odds. Looks like somebody got in just under the wire. He tells them she’s about four weeks along and by the looks on their faces, Dr. Evans takes it this wasn’t something they planned. Gwyn says no, this was a total, complete accident. There’s no easy way to say this next part, Dr. Evans begins. He says while geriatric pregnancies are not uncommon, they’re rare. The risks are heightened, and not just for the baby. There are serious complications that could arise for Gwyn as well. Increased risk of heart condition, blood clots, preeclampsia, and maternal mortality. Dr. Evans is sure she’s read that a significant percentage of these pregnancies end in stillbirth or miscarriage. “Well, that’s bleak.” Owen wonders what couples in their situation normally do and Gwyn answers that they terminate the pregnancy. Dr. Evans isn’t recommending anything, saying it’s really a conversation for the two of them.

At the firehouse as T.K. and Paul are talking, they notice Mateo is having trouble getting his sweatshirt off. Paul asks if there’s a reason why he’s losing a wrestling match to his sweatshirt right now and Mateo admits he got a back tattoo, showing it off. Mateo says he designed it himself; a firefighter hat with the 126 on it, and wings. After taking a closer look at it, T.K. mentions that there’s words, Paul continuing that there’s two. “Guardian angel, because that’s what we are.” Though, it’s not “Guardian angel,” it’s “Guardian angle.” T.K. and Paul don’t have the heart to tell Mateo. “My man has a typo permanently tattooed on his back.” That is unfortunate.

FOX

After responding to a call for a man who had a heart attack in the middle of “doing it,” Judd turns the guy over, mentioning they should check his glucose and steps back. When paramedics do, they find out he’s diabetic. Back on the ground, Paul brings up the hypoglycemic shock to Judd and that he called it from across the room. Paul mentions that Judd knows him, saying, “I thought I did.” Paul figures out that it’s his father-in-law and Judd admits that it’s Grace’s dad. But that woman with him is not her mom.

At the hospital after Judd has a talk with Grace’s father, Benjamin, about what happened, Grace and her mother come in and are relieved that Benjamin’s okay. Grace asks him how he let this happen and Benjamin makes up a story that he stayed too long on the treadmill at the gym, they had ESPN on and he guesses he got carried away watching the game. Grace promises him he can watch football sitting on the side of the road and he would pull over and stare at it. He got shaky on the way home and pulled over to get a milkshake at the hotel restaurant, but it just didn’t kick in fast enough. Next thing he knows, he was passed out in the lobby. Benjamin say that his favorite son-in-law was there to catch him and this is the first time Grace is hearing Judd was on the call. He figured he’d let Benjamin tell her.

T.K. and Paul are watching Mateo work out and Paul says every time he looks at the tattoo, it gets little bit bigger, like The Tell-Tale Heart. “It’s like those weird paintings when the eyes follow you.” They argue over who is going to tell Mateo and Paul says someone has to tell him. T.K. spots Marjan and they both walk over to her. T.K. asks if she saw Mateo’s new tattoo, so Paul calls over Mateo to show it off. Paul tells Marjan that Mateo designed it himself and Marjan compliments it and him. She begins to walk away but Paul pulls her back, TK. telling her she barely even looked at it. She did, it’s cool. Paul tells Mateo to lift the shirt to really show it to her and he does. Marjan’s eyes get big, noticing the mistake. T.K. and Paul whisper to her to tell Mateo but all she says is it’s really quite something. Mateo leaves and the other three just exchange looks.

FOX

Marjan’s getting ready to leave as Mateo is taking pictures of his tattoo. He asks her which filter he should use for his Instagram picture and Marjan, taking one for the team, tells Mateo he can’t post it, they need to talk. She asks if they said anything to him when he brought the design into the tattoo shop. Mateo mentions they said it was fire, and asked if it was exactly what he wanted. Marjan wonders if there was any chance they were laughing while they did it and Mateo guesses they were, but they were all busting chops. Marjan tells him how “angel” is spelled and Mateo says he knows, but as he’s spelling it out, he looks at the picture and realizes the mistake he made. How could he be so stupid? Marjan tells him he’s not stupid, he’s dyslexic. Mateo says those guys at the tattoo shop were clowning on him. And they’re a bunch of tools, Marjan says. T.K. and Paul were not having a laugh, they didn’t say anything because they love him and did not want to look at the face Marjan is looking at now. “Nobody wants to say the hard thing.” Marjan says he can fix it, she has an idea. It’s going to sting, though.

Owen is looking at T.K.’s baby pictures (which are Ronen Rubinstein’s ACTUAL baby pictures) and Gwyneth comes over to him. “We may not be perfect but we made a beautiful boy.” Owen wonders if she can imagine doing this all over again, little tiny body resting on your chest, chasing a toddler around, first day of school. “Are we actually considering this?” Owen says they’re young for their age, they do all the healthy things. 50’s the new 40. “Is 67 the new anything?” Because that’s how old Owen will be when he’s teaching them to parallel park. Gwyn says it’s a skill that will come in handy when one of them breaks a hip moving them into a dorm and they have to rush them to an ER. Owen tells Gwyn he had a case earlier that day, a dad he couldn’t save. And his daughter was maybe 19, and now she’s left without a parent. Would it be fair to do that to their kid? That’s assuming the pregnancy goes well, which is a huge assumption. It’s risky for the baby and Gwyn. Maybe they should just do the logical thing, schedule an appointment.

FOX

Grace takes a call from a woman, Kristen, ordering pizza and Grace thinks she dialed the wrong number. She didn’t, asking if they have cheesy crust, telling her her address. Grace asks if she’s in danger, if someone is making her feel like she can’t speak freely. Kristen tells her that’s right, as a guy, Andrew, is sitting on the couch watching a hockey game. Grace tells Kristen she understands and that help is on the way. Kristen asks if a medium pizza would be big enough for two people, then telling Grace her name for the “order.” Grace tells Kristen if the person she’s with is armed with a gun to ask for extra pepperoni, and she does. Grace says help is eight minutes out and if there’s somewhere safe she can go to say “peppers.” Definitely no peppers.

Andrew Smart, two priors for aggravated assault, just got out on parole. Kristen has a permanent restraining order against him. “He’s definitely not going peacefully.” Grace tries to keep Kristen on the line as Andrew is getting more angry. Kristen thinks she can do that and Grace tells her she needs her to try to move as far away from the door as she can. However, a muffled yelp can be heard and Andrew tells Kristen nice try. Grace asks Andrew where Kristen is and Andrew says she’s right here, his hand grabbing her neck. Grace stalls Andrew, telling him that her grandmother always told her that when God closes a door, he opens a window. “Sometimes you have to take a leap of faith.” Kristen breaks free and runs towards the window, jumping out of it and landing onto a big airbag fire and rescue have set up for her on the ground. Andrew tries to run away but it’s too late. Carlos and other officers come in and Carlos tells him to get on the ground, cuffing him.

Elliot tells Grace another operator would have hung up, but not her. How did she know? Sometimes it’s not what they say, it’s what they don’t say. Grace realizes something Judd had said and she listens to the hotel call, figuring out that her father was lying.

FOX

At home, Grace thanks her mother for stopping by, bringing out some tea for her. Grace knows she’s had a crazy week. Grace’s hands are shaking as she holds the cup and she tells Denice she’s okay. Denice asks Grace why she’s so nervous and Grace says she has to tell her something, and she’s just not sure she knows how. Denice asks what’s going on and Grace says it’s about her dad. Denice is worried the doctor said something but it’s not anything like that. She tells Grace to come out with it and all Grace says it’s Grandma’s china, she was moving some boxes around the house and she broke some of it. Denice is relieved, she was worried it was something serious. Benjamin loved that china more than Grace. Denice tells Grace with what they could’ve lost this week, she doesn’t care about some old plates. Grace knows she knows, telling her mother she loves her.

Owen and Gwyneth get ready for their appointment, both of them nervous, talking about where they should go to eat afterwards. Owen asks her what she wants, she wants to have this baby. Good, so does he. Gwyn asks if he’s sure and Owen thinks so. It’s crazy, probably a terrible mistake. So, they’re doing this. “I think that’s what we’ve been saying.”

Marjan and Mateo show up at Carlos’, T.K. and Paul already there. Carlos asks them how it went and Marjan says they did not botch it, Mateo is just being a baby. He has T.K. and Paul help him with his sweatshirt and the word “angle” has been covered up by a blood design. Mateo’s going to go back once it’s healed up and get the letters redone, best part is, the shop agreed to do it all for free. Marjan had a conversation with them. “Must’ve been some conversation.” Amazing what a little direct talk can do. T.K. gets the hint, apologizing to Mateo for not giving him the heads up. “Yeah, man, it’s just really hard to hurt someone with the face of an angle.”

Judd gets home, seeing Grace already in bed. He asks if she’s awake, and she said she is now. He has to tell her something, and he thinks it’s going to make her mad. But he just wants her to really consider who it is that she’s angry with. Grace gets up and turns on the light, telling Judd if he’s about to tell her that her father is not the man that she thought he was or that he kept this from her because he loves her and he didn’t want to see her hurt, she will say she understands and she appreciates it. Beyond that, Grace doesn’t want to talk about it. She turns off the light and goes back to sleep, Judd understanding and Grace holding back tears.

FOX

Catch 9-1-1: Lone Star every Monday at 9 p.m. ET/8 p.m. CT on FOX, following an all-new 9-1-1! New episodes stream the same night on FOX NOW and the following day on Hulu.

Read our exclusive interview with Lone Star‘s Director of Photography, Andy Strahorn, here!

Disney’s ‘Cruella’ Poster and Trailer Released

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If you’re not scared by evil things, get ready for the return of Cruella De Vil. Disney has released the trailer and a new poster for the upcoming movie Cruella. Emma Stone (La La Land) plays the iconic villain in the new film.

Cruella follows the young designer down her path towards villainy. The film also stars Emma Thompson (Men in Black: International), Mark Strong (1917), Paul Walter Hauser (Reno 911!), Emily Beecham (Into the Badlands), Joel Fry (Yesterday), Kirby Howell-Baptiste (The Good Place), and Jamie Demetriou (Miracle Workers).

Cruella premiers on May 28, 2021. You can watch the trailer below.

Interview: ‘9-1-1: Lone Star’s Director of Photography Andy Strahorn Talks Season 2, the Crossover, and More! [EXCLUSIVE]

FOX’s hit action drama 9-1-1: Lone Star, which follows the high pressure situations of first responders (namely the paramedics and firefighters of Station 126) in Austin, Texas, is off to a fiery start with its second season.

Nerds and Beyond recently had a chance to talk to Andy Strahorn, 9-1-1: Lone Star‘s Director of Photography. Strahorn has been with the show since the pilot. Prior to joining the Lone Star crew, he was the Director of Photography on FOX’s Lethal Weapon television series. Strahorn has spent decades in the film industry, and he joined us to discuss his history, what exactly his role entails, season 2 of 9-1-1: Lone Star, the epic crossover episode, how the pandemic has affected shooting the show, and more.

(This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.)

Nerds and Beyond: As the Director of Photography, you play a vital role in bringing a piece of television or film to life. Can you give our readers an overview of the main facets of your job?

Andy Strahorn: Basically, the Director of Photography is a visual extension of what writing is and the director’s vision. You’re really the person that can bring all of that, hopefully, to fruition and to screen. So what does that entail? Setting cameras and lights up and lighting the scene for the tone to capture the show, the mood, and so forth. But also it’s marshaling the people around you in a way that can assist you in achieving what you’ve got to do. In some weird way, the antithesis of all of our jobs in the film industry is money. We’re always working under the guise of “no time and not enough money.” Art can’t be really bought. When you bring that into the equation, it’s finding that balance of how do you make the show, movie, or whatever you’re doing, under the constraints of time, weather, money, availability, locations, all of that.

Jordin Althaus/FOX

My job is somewhat logistical with regards to dealing with studios, production, producers, director. The flipside of that coin, which is obviously why we all do it, is it’s very creative and liberating to interpret words on a page. And then how do you interpret that in regards to color, shadow, light, and camera movements? What does that say to the audience if you select a certain lens here and isolate a character from the background? As opposed to a wider lens, and now you feel the background around them and you feel the environment. You can say two completely different things to an audience without saying a word. It’s really a marriage of all the art, science, and money. Particularly now in the digital realm, as opposed to the photochemical when we used to do film, it’s a new technology and working with that technology that is moving so very quickly. The first hundred years of cinema, there were really only six or seven film formats. In the last 30 to 40 years of digital, there’s probably 20 to 25 formats. So it just gives you an idea that the technology is moving very fast and almost mimicking our culture.

Nerds and Beyond: Can you tell me a bit about your background in film and movies and how you eventually came to work on 9-1-1: Lone Star?

Strahorn: I started back a long time ago, when I was eight years old in Australia. I grew up in a small country town about eight hours west of Sydney. We had a single-screen theater in the 80s. We went to the movies every now and then, but not like today. The movies played three nights a week. I remember seeing The Empire Strikes Back when I was eight years old, and I didn’t know what I wanted to do, I just knew I wanted to do that. Once I finished high school, my first job in the film industry was at the very cinema that I watched Empire. 10 years later, I got this job as a cleaner at that cinema. So my first foray into the film industry was as a cleaner, not a PA. I worked my way up, did all that, and then became a projectionist, and then moved to a bigger city and started hustling my way into the film industry.

Back then, in Australia, you started off in the camera department as a video studio operator, and you worked your way up to AC and then DP. Along the way, you meet people, you take chances, and you shoot things for free just because of the sheer passion and love you have for cinema. You’re 25 years old you’re like, “Hey, I’ll work for free.” Then, I was lucky and fortunate enough that a movie that we shot [when I was 30] was with a bunch of mates that were successful commercial directors, at least in the United States. And then I just decided to jump on a plane and come over and didn’t look back. I have a lot to owe with regards to growing up in Australia and having that mentality of just like, “Well, you’ve got to keep moving forward. So if that’s where you gotta go, that’s where you gotta go.” You just pick up, grab a suitcase, and you stop at Los Angeles and go, “Well, what do I do now?” You just make your way and meet people. That’s basically how I got here, and I started off with a lot of commercial work in Australia.

In the last 10 to 15 years, streaming and episodic is really an interesting foray now in filmmaking. In the last five years, I really started enjoying shooting episodic because of the nature — you’re telling a story every 10 to 11 days. There was something liberating about that, and I really enjoyed that. I got my break on a show over at Warner Brothers. And lo and behold because of that show that I had shot, which was very action-oriented, I was introduced to the producers and the creator of Lone Star. We had a meeting and kicked it off really well, and the rest is history.

Nerds and Beyond: What does your prep process typically look like for an episode of Lone Star? Who are the key people on set that you do your planning with?

Strahorn: When you’re replicating rescues and so forth, that becomes this really finite marriage of pure logistics mixed with creativity. It’s dealing with stunt, SFX (they supply everything from smoke, to fire, to explosions … you name it, they do that), and then obviously safety, locations. All of these heads of department come into play. A lot of the process is just sitting and listening to each department talk about what their contribution will be to the show and to the scene at hand. You almost become somewhat of a cook once all those ingredients are in the bowl.

Kevin Estrada/FOX

The one thing I find really interesting about prep is just listening to other people and hearing their opinions and views on what they’re bringing to the table. We don’t all think the same, so it’s really enlightening sometimes hearing some person’s different take on it. And then going, “Okay, how can I use that?” or, “How can I embellish that?” That is a really fun part, seeing all of these other filmmakers contribute. I have my point of view of color, the tone and mood, and all that. Then I hear people go, “Hey this is what I’m thinking, can we do this or can we do that?” So it’s a lot of bouncing ideas off each other, all walking in the same direction to try to achieve the best results, if you will. 

Nerds and Beyond: What have been some of your favorite emergency scenes to create and film for the show? And, if you had to pick one, which was the most challenging?

Strahorn: One of my favorites was … we just aired it recently for this season, and it was a wildfire episode. That was a lot of fun. Partly because, logistically, it was such a huge scale of: how do you create drama and impending danger just off-camera with regards to certain firefighters at certain distances from the line, and what level of intensity of danger is there, of atmosphere, of physical tread? And how to create and put all of that in the mix.

Jordin Althaus/FOX

I think, logistically, probably the biggest challenge was the very first one we did, which was the pilot. We had a fertilizer factory that was empty, and it was out in Paris, California. It was huge. There was no power. It was an abandoned facility, and we came in and put power into the situation. It was almost a quarter of a mile squared that we needed to light. That was straight out of the gate and I thought, “Wow, this show is going to be big. This is just the pilot? What happens next?” That was probably one of my fondest ones, because it was like that was the baptism of, “This is the show.” We pulled it off safely, no one was injured or anything like that, but just created the atmosphere of a massive explosion that took place. I thought it came off really well. I’m really proud of that.

Nerds and Beyond: Speaking of some of these wild 9-1-1 calls and emergencies, is there a process that goes on behind the scenes with you, the directors, the writers, where you have to determine the feasibility of creating and filming these emergencies?

Strahorn: My understanding is that a lot of the calls that come in, the ones that we do photograph, are based on real life scenarios of calls being made. When we look at that and bring that to screen, there is a feasibility of going, “Well how do we do this? How do we even photograph it? Number one. And number two, is it even affordable to do that on the schedules that we have?” We have some really talented, creative producers that guide us to knowing, “Yeah, there’s a feasibility that we can do this in the time, the way we want to photograph it, or we can’t.”

Kevin Estrada/FOX

Generally speaking, as far as I know, there hasn’t been something where we haven’t done that the creator has wanted. I’m very lucky to be surrounded by a lot of creative, lateral thinkers that can think very fast on their feet, that allow us all to shine. There’s really a sense of camaraderie and teamwork with regards to, “Yeah, let’s do this. This sounds a little different, how do we do this?” 

Nerds and Beyond: Coming back to the crossover, which was excellent by the way, it was pretty different from a normal episode of Lone Star with the location, the wildfire. Can you expand upon the process of shooting that a little bit more? Especially because you’ve got the mine, the helicopter … there’s a lot going on.

Strahorn: It was a lot of fun working with those actors from the original 9-1-1. They were such a great asset coming into our show and were so complimentary and just absolutely enjoyable people to be there and work along the 126. Because they’re shooting their own show, which is demanding in itself, I didn’t get the chance to meet any of the actors until they walked straight on set. I had their headshots to go off and whatnot. That’s sometimes a part of my process, looking at the headshots and then trying to look at as many pictures as possible of the actors, on any show that I do. You start to see, from a camera point of view, “Okay, if I want to make them look attractive … if I want to make them looked rugged … if I want to make them look fierce.” You can start to tell by looking at their face, “Okay this lighting will work really nicely here, and this will work there.” Each actor, everyone’s face, anyone who jumps in front of the camera, is different to the next. That was interesting, just learning their faces before they walked on set.

Jordin Althaus/FOX

Once we got into the fire and you start getting into the chopper stuff, you’re almost like a conductor, working with the assistant directors and the director, and running multiple units simultaneously. So at that point it almost becomes like a military drill. Whilst we’re on the ground, and the chopper hasn’t started, we’re walking through where certain camera operators will be, where they’re going to be with what talent, and what other shots. We had story boards for some of these big set pieces. The operators knew what they needed to get based off of the story boards. At that point, I’m coordinating with exposures and so forth, to them remotely, and we have multiple cameras on the ground in different areas with different actors in different locations. Then we had cameras in the air from chopper to chopper, and cameras over stunt doubles flying the actual hero chopper. There was a lot of coordinating done on the ground and talking it through so everyone knew very concisely, once that helicopter went up, where we would be. In lieu of that, the biggest thing too is then effects. At the same time, I’m talking through the assistant directors with regards to the effects artists — how much smoke, where I need the smoke in order to create the illusion of wildfire that would be enhanced with visual effects. There’s a lot of that happening at the same time.

Jordin Althaus/FOX

I think once you’re in those situations, only experience can really take over at that point, knowing where to put your energy at any given moment in order to capture what you’re shooting. Once those choppers are up in the air, it’s a finite amount of time that you’ll be airborne. It’s a very expensive process, and you have to get everything you need. That in itself was where experience takes over, because you’re dealing with a lot of safety as well with the helicopters. There’s a lot of … being very clear to people, knowing where they’re going to be and what they’re doing, coordinating with other heads of department (like special effects) with regards to what I need, where I need it, because we’re really only in the air for probably 20 to 25 minutes. That’s a lot of footage captured in a short amount of time. It’s adrenaline pumping, it’s exciting, but at the same time there’s a little bit of nerves because there’s a lot of money riding on that. Everyone has to step up to the plate and get what they need to get. Particularly on that episode, it’s very much an expensive peak of the act that you need that grandiose nature that you just can’t get from the ground level. You can to a degree, but once you start getting airborne and above the trees and all the rest of it, that’s when you really get a sense of scale. It was imperative that all of that had to succeed in order for the show and the episode to have a sense of scale for the nature of what the characters were fighting. 

Nerds and Beyond: Speaking of the original 9-1-1 and then Lone Star, they both have a cohesive feel as two related shows, but they also have their own distinct appearances, especially considering their fictional locations are in different states. Can you talk about how you went about prepping the look and feel specifically for Lone Star?

Strahorn: Obviously the other show has its own success, and we are here because of that. There was very much an acknowledgement that the success of that show stands upon its own two feet. When we started this, we always knew that the process of going out and making part two of it would render it very short-lived, because you can’t beat the original. So why try to replicate it? You have to kind of take the idea and then go, “We’re going to stand on our own two feet. We’re going to be our own thing.”

Being Austin, Texas, I felt that there should be this kind of heightened grittiness to it. The look has evolved throughout season 1 and into season 2, where it has this kind of warmth, but I would say more copperish tone, that’s very subtle to the day exteriors. That (to me, when I think of Texas) is heat, dryness. Texas really reminds me a lot of Australia and the Outback, to be honest. Then at night, we have the flip side of that coin, which is almost like this coolish steel feel to it. We went down this path where, in order to embrace the climate and whatnot, we had this very subtle bleach bypass look. It had a heightened contrast. It was all based on what presented our lead actor in the best light in a rugged way.

Kevin Estrada/FOX

When we did camera tests and costume tests at the beginning of the pilot, that’s what we kind of explored and we went down that path. Now, from episode 1 to 10 of season 1, that has developed and even evolved more. I think that’s just natural for any show. The more you start to learn the environment, and the characters and all that, naturally there’s going to be an evolution to anything. From my end, that gives it a very distinct difference from the Los Angeles 9-1-1 in a way that still pays homage to the namesake of first responders and all the rest of it. But it’s a little bit grittier with the use of color. I think that, in itself, you just look at the two shows and you know this isn’t replicating the success of 9-1-1, it’s its own thing. That was really important when we started this journey.

Nerds and Beyond: What was your plan going into season 2, did you have any specific goals or anything?

Strahorn: I love seeing what happens in our processes. We shoot the day’s worth of photography, and then usually at 4 or 5 a.m. we get sent stills and dailies. Because of the demand of our shooting schedules, I don’t get to see dailies all that often when I would like to. But I see stills from the previous day that are captured from the transfer. It’s nice to go, “Hey, that was great, I liked taking those chances yesterday, now I want to do better.” So going into season 2, I’m really enjoying exploring, “How do we keep fine tuning the sets, the locations, the rescues, the little things? How do we heighten reality? How do we make them look more rugged here? How do we make them look softer in this emotional content for this scene with their loved ones at home?” I’m enjoying all of that, where you have to learn these people’s faces and their characters. The more you learn and know, the more you can kind of get in-depth further with the lighting to reflect where they are emotionally at any given time. 

Kevin Estrada/FOX

When I go into each day, you’ll have what’s called sides — you’ll just see the scenes you’re shooting that day. As we read them, I always just do a quick glance and refresh on what I’m shooting. Aside from all the logistics and planning, usually my little thing that I do personally is I look at that scene and I think of one word. That’s what I just keep coming back to, and that’s my anchor to how to light the scene. Does this feel ‘this word’? Weighted? Depressing? Sadness? Happiness? Elation? Heroic? That’s my little thing that I just keep reminding myself that keeps me honest as I go about each scene. It’s such a fluid environment, that’s kind of what keeps me thinking in regards to my approach. Once you get into it, lighting to me is purely instinct. You just feel it. If you really break it down, the only true answer I can ever give is it just feels right. It feels appropriate. That’s what governs me when I light, and I like exploring that deeper into a season, like season 2, as opposed to season 1. Because you’re starting to really get to different layers of each character and storyline. And their relationships within each other. That is really fun as you start to scratch those surfaces. You start to really understand the people that you’re photographing, and what does that mean, and how do you translate that just through pictures.

Nerds and Beyond: How have COVID-related filming rules and regulations changed and affected your job on the set of Lone Star for season 2?

Strahorn: I think COVID, it’s impacted everyone’s lives anywhere in the globe. First and foremost, I feel blessed that I’m lucky to work. That opportunity is not wasted on myself personally. What it’s meant for us is that, as per safety agreements and trying to keep everyone safe as much as possible, it’s limited the hours that we’re able to be around and photograph. There’s a different type of pressure that’s exerted for no reason other than safety, and obviously safety is paramount. Losing a couple hours a day because of that, it forces an economy into your way of thinking. What I really admire about the crew, and I don’t want to talk in generalizations of film crews, but we’re so adaptable to locations, weather, and time — you could be shooting at 6 a.m., you could be shooting at 2 a.m., you could be shooting at midnight. Seeing how quickly we could adapt to masks, face shields, distancing, limited people in a designated area, and doing all that, and then still doing the show at the same level, if not higher, is really an interesting thing. It was an adaptation the first couple of weeks, without a doubt, because it was something that none of us had ever encountered before. But we all adapted very quickly. 

Kevin Estrada/FOX

There are a lot of good things that have come out of this. The shorter work days have been good. It just means that you sprint a lot more, but you go home and people somewhat have a life with their family. It does put more pressure on the Directors of Photography and heads of department because of the limited time as opposed to pre-COVID. There is definitely a limit of time, and what comes with that is the time to execute but also plan. So everything is somewhat expedited. It just means that we’ve had to adjust and adapt. But now that we’ve done it since September, we’re all so used to it that it would seem somewhat luxurious if we were ever to go back to pre-COVID shooting. It would feel like we have all the time in the world. I kind of work off of adrenaline, in some weird way that’s my happy place. It’s just a normal day for me. It has forced us into somewhat of a more concise approach, given that we don’t have the time that we had previously. It’s definitely an expedition of creative percolating of the approach for each episode, each scene, each shot. There are layers of multi-tasking that are taking place at any given time. Whilst I’m shooting and I’m watching, I have operators doing the current shot and I’m looking at color on the DIT station, looking at exposures. I’m talking to my guys with regards to the next shot, and then what is the next shot after that, and I’m already lighting in my head. You somewhat have to work on multiple layers, and I think that’s for any camera person pre-COVID. But now it’s a little bit tighter. It forces that economy, if you will.

Nerds and Beyond: Finally, out of all of the shows and films that you’ve worked on over the years, are there any projects or scenes in particular that you’re most proud of, or that have just stuck with you?

Strahorn: It’s so hard, it would be like asking someone to pick their favorite child. Even though my mom always said I was her favorite child, but I’m sure she said that to my brother and sister as well. There’s different lives for different reasons. I’ve been fortunate enough to do police officers and buddy cop dramas like Lethal Weapon. The movies were such an indelible impression on me growing up, so that was great. I was drawn to Lone Star because I loved Backdraft and firefighters. There’s something really amazing about first responders, the selflessness. It just feels like a compelling thing that you want to do justice to. 

I had the fortune of shooting a pilot in New Zealand about a year and a half ago for Disney/ABC. Unfortunately, it didn’t get picked up, but it was very ambitious. We were down there for eight weeks. The one thing that I love about this career is that it takes us to corners of the globe and you see sunrises and sunsets that people pay a lot of money to do. And I’m fortunate enough that I get to see that (or be it, surrounded by a hell of a lot of sheep in a paddock down in New Zealand.) But I got to see that, and at the same photograph something that I was really passionate about — this story that we did about the Bermuda Triangle. It was like, “Wow this is amazing. Would I ever even come to this part of the globe if I wasn’t shooting here?” That is one of the things that I love about each and every time I’ve shot all throughout the United States, Australia, New Zealand, Central America. Being able to have those opportunities to see sunrises, sunsets, people, culture, the way light looks different in the Outback of Australia compared to the West Coast of the United States.

To me, it’s the simple things. That has been really enjoyable, so it’s very hard to define, “What is that one thing?” So much goes into it with regards to the people you work with, the weather, the location. Much like in the actual execution of a film, there’s so much that goes into building a memory. There’s a lot of friends I’ve met all over the globe that I’m fond of, and it’s very hard to pick who, of those people, were responsible for that one indelible impression. It’s all equal. It’s a good question, I just find it hard to really discern which one I love more than most. You’re learning different things at different times in your life; they’ve all been pretty amazing. When I started this journey, I was eight years old in the Outback. To me, films were something that … you went down to the video store and you got a VHS tape. It wasn’t something that you went out and did. So there’s a very much humble approach to “Wow, this is pretty cool I get to do this,” and several decades ago I was thinking, “How the hell do I get there?” 

Karen Gillan, Jewel Staite, and More Heading to Wales Comic Con 2021

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Wales Comic Con has once again had to change it’s dates due to Coronavirus. It has now announced its new dates and its first few exciting guests!

Wales Comic Con has moved from April 2021 to November 20-21, 2021. It will still be held at The Telford International Centre. All tickets from previously postponed events will be valid for the new dates. If you are unable to make the new dates, refunds can be requested on the Wales Comic Con website between February 28 – March 25.

Some amazing guests have already been announced. Currently set to appear are Karen Gillan (Doctor Who, Guardians of the Galaxy), Jewel Staite (Firefly, Supernatural), James Marsters (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), and Khary Payton (The Walking Dead). There are also some great arts guests who have been announced. To check out the full guest list, visit the Wales Comic Con website here.

Tickets are not yet available for the new dates but make sure you keep an eye on the Wales Comic Con website and Twitter so that you can grab yours!

‘Rule of Cool’ Written by Matthew Siege and Narrated by Felicia Day Is Released!

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Gamers and geeks alike will absolutely love this new novel! Published by Aethon Books and written by Matthew Siege, this story will take you down to nerdy paradise! If you prefer to listen to the novel, you can join Felicia Day as she narrates Raze the Gearblin in this funny, fictitious, sci-fi journey you won’t want to miss!

Here is the description, according to Audible:

Actress, YouTube star, and goddess of geekdom Felicia Day (The GuildDr. Horrible’s Sing-Along BlogBuffy the Vampire Slayer) brings to life this screaming love letter to litRPG and the possibilities the genre embraces. Don’t miss her hilarious, high-paced performance of unforgettable characters in Rule of Cool – perfect for fans of Ryan Rimmel, Dakota Krout, and Shemer Kuznits.

Raze is “just” a lowly Gearblin chained to the quest-giver desk at the worst (and only) arcade in town. And that’s a problem for her. It means that she’s a Non-Participating Citizen, someone who can’t see her stats nor make opposed rolls against Heroes. It’s why her life’s worth less than the vendor trash she doles out.

The old-timers swear it didn’t use to be like this; their issues only began once RNGesus went AFK a thousand years ago, leaving the questionably blessed Heroes to conquer everything without consequence. Fortunately, Raze is not about to let something as trivial as a millennium of injustice cramp her style. She’s got a crush on a frustratingly optimistic dreamer who talks her into using the Konami Code as a map to scale the conveniently located and suitably forbidden fortress. And when they reach the top, everything changes.

What follows is Raze and her mismatched crew doing their damnedest to burn the new “old” ways down to the ground, squaring off against thousands of noob heroes in epic, crunchy, badass, mechanized carnage!”

Make sure to snag your copy today! In case you’re feeling fancy, you can also enjoy this novel on Audible or Podium Audio.

New Images Released for ‘Prodigal Son’ Season 2, Episode 7 “Face Value”

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FOX has released new photos for “Face Value,” episode 7 of Prodigal Son‘s second season! The episode premieres March 2 and will feature the debuts of both Alan Cumming and Catherine Zeta-Jones as guests stars. The images show Zeta-Jones as Dr. Vivian Capshaw as well as a plastic surgery gone wrong case of the week. Check out the new images below!

Recap: Down the Rabbit Hole We Go in ‘Prodigal Son’ Season 2, Episode 6 “Head Case”

After last week’s episode of Prodigal Son, we were left with tons of questions. With a Jessica/Martin team up looming on the horizon, accidents waiting to happen, and certain members of the Whitly family slipping further and further off the rails, it seems that a whole lot of trouble is about to head our favorite profiler’s way. Let’s jump right into what happened on this week’s episode!

Phil Caruso/FOX

The scene opens with Malcolm visiting Martin at Claremont only to see … Jessica? She and Martin have come to the conclusion that Ainsley needs to be told of what she did to Endicott. Malcolm doesn’t think this is a good idea. His parents believe that by getting ahead of it and telling her together, they can “control the narrative.”

Malcolm vehemently protests this plan and tries to explain to Jessica, who’s still upset that they didn’t go to the police in the first place, that even if he handled the situation wrong, he was protecting his sister. Of course, Martin has to interject “I’m just saying, if he’s fine with murder coverups, I could’ve done with a little of that energy back in ’98.” As the two continue to try and convince Malcolm, a text from Gil comes in alerting him to a case.

Phil Caruso/FOX

Malcolm inquires about the vic on the scene — overenthusiastically if JT’s “Damn, Bright,” was any indication. The creepy Canmere Hotel boasts an architect, Lyle, who has been murdered, left with what according to JT is called a ball-bearing compass (or as Bright relatably calls it, a circle drawey thing) jammed in his eyes. The architect was set to renovate the building.

Phil Caruso/FOX

Noting that there were no fingerprints but that the kill was precise, Bright profiles that the team is dealing with a “good old fashioned psychopath,” as the killer stayed calm and collected though the murder was impulsive.

Phil Caruso/FOX

Outside, Malcolm spots Ainsley interviewing Ramon Vieja, an investor who sunk a large sum of money into the renovation. When Ainsley brings up criminal accusations that leveled against him, Vieja gets cagey. When Gil and Malcolm try and speak with them, he points them towards his lawyer and “those Bolsheviks on the eighth floor.”

Phil Caruso/FOX

Malcolm walks over to Ainsley, asking how she is; she coldly dismisses her brother and walks away, obviously peeved at him. Malcolm, Dani, and JT go to the upstairs loft Vieja referred to, where a group of artists are furiously working.

As the team stares at a sculpture, Karina Petrovic, the artist in question (who says the piece is a reimagined sculpture of her lady parts) and another eccentric worker, Wendell, tells them all about Vieja’s endeavors to evict everyone in the building; evictions, lawsuits, and refusing to fix the elevators were only some of the tactics the wealthy investor resorted to. Wendell and Malcolm also geek out about the hotel’s deep history, from Duke Ellington’s stay to the Bowery Ripper’s victims. As Malcolm questions the pair further, he observes their behavior.

As they wait for the elevator, Malcolm and Dani conclude Karina is hiding something and Wendell is protecting her. The rickety elevator opens, inspiring JT to take the stairs while Dani and Malcolm brave the contraption. During the ride, Dani asks if Malcolm is ok, citing his visit to Claremont for her worry. While he opens up a bit, he shuts down as soon as she asks why his parents were upset, unable to give Ainsley’s secret away.

They lapse into awkward silence as a lady, Greta Swan, wheels her father, Rupert, onto the lift. She tells them they overheard the architect and Ramon arguing about the broken elevators, which the architect fixed.

Back at home, Malcolm asks a still-peeved Ainsley for her interview footage of Vieja and asks if she’s upset with him. She tells him she hasn’t been sleeping and that she’s been remembering snippets from the night of Endicott’s murder. In what would’ve been the perfect moment to tell her the truth, Malcolm lies yet again, saying that no one should have to see someone kill a man. While they hug, Malcolm notices Vieja was missing a cufflink in the footage, calling Dani and asking her to meet him back at the hotel.

Bright examines a hallway, finding spilled paint and the cufflink. He calls Dani, telling her he thinks he can link Vieja to a cut on the victim’s face when someone darts past. Of course, Malcolm investigates. The elevator mysteriously opens, and Bright peers in … only to be pushed, plummeting 3 stories down the elevator shaft.

Malcolm groans as Dani holds an icepack to his head as she asks how he feels. JT enters and after ribbing Malcolm, says that Vieja’s been linked to the cufflink. Dani and Malcolm interrogate Ramon, realizing he’s not their guy.

The pair come out of the interrogation. Malcolm declines a call from Claremont and crumples over from a sharp pain in his head, hand trembling. Dani and JT send him home to family dinner. Malcolm enters the Whitly mansion to find Jessica, Ainsley, and… Martin?!? Malcolm suffers another attack, getting flashes of the elevator shaft and feeling something isn’t right. Martin and Ainsley, having followed in Martin’s footsteps becoming a doctor, think he’s experiencing jamais vu (the opposite of deja vu) brought on by a concussion.

Malcolm gets another call from Claremont. He gets flashes of Gil in Martin’s cell before he shoots awake, with … Dani there comforting him? Malcolm says “I’ve got to get out of here. Or I’m gonna die.” When Dani asks him “get out of where?”, Malcolm can’t recall and believes it’s a nightmare.

Dani and Malcolm sit on the couch, Dani asking him about what’s wrong. He responds that he feels like he has everything he wants, but doesn’t deserve it. Dani reassures him that he does, and the two kiss. Malcolm’s hand begins to shake again, and with it, his surroundings. The two get a call saying Karina was spotted at the hotel.

They go to check it out and question Karina, who denies trying to kill Malcolm or Lyle. She specifically says “I don’t fit your profile,” making Malcolm jolt with awareness — though this passes. Karina points the detectives towards Wendell, who’s in love with Karina. However, when they get upstairs, Wendell’s been slain.

The confidence with which Wendell’s murder was carried out leads Bright to profile that they have a serial killer on their hands. Another call from Claremont comes, and Malcolm answers; Mr. David says that someone there has all the answers. In a scene hauntingly reminiscent of Malcolm’s first visit to Martin after 10 years, he enters the cell to see none other than Gil Arroyo.

In this timeline, Malcolm called the police to report Martin, but he didn’t stop Gil from drinking the tea Martin offered; Gil “woke up 3 days later stark raving mad.” Malcolm starts suffering another episode before Martin enters. Martin and Gil begin to argue while Malcolm continues panicking, finally realizing he’s still at the bottom of the elevator shaft and that everthing was “all in his head.”

Malcolm rushes back to the hotel elevator, trying to make himself wake up so he doesn’t die. Martin continues to try and convince him that everything is just jamais vu. Malcolm thinks if he solves his case, he might be able to wake up. Martin resolves to help him even though he thinks he’s acting crazy.

Malcolm frantically begins to try and analyze the clues he’s encountered. Seeing bloody bootprints on Wendell’s papers, Malcolm remembers that the woman on the elevator, Greta Swan (as Karina’s changed sculpture prompts him to remember), was wearing boots. Malcolm’s realized that he’s kept seeing swans throughout the entirety of his hallucination.

Martin tells JT he thinks Malcolm’s having a psychotic break and he needs his help, but before they can subdue him, he’s slipped away. Malcolm’s gone to confront Greta at her apartment when her dad wheels up to him, saying she’s not there and that he’s very protective of her. Seeing the man’s boots, Malcolm realizes that Greta’s father is the Bowery Ripper, a serial killer that was never apprehended.

Everything starts to add up. Martin finds Malcolm but before he can properly warn him off, Rupert stands up and holds a knife to Martin’s throat.

Phil Caruso/FOX

Malcolm tries to get Rupert to release Martin while trying to figure out why Rupert started killing again. It seems that Lyle was going to expose Rupert’s secret. Remembering that in his dream he’s a detective, Malcolm pulls a gun and shoots Rupert, sending him careening down the empty elevator shaft as Martin ducks out the way.

Malcolm stares at the gun in his hand, wondering why solving the crime didn’t liberate him from this dream sequence. Martin tells him “you got the killer, saved my life, and now everything’s ok, isn’t it? Isn’t it, my boy?” The two hug as Malcolm agrees. Suddenly, they’re back celebrating with the Whitly clan. Malcolm’s headaches have stopped … is he giving up on waking up, enamored with this fantasy life he’s found himself in?

Malcolm briefly stares at an open door leading to the basement. On the premise of replenishing the snacks, Malcolm goes down to the room where he found Sophie, flashing back. Martin asks him why he’s so determined to wake up when he has a good life in this dream. Malcolm explains as everything begins to shake.

“Because it’s all a lie. This dream, vision, alternate reality, whatever. I thought it was what life would be like if you weren’t a killer. But it’s not. It’s what life would be if I never found out … Suffering is real. Even if I don’t open the box, the woman in there is still in pain … This is who I am Dr. Whitly. Even in my wildest dream, I’m still a detective. I need to seek the truth, no matter how painful.”

As Malcolm starts to opens the box, Martin tries with one last-ditch effort to keep him there. He cites that Dani won’t be there in the capacity that she is in the dream, saying “Stay for her. A partner you can actually be honest with? You’ll never have that if you open the box”. Malcolm tears up and declares Martin made him the way he is, to which dream Martin responds, “well you can point fingers as much as you want, but when you’re miserable and alone, remember you had a choice”. Malcolm responds “no I didn’t”, throwing open the box and waking up.

At the bottom of the elevator shaft, about to be crushed by the descending cart, Malcolm finds the skull of an old victim. He jams the elevator’s progress with an old tool he finds on the floor, escaping peril yet again (how is this man still alive?).

Battered and bruised, Bright hobbles out into the lobby where he’s greeted by JT and a worried Dani, whom he stares mournfully at. It’s only been 20 minutes since their phone call. He informs them that he knows the killer’s identity.

The team goes to the Swans’ apartment and confirm Rupert is the Bowery Ripper before arresting him. Back at the precinct, Dani checks up on Malcolm. She comments on how he managed to solve a case while unconscious and the craziness of his dream.

Sherlock Freud cracks another one.

Dani turns to leave but asks Malcolm if she was different in his dream, to which he cryptically responds, “yes … and no.” Malcolm tries to brush her off, saying he wouldn’t want to bore her when she inquires further, leading her to repeat something she said in the dream (“the one thing you never do is bore me”) before bidding him goodnight. Bright stares plaintively after her.

Malcolm returns home to find a blank looking Ainsley on his couch, having asked her to meet him. Likely influenced by his dream realization, he tells her that she killed Endicott. He reassures her that everything is going to be alright, but she shakes her head blankly before saying “no, it’s not”. Malcolm jumps away as she opens her coat to reveal her blouse splattered with blood; she’s blacked out again … and doesn’t remember what happened. As Malcolm panics, wide-eyed, Ainsley apologizes, saying “I’m sorry, I didn’t know where else to go” before the screen goes black.

Malcolm Danger Count: 5

FOX said that there would be a twist; they did not disappoint. What this means for the Whitlys remains to be seen. Catch Prodigal Son on Tuesday nights at 9/8 CT on FOX.

Keke Palmer Cast in Upcoming Secret Project From Jordan Peele

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Jordan Peele has another film in the works, and Deadline has revealed that Keke Palmer is set to star in the movie. Though not officially confirmed, Daniel Kaluuya, who starred in Peele’s film Get Out, is currently in negotiations to star in the new project.

There are currently no further details about plot or what character Palmer will play. We do know that the film will be produced with Peele’s company Monkeypaw Productions and Universal. Peele will write, direct, and produce the film, with Ian Cooper joining as producer.

Though we don’t yet know what the film will be about, we can’t wait to learn whether Peele will carry a similar tone that he has for his previous two films, Get Out and Us, or head in a different direction. Either way, we already know he’ll bring another incredible film to the table.

The upcoming project is scheduled to release on July 22, 2022.