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Review: ‘Solo Leveling -ReAwakening-‘ Sets a High Bar for Season 2

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Solo Leveling -ReAwakening- will soon be making its way to theaters this December. Ahead of the premiere, Nerds and Beyond’s Otaku Stroll had a chance to check out the film, which left us even more excited than before about the show’s upcoming second season.

Solo Leveling -ReAwakening- touts a two-hour runtime, and the first hour and change gives audiences a condensed recap on what went down in the 12-episode first season from start to finish. This is a great way to experience the show in a theatrical format — particularly the events of the epic finale — while getting a refresher before the next season (and the perfect opportunity to bring a friend along if you’ve been trying to get them into the show).

Once -ReAwakening- reaches the end of episode 12, the real treat awaits. The rest of the film is the first two episodes of season 2, in full. For those that have read ahead, these episodes will take us through the majority of the fourth volume.

Watch our spoiler-free review below, where we discuss our thoughts on this first look at what’s to come in the second season of Solo Leveling.

Solo Leveling is adapted from the best-selling Korean web novel written by Chugong, which was then later adapted into a webtoon and manhwa with illustrations by DUBU.

“Over a decade has passed since a pathway called a “gate” which connects this world and another dimension suddenly appeared, and people with superhuman powers called “hunters” have been awakened. Hunters use their superhuman powers to conquer dungeons inside the gates to make a living, and Sung Jinwoo, a hunter of the lowest rank, is considered the Weakest Hunter of All Mankind. One day, he encounters a double dungeon, a high-level dungeon hidden inside a low-level one. In front of a severely wounded Jinwoo, a mysterious quest window pops up. On the verge of death, Jinwoo decides to take on the quest, which makes him the only person who can level up.”

Don’t miss Solo Leveling -ReAwakening- when it hits theaters in North America on December 6, and stay tuned as we await an official premiere date for season 2.

Atsuko Releases New ‘Kaiju No. 8’ Apparel Collection

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Get the squad ready to assemble with Atsuko’s new Kaiju No. 8 collection!

Based on the manga from Naoya Matsumoto, Kaiju No. 8 premiered back in April to acclaim from fans, becoming one of the biggest series of the year. Season 2 is currently in production and set to release in 2025.

Atsuko’s licensed Kn8 collection is now available. It includes Kaiju No. 8 Black Tee for $40, Kaiju No. 8 Sweater Vest for $75, Kaiju Defense Bomber Jacket for $150, and Kaiju 8 Parachute Pants for $90. All prices are in USD.

Voice actors from the dub series Abigail Blythe (Kikoru Shinomiya) and Adam McArthur (Reno Ichikawa) helped launch the series modeling the new gear.

Check out our interview with Jonathon of Atsuko from New York Comic Con this year!

The story revolves around Kafka Hibino, a 32-year-old longing to join The Defense Force and make good on his promise to a childhood friend, Mina Ashiro. He befriends a new coworker Reno Ichikawa, while cleaning up Kaiju remains, whose determination to join The Defense Force inspires Kafka to fulfill his childhood promise to pass the entrance exam and join Mina to protect humanity. When a small Kaiju burrows itself inside Kafka, he gains superhuman strength and powers fit for fighting Kaiju. He works to earn the trust of his human teammates, defeat increasingly powerful Kaiju, and keep the world safe.

You can watch the first season of Kaiju No. 8 on Crunchyroll in subtitled and dub formats.

‘Beyond Black Beauty’ and the Importance of Its Storytelling

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Black girl magic is meeting cowboy core aesthetics in Season 1 of Prime Video’s Beyond Black Beauty, and it’s a horseback ride worth taking. 

Beyond Black Beauty, based on the book Black Beauty by Anna Sewell, follows the teenager Jolie Dumont (Kaya Coleman) and her multi-generational family. Jolie has heart and spirit. She’s an ambitious horseback rider living in Belgium with plans for the Olympics. However, her life is uprooted when her father’s (Gilles Marini) business scandals surface, and she finds herself moving into her Aunt Yvonne’s (Lisa Berry) urban ranch in Baltimore with her mom (Sagine Sémajuste). 

Initially, Jolie’s primary goal is getting back to Belgium, but she develops an unbreakable bond with a gorgeous black horse who has been let down time and time again. The horse, who Jolie appropriately names Beauty, connects Jolie to her family and gives her an entirely new definition of home. 

The scope of issues on this show is vast, and every issue is handled with impeccable care. It covers animal rights and resilience through the story of Beauty. It covers the struggles of gentrification through the story of Yvonne’s ranch. It covers mental health through Jolie’s struggles with anxiety and bullying, and it covers racial discrimination through a wide variety of lenses. I could go on and on. Somehow, though, Beyond Black Beauty covers all of these intense topics (and more), while holding the viewer in the comforting embrace of the familial bond that ties the show together.

This show is Black women-led by a stellar cast. Kaya Coleman’s performance as Jolie shines on this show. Being a primary connecting point of all the stories being told isn’t an easy feat, but Coleman does it with heart and talent. The chemistry she has with Akiel Julien, who plays her love interest, Alvin, is also incredibly tangible.

Similarly, Sagine Sémajuste and Gilles Marini have great chemistry, even playing a couple with marriage turmoil that’s rather heavy in the plot. The sisterhood between Sémajuste’s character, Janelle, and Lisa Berry’s character, Yvonne, is also wonderful, heartwarming, and refreshing. Its growth is beautifully nourished throughout the show’s first season

Lisa Berry’s performance as Yvonne Parrish is powerful and full of love, comfort, and joy. Fans of her previous work like Supernatural will savor seeing her in a lighter role that’s easy to adore and root for.

With fully-rounded characters of all ages, this show truly covers and relates to the experiences of anyone who watches. Even through some of these characters’ flaws and mistakes, it’s hard not to root for the wonderful women who make this show what it is. We can only hope that Season 2 is on the horizon. (I mean, that ending? Come on!) 

The first season of Beyond Black Beauty is available to watch on Amazon Prime Video and FreeVee. 

Interview: Nat Geo’s ‘The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth’ – with Clay Ramsay

The Stanford Prison Experiment was one of the most notorious psychology experiments of the last 50 years. 

In 1971, Stanford psychology professor Dr. Philip Zimbardo gathered a group of college students to take part in a study about life in prison. He paid them $15 a day and divided them into two groups: prisoners and guards. The study was supposed to take two weeks, but after just six days, the guards became increasingly worse toward the prisoners, and the experiment was halted. 

Over the next few decades, Dr. Zimbardo became infamous, staying in the spotlight and making media appearances discussing the study, speaking at length about how good people can do bad things and the brutality of prison life. 

But what of the participants? Did they feel the same way about the study as Dr. Zimbardo?

For the first time, the guards and prisoners are breaking their 50-year silence through a new NatGeo docuseries called The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth in which they discuss and recreate pivotal moments from the experiment. The series takes a look at all angles of the experiment and challenges the narrative built by Dr. Zimbardo after all these years.

One such participant is Clay Ramsay, or Prisoner 416, who is most known for initiating a hunger strike while “behind bars.” Below, he reflects on his experiences during the study, offering a perspective not often discussed regarding the ethics of the study and the inherent power manipulation therein.

I know you were not one of the original participants. You were an alternate, if you will. What were your expectations going into the experiment and do you think you were fully aware of what you were getting yourself into?

Clay Ramsay: No one was fully aware, and I was not fully aware. I had assumed that this would be, to some degree, like other psychology experiments I had participated in. In the Stanford environment, there were always ads up for different kinds of experiment participation – not ones that lasted two weeks – but in any case, no, I was shocked from the point that I was stripped and pseudo de-loused using baking powder.

When you joined, there was already an air of rebellion against the guards regarding their treatment of the prisoners. You pretty famously even started your own rebellion in the form of a hunger strike. Tell me a little more about the catalyst behind that decision.

Ramsay: Actually, there wasn’t an air of rebellion at that point. That was something that happened at the end of the first day or sometime on the second day, and it had been pretty much quashed. So I wasn’t there for all that, but that’s the point at which the guards really got tested, and they succeeded in pushing people back into place. When I got there, the prisoners were pretty subdued. It took me easily a day and a half to decide whether this thing was even really an experiment or not, whether it was at all legit. It took me a while, but at the point that I decided I would do a hunger strike, there really wasn’t any other kind of activity like that going on.

Zimbardo said the other prisoners viewed you as a troublemaker for that decision. Do you think that’s a fair judgment? Did you see that play out in their attitudes toward you, or did you see yourself as a hero?

Ramsay: First of all, my judgment is very limited about that, because part of the time I was in the janitor’s closet, so I couldn’t tell. I know that the guards felt they had to find a way to get control, and so they looked for ways to inconvenience the other prisoners, to create some kind of social pressure on me to do things differently. But the guards’ pressure on the other prisoners was so coercive that it wasn’t convincing that they were mad at me. So I would have to disagree with the late Dr. Zimbardo on that.

Do you think anything would have played out differently had anyone else joined you? 

Ramsay: Oh, I think we would have been repressed more if somebody had joined me. I think it was perhaps more effective for me to do it by myself, actually. I don’t know what they would have done at that point, but it’s not like it would have made the difference for a second person to join me. 

What do you think this says about solidarity vs. individual resistance?

Ramsay: You have to understand that I have said for 50 years that this study has no scientific value whatsoever. I have been shown to be right by the book [Investigating the Stanford Prison Experiment: History of a Lie] by Thibault Le Texier. He unearthed like 100 times more information than was available to me until his book appeared. But really, this [experiment] is not something that tells anyone anything about human behavior. That’s my position.

I was reading about another documentary called Quiet Rage that y’all did with Zimbardo two months after the experiment and that you felt – even for the short amount of time you participated – like you were losing your identity. How did that affect you then, and how much of that has stayed with you in adulthood?

Ramsay: My memory is imperfect, but in terms of the time interval, that makes sense. And if I’m on record having said that I felt I was losing my identity, then I guess there’s something to that. But one would expect some lasting after-effects if that were the case, and that just really wasn’t true. You have to remember, this was the Bay Area in 1971. People talked dramatically, people threw things around, people did gonzo behavior of all sorts, and Zimbardo’s experiment was really part of that atmosphere within Stanford. There was a lot of “everything and anything goes.”

What does being a part of such a historically significant study mean to you? I have two cousins who were psychology students and they knew exactly what the study was when I mentioned I was talking to you, and that’s even 50 years after the fact!

Ramsay: Well, I have been in a position of having said over and over that this is bad science, right? And that has not been of much interest to journalism decade after decade. And I don’t expect that part to change. However, at least now, my position has been justified at the level of articles in American psychological journals and so forth.

Have you maintained relationships with any of the other participants and if so, what does that look like?

Ramsay: We were brought together in the course of doing this very documentary. Juliette Eisner, the director, gets all the credit for that, along with Alex Braverman, the producer. Throughout this, [Juliette] has been extremely intelligent, sensitive, and attentive, sort of 360-degree documentary maker. I felt that I got to tell my story. You’ll see in episode three that Zimbardo got to tell his story. So in the course of that, yes, I would say thanks to Juliette Eisner, there are some connections. Zimbardo would try to bring together participants in one venue or another, but I was not a part of that, and he was not trying to get me into that.

You’ve said you don’t think the experiment was sound science. How did the constant surveillance and lack of control and agency throughout the experiment affect you?

Ramsay: It affected me in the desire to see what I could do to get out! The idea that I lost my identity boundaries is, I think, disproven by my ability to come up with a strategy and execute it. And I would say that also, of other prisoners and guards, that two-thirds of the guards were not like Dave. [Note: Dave Eshelman was an acting student who patterned his behavior after the movie Cool Hand Luke. Those in the experiment called him John Wayne.] They didn’t have acting training and they weren’t getting nudged along by Zimbardo in the same way. And so two-thirds of them were basically “live and let live” in the experiment. So they made their decision, and they followed it. Some of the prisoners felt like “This is my late summer job, and I kind of want the two weeks’ worth of money, and so maybe this will calm down soon.” So they were willing to put up with a fair amount because they knew this wasn’t permanent. That it was not a prison. There was one person who, before I was there, had the signs of a nervous breakdown, and he has said later that he chose to fake it. That this was his exit, right? And it’s possible – and I’m only speculating, I’m probably doing him a disservice – that it was a bit of a mix. That he began trying to fake it, and then he realized, you know, I really do feel terrible. I gotta get out of here.

We’ve kind of touched on this, but how did the participation in the study help you reflect on human psychology, and what did it reveal about human nature to you?

Ramsay: It didn’t help me reflect on human psychology. First of all, right after this, I started UC Santa Cruz. So I was not only occupied, I was thoroughly entertained by UC Santa Cruz. I’m not spending my time going out into the hills and pondering the experiment. But there was a point, maybe a year later, where I thought, maybe I can get something out of this. Maybe I could write something and get it printed somewhere. And I started on it, but I ran out of gas because I found all I had to say was that the main motivation for the prisoners was that this was a job. And that wasn’t very interesting to me or others. So I dropped it.

This documentary shows all sides of the experiment and even casts some doubt on Zimbardo’s credibility and ethics during the experiment through Thibault Le Texier’s book. Has your opinion of Zimbardo changed throughout the years and if so, how?

Ramsay: No, what Thibault did was confirm my existing opinion of Zimbardo, which is that he was basically a public relations man. That was his real skill. He nursed this thing and made it a cultural object and it now will never go away. And all that we’ve got now is that there’s a dissenting opinion that’s in the public record, instead of it being just a thing that floats around occasionally. What Thibault showed me in his book – which is now in English, by the way – was a huge amount of information that was new to me. I had thought that however badly this was done, at least some kind of design, research, or design on paper. That wasn’t the case. What Zimbardo had instead was the work of one of his students who had the original idea. And they did this by renting three hotel rooms in South Palo Alto somewhere for a long weekend, and that it would be a quick [experiment]. That was their student activity. And then this was presented to Zimbardo, and he went, “This is great. I have access to lots of credit for this. And I have access to lots of funds.” Which is true. And Thibault’s book outlines how that worked at Stanford at the time. And so he just went about taking over the basement of the department, built what he needed, put the cameras in, and he was ready to roll. There was nothing else on paper, except afterward.

The book is fascinating to me. I’m in grad school and I’m taking a Research Methods class where we go over all the steps you have to take to conduct an experiment, so it surprises me that he could bypass that.

Ramsay: Yeah, that’s a lot of the charm. That’s a lot of what makes it a story. After his experiment, there was a decision by the American Psychological Association to have institutional review boards in place for human subjects in psychology experiments instead of only medical experiments, which had been the case before. So after Zimbardo, there were no other splashy-looking, career-making experiments like this, right?

And he was able to keep it in the zeitgeist and we’re still talking about it 50 years later.

Ramsay: That was his skill. That’s what he was really good at.

Lastly, in this documentary, you mentioned that you wanted to write a book on acid use in California and felt like being a participant would give you time to work on it. Did you ever get to write your book?

Ramsay: I did write it. I’ve just never published it. It’s a novel called Within California. It’s a little dense, but it’s more of a sort of slight fantasy alternate California. But all the elements about acid use are from the sort of the Golden Age, which was 1966 to when I finished it in 1973. 

The Stanford Prison Experiment: Unlocking the Truth is now streaming on Disney+.

‘Saturday Night’ Available on Digital Today

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Saturday Night, the film based on the true story leading up to the first broadcast of Saturday Night Live, is now available to buy or rent on digital. The Blu-ray/DVD will be available on January 7, 2025.

Directed by Jason Reitman and produced by Jason Blumenfeld, Peter Rice, Reitman, and Gil Kenan, here’s the synopsis:

At 11:30pm on October 11, 1975, a ferocious troupe of young comedians and writers changed television – and culture – forever. Directed by Jason Reitman and written by Gil Kenan & Reitman, Saturday Night is based on the true story of what happened behind the scenes in the 90 minutes leading up to the first broadcast of SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE. Full of humor, chaos, and the magic of a revolution that almost wasn’t, we count down the minutes in real time until we hear those famous words…

Saturday Night stars Gabriel LaBelle, Rachel Sennott, Cory Michael Smith, Ella Hunt, Dylan O’Brien, Emily Fairn, Matt Wood, Lamorne Morris, Kim Matula, Finn Wolfhard, Nicholas Braun, Cooper Hoffman, Andrew Barth Feldman, Kaia Gerber, Tommy Dewey, Willem Dafoe, Matthew Rhys, J.K. Simmons, Jon Batiste and Naomi McPherson.

Make sure to check it out on digital now!

‘Fire Country’: Jeff Pierre to Appear in Season 3, Episode 5

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It’s a Walker reunion on CBS’ Fire Country! In a newly released episodic still from season 3, episode 5, “Edgewater’s About to Get Real Cozy”, a familiar face can be seen talking to Eve (Jules Latimer).

In the still, we see Jeff Pierre, who played Trey Barnett on The CW’s Walker. Coincidentally, this episode also marks Walker star and executive producer Jared Padalecki’s appearance in the first of three episodes on Fire Country.

It looks like Pierre’s character is named Elijah Edwards, sharing the same last name as Eve. A family member, perhaps? Especially after the show has discussed Eve’s family life more.

Make sure to tune in Friday, November 15 to see Jeff Pierre, Jared Padalecki, and the rest of the Fire Country cast suit up for another great episode!

‘Fire Country’: Season 3, Episode 7 “False Alarms” Synopsis Released

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The synopsis for season 3, episode 7 of CBS’ Fire Country has been released. The episode is titled, “False Alarm” and is set to air on Friday, December 6. This will be the third of three episodes guest-starring Jared Padalecki.

Here’s the synopsis:

“False Alarm” – Station 42 responds to a false alarm call that escalates into a dangerous hostage situation, on FIRE COUNTRY, Friday, Dec. 6 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jared Padalecki guest stars as Camden, a SoCal firefighter who immediately recognizes Bode’s raw talent.

The episode was written by Jacqueline Furnare Donabedian and directed by Sarah Wayne Callies.

Here are some photos from the episode:

‘Fire Country’: Season 3, Episode 6 “Not Without My Birds” Synopsis Released

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The synopsis for season 3, episode 6 of CBS’ Fire Country has been released. The episode is titled, “Not Without My Birds” and is set to air on Friday, November 22. This will be the second of three episodes guest-starring Jared Padalecki.

In a fun turn of events, the photos for this episode also show Katie Findlay, who was part of Walker: Independence, a prequel to Padalecki’s Walker, of which he was also an executive producer of.

Here’s the synopsis:

“Not Without My Birds” – When a fire breaks out in a park containing an eagle nest, Station 42 and Three Rock work to rescue the protected species and prevent the fire from spreading into town, on FIRE COUNTRY, Friday, Nov. 22 (9:00-10:00 PM, ET/PT) on the CBS Television Network, and streaming on Paramount+ (live and on-demand for Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers, or on-demand for Paramount+ Essential subscribers the day after the episode airs)*. Jared Padalecki guest stars as Camden, a SoCal firefighter who immediately recognizes Bode’s raw talent.

The story for this episode is from Joe Hortua, and the teleplay is by Barbara Kaye Friend. This episode was directed by Alexis Ostrander.

‘9-1-1’ Midseason Return Date Announced

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ABC has announced its midseason lineup, including the return date of 9-1-1. 9-1-1 premiered earlier this fall and will take a hiatus around the holidays.

ABC has announced that the show will return with brand new episodes on Thursday, March 6 at 8:00 p.m., followed by Doctor Odyssey and Grey’s Anatomy.

9-1-1 stars Angela Bassett, Peter Krause, Oliver Stark, Aisha Hinds, Kenneth Choi, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Tracie Thoms, and Ryan Guzman. Make sure to watch 9-1-1 on ABC. You can also watch episodes the next day on Hulu!

‘The Rookie’ Season 7 Midseason Premiere Date Announced

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ABC has announced the midseason premiere dates for its lineup, and The Rookie‘s seventh season finally has a premiere date!

The show will return soon after the new year, premiering at 10:00 p.m. on Tuesday, January 7. The show will air after the premieres of Will Trent and High Potential.

The Rookie had a shortened season 6, due to the strikes, with the season 6 finale concluding in May 2024. Get ready for all of your favorites to return in just a few short months!

The Rookie stars Nathan Fillion, Alyssa Diaz, Richard T. Jones, Melissa O’Neil, Eric Winter, Mekia Cox, Jenna Dewan and Shawn Ashmore. You can watch episodes on demand and on Hulu the day after they air.