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I'm still mad Prime Video canceled this show — it's the perfect summer binge watch

I'm still mad Prime Video canceled this show — it's the perfect summer binge watch

Tom's Guidea day ago
It's baseball season, which not only means plenty of Major League action but also the perfect opportunity to revisit some of the best baseball movies and TV shows on streaming services like Netflix, Paramount Plus and Prime Video.
The latter, in fact, boasts one of the best depictions of the beloved sport in recent memory: 2022's "A League of Their Own," an eight-episode TV adaptation of the 1992 classic sports comedy of the same name starring Geena Davis and Tom Hanks. Co-created by Will Graham and Abbi Jacobson (who also stars as plucky protagonist Carson Shaw), the half-hour sitcom similarly focuses on the film's memorable Rockford Peaches, a team of female baseball players organized during World War II. But the series stretches and deepens the scope of the original film, tackling vital topics like racism, sexism and queerness in the formation of the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League.
Though the series only ran for one season — its ballgame sadly ending early due to the WGA strikes — it's still well worth a watch, whether you're a sports fanatic or otherwise. Need more convincing? Here's why you should stream "A League of Their Own" on Prime Video.
"Broad City" great Abbi Jacobson stars as Carson Shaw, an amateur athlete who, while her husband is deployed, travels from her small town to Chicago to try out for the All-American Girls Professional Baseball League (a real-life league that existed from 1943 to 1954, filling the gap left when male baseball players went off to war).
There, she lands the position of catcher on the Rockford Peaches and meets other women who also dream of playing baseball professionally, opening her world in more ways than one.
Elsewhere, Maxine Chapman (played by Chanté Adams) — a talented Black pitcher who is obsessed with baseball — is struggling to even be considered for any team; she can't join her local roster, the Peaches, because the AAGPBL doesn't accept Black players.
The parallel storylines between Carson and Maxine show that, while the level of athleticism and passion could be the same between two players, their respective realities mean very different trajectories for each character.
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Though "A League of Their Own" was initially greenlit by Prime Video for a second season — off the critical strength of its first eight episodes, which have a homerun 94% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes with a critical consensus that praised the comedy's "roster filled with all-stars and a field rich with possibilities" — but that pick-up was harshly reneged by Amazon in August 2023 due to delays caused by the WGA strike.
It is a shame because the sports series had a winning future ahead of it. "A League of Their Own" was smartly and thoughtfully expanding on the original movie's stories with an ever deeper and more diverse ensemble, refreshingly giving space and spotlight to LGBTQ+ representation and racial inequality and how intersectionality was at the core of the female experience in 1940s America.
But don't think that "A League of Their Own" is merely some old-fashioned after-school special — there's also some grand-slam baseball on view here from the show's actors, with exciting scenes of action-packed (and believably choreographed) athleticism throughout. It will charm you whether you're a diehard baseball fan or simply just want a great show to add to your watch list.
Watch "A League of Their Own" on Prime Video now
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2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams
2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams

USA Today

time21 minutes ago

  • USA Today

2024-25 Thunder player grades: Jalen Williams

The calendar has flipped to August, which means we've officially hit the low point of the NBA calendar. The next couple of months are the driest part of the year. Everybody has headed to vacation and awaits training camp to kick off the 2025-26 season. The Oklahoma City Thunder continue to enjoy their NBA championship. They had a historic 68-14 regular-season campaign that eventually led to the franchise's first title with a 2025 NBA Finals Game 7 win. They'll enter next season as a favorite to be a rare repeat winner. To reflect on their title run, Thunder Wire will conduct 2024-25 season grades for all 19 players who suited up for the squad at one point during the year. Second up is Jalen Williams, who had a career season with first-time All-Star and All-NBA honors: 2024-25 statistics: Advanced stats: Significant Percentile Finishes: Contract: Thoughts: Reminding folks he played through a broken wrist throughout the playoffs every other day on social media, Williams has earned the right to run as many victory laps as he wants this summer. The 24-year-old answered any questions and criticisms with a stern hush. After wondering if Williams is good enough to be the second-best player on a title contender, he shut down any doubters with a career season. Juggling injuries all regular season, it was him who was one of the Thunder's most consistent threats that helped them reach 68 wins. A player's third season is when you typically see a breakout. If they have a major leap in them, that's when they usually make it. Williams jumped young player with potential to a first-time All-Star and All-NBA member. Gen Z Scottie Pippen comparisons weren't laughed off. He was one of the NBA's best players last season and has plenty more to grow. Williams enjoyed career highs across the board. He became an efficient 20-plus point scorer. Like his MVP teammate, he made a living driving to the basket. He's not the ballerina Shai Gilgeous-Alexander is, but he used his physique to bulldoze his way to the rim and had a nice touch around the basket. Williams was also a lethal mid-range shooter. His pull-up jumper was one of his signature shots. When he gets into a rhythm, defenses can't stop him. Career highs in 3-pointers and free-throw attempts also helped him boost his scoring numbers. Usually playing within the flow of the offense to a fault, the 24-year-old was begged to be more aggressive. Easy to see why the Thunder wanted him to do that. As the season progressed, Williams was slowly given more on-ball responsibilities. The second-unit lineups eventually became his to orchestrate. He helped the Thunder suffer a catastrophic drop-off when Gilgeous-Alexander was off the floor. The special self-creation and decent playmaking were enough to help OKC's offense keep its head above water. And then there's the defense. That can be its own section, really. The Pippen comparisons aren't just because Williams is an efficient 20-point scorer. He was the most consistent defender on one of the greatest defenses the NBA has ever seen. His special blend of size and skill made him a textbook versatile defender. We saw that throughout the season. When the Thunder were without a center, Williams stepped up as the rim protector. When matched up with a perimeter scorer, his Pterodactyl wingspan made it nearly impossible to blow past him. Instead, plenty of possessions from the opposition ended in a turnover because he cleanly poked the ball out. His efforts were noticed by being on the All-Defensive Second Team. This was an all-time season by Williams. He exploded onto the scene as one of the NBA's best players. He was rewarded for it with a handsome contract extension this summer. His combination of efficient scoring and elite one-through-five defense has turned him into one of the most productive wings the league has right now. Moving Forward: The scary part is, Williams has plenty of room to grow. The 24-year-old might be on the older side, but that gets negated by experience. He'll enter his fourth season and there are plenty of pathways for him to ascend higher on folks' lists of the top NBA players. While playing behind Gilgeous-Alexander caps his ceiling, Williams could get into some eye-popping conversations this upcoming season if he plates more of the offense. The 24-year-old is fresh off a playoff run that has completely flipped his narrative. Dropping 40 points in an NBA Finals game on an injured wrist will do that. Considering he upticked his usage last season and his efficiency numbers remain superb, Williams is primed to handle more of a workload. That could include him being more selfish and taking more shot attempts. He's also figured out how to get to the free-throw line at will. That was a skill he struggled with in the regular season, but finally had a grasp of it in the postseason. If the drive-heavy scorer can sell contact, Williams can average more free-throw attempts. That's the more direct path to jumping into the special 25-plus point range. Only a handful of players can say they do that in the NBA. The 24-year-old has a shot to join that exclusive club. Consistency is the one variable that you must master. That was something he struggled with at times. His lows were single-digit point efforts where he faded into the background. You can't have too many of those if you want to be considered among the best of the best. If not, you'll just settle with a perennial All-Star who's good at everything with no real weaknesses. Not bad for a title contender. Zooming out, Williams' addition was the fork on the road for the Thunder. He turned into an All-NBA player as a type of surprising player developmental journey that a title winner needs to build up a roster. The Thunder are viewed as one of the strongest contenders to be repeat NBA champions in recent history. Williams is the second-biggest reason for that. He had a breakout season that cemented his spot in OKC's hierarchy as the second-best player. It's now about growing from that experience by being more productive. Winning a ring can completely change a player's mentality for the better. Let's see if that's the case with him. Final Grade: A-plus

Florida Gators kicker Trey Smack named to Lou Groza Award preseason watch list
Florida Gators kicker Trey Smack named to Lou Groza Award preseason watch list

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

Florida Gators kicker Trey Smack named to Lou Groza Award preseason watch list

The 2025 edition of the Lou Groza Award preseason watchlist is out, and one member of the Florida football program saw his name mentioned among the 30 student-athletes listed. Senior kicker Trey Smack was named to the prestigious watch list for the second time in his collegiate career, also getting the call back in 2023 when he finished among the semifinalists. While he missed out in 2024, his performance last season was arguably better, playing in all 13 games while nailing 18 of 21 field goal attempts and remaining perfect in PATs for the second-straight season with 44 — giving him a total of 73 straight PATs over two years. Smack has earned the SEC Special Teams Player of the Week award thrice (Week 12, 2024; Week 7, 2023; Week 4, 2023) and Lou Groza Star of the Week honors twice (Week 7, 2023; Week 4, 2023). About the Lou Groza Award The Lou Groza Award — named after the NFL great who played 21 seasons with the Cleveland Browns after serving in World War II — is presented each year to the best placekicker in college football. Groza was a nine-time all-pro player and won four AAFC championships and four NFL championships before retiring in 1967. The qualifications for the award include inclusion among the 30 players on the preseason watch list, which is determined by a player's statistics from the previous season and their preseason expectations. The 30-athlete watch list will be trimmed down to a group of 20 semifinalists on Nov. 18 by a selection committee. From that group of semifinalists, three finalists will be announced on Nov. 25, with the winner being selected on Dec. 12. Athletes are chosen to advance to the next round by a panel of more than 100 members, which consists of FBS head coaches, sports information directors, media members, former Groza finalists and current NFL kickers. Follow us @GatorsWire on X, formerly known as Twitter, as well as Bluesky, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Florida Gators news, notes and opinions.

The ‘Slacker' Teen Who Was More Than Just a Punch Line
The ‘Slacker' Teen Who Was More Than Just a Punch Line

Atlantic

timean hour ago

  • Atlantic

The ‘Slacker' Teen Who Was More Than Just a Punch Line

In the first episode of The Cosby Show, Cliff Huxtable (played by Bill Cosby) walks into his only son's messy room with a mission: getting him to care about improving his straight-D report card. But the teenager proves difficult to rattle. After his father makes a big show of giving him Monopoly money and then taking it all away bill by bill for hypothetical expenses, Theo (Malcolm-Jamal Warner) holds firm in his assertion that he doesn't need to emulate his parents in order to be happy. 'If you weren't a doctor,' he tells his father, 'I wouldn't love you less, because you're my dad.' Can't the same be true in reverse? For a moment, it seems as if Theo has gotten through. But instead, Cliff goes off, scolding his son for being 'afraid to try, because you're afraid that your brain is going to explode, and it's gonna ooze out of your ears.' The genius of the scene is that both characters are right. Theo is afraid to try, but he also recognizes one of his father's limitations: Cliff has a very specific idea of what success looks like, which can burden his children as they try to live up to it. It's a testament to Warner's skill as a performer that even when Theo isn't winning an argument with his dad, he evinces a complex vulnerability. Warner, who died last week, at the age of 54, struck a delicate balance while playing Theo: He's hubristic but not smug, clueless but not buffoonish. Nailing these nuances was key. Although today Cosby's name is inextricable from his tarnished legacy, The Cosby Show was nonetheless groundbreaking in its portrayal of a well-educated, middle-class Black family—and Theo's story bookends the series, starting with the Monopoly lesson and ending with his graduation from college. Cliff uses tough love to teach his son that hard work is instrumental to prospering in life. But Warner played Theo as the house jester, balancing the dramatic tension of his character's uncertain future with his impeccable ability to deliver a one-liner. Ultimately, Theo's development does not amount to simple 'success' or 'failure.' His arc comes into focus when he finds his sense of purpose—in part by challenging his parents' judgments and assumptions. As a high-school freshman at the start of the series, Theo isn't much for studying. Instead, he hopes to skate by on charisma alone—which rarely works—and aspires to land a variety of improbable dream jobs, such as tennis pro, pilot, and model. Theo's apathy serves as a counterpoint to Cliff's moralizing about the importance of education and family values to one's social mobility, which echoed Cosby's own. In retrospect, Cliff's fears about his son's future foreshadowed the comedian's public excoriations of Black youth, which drew national attention in the early 2000s—mainly, his charge that they were ' going nowhere.' The harshness that sometimes emerges in Cliff's approach to parenting lands with a more punitive thud in that context. And with Theo, we eventually see that the slacker persona his father has projected onto him is not the full picture. Theo's apparent lack of motivation occasionally drives his father to theatrical extremes. In one episode, Cliff enlists the entire family to simulate the 'real world' for his son; the exercise walks Theo through getting a job, renting an apartment, and surviving life's unpleasant realities for a day. Like the earlier Monopoly gambit, it doesn't really work. When his mother, Clair (Phylicia Rashad), suggests afterward that he's learned an important lesson, Theo clarifies for her. 'I learned that when I go into the real world,' he says, 'I don't want to do business with anyone in my family.' The episode's punch line reflects a common parent-child dynamic: Rather than attempting to find common ground, both sides put up a wall—in the Huxtables' case, through humor. The Cosby Show indulges in this again and again, as Theo's parents invent dramatic ways to school their son; they even go so far as to stage a mock trial to catch Theo in a lie. Their son, meanwhile, typically shrugs it all off with a joke. The show's early years often played the chasm between Theo's overconfidence and the outcomes of his actions for laughs too. For example, take a scene in which he tries to impress his older sister Denise's (Lisa Bonet) study buddy: Theo adopts a baritone voice, and then Denise manhandles him out the door. As with many adolescent boys, Theo's bravado is a mask for his still-developing identity. The relatability of his 'fake it 'til you make it' attitude renders him endearing, even when he's the butt of a joke. Still, Theo's self-mythology suggests a latent sadness, perhaps stemming from a suspicion that he might live out his adult life as a regular person, rather than the educated professional his parents expect him to become. But for as often as the show points out the teen's foibles, Warner never lets viewers dismiss Theo outright. For a while, he animates his character's puppyish demeanor with perfectly timed voice cracks and awkward body language. Yet the actor slowly recalibrates as both he and Theo age, shifting the fumbling swagger toward a more mature kind of self-assurance. Some of the show's most rewarding scenes arrive when Theo, as an older teen, earns his father's respect by showing up as his full self. On two separate occasions, Theo and his best friend, who goes by the nickname 'Cockroach' (Carl Anthony Payne II), write a rap for a class assignment. Both iterations include catchy lyrics that demonstrate an understanding of the material; teens like Theo and Cockroach can do great work, the show suggests, when they have room to be creative. It feels fitting, then, that Theo's emotional turning point comes from a diagnosis that upends his parents' skepticism about him. After he enrolls in college, Theo learns that he's dyslexic, which reframes his academic challenges, flighty aspirations, and self-doubts. (Charting a clear path forward is hard when you believe that you aren't smart enough to advance.) The revelation frees Theo from the 'failure' narrative that the adults in his life have pinned on him; he begins performing better academically as a result. More important, he invests his downtime in a meaningful, altruistic pursuit. As a volunteer at the local community center, Theo lights up while mentoring tweens who have struggles similar to his own, and not just because he's good at it. Working with a younger generation gives Theo a platform to draw upon his life experiences and learn as he goes, affirming his newfound sense of accomplishment. When one of his advisers tells him he's doing well but isn't 'there' yet, Theo agrees—a moment Warner underscores by smiling to himself as he murmurs, 'But I'm growing.' The pleasure Warner brings to the exchange reflects just how much his character has transformed from an aimless teen afraid to fail into an adult who recognizes that trial and error are part of life. The Cosby Show closes with the whole family gathering. Although Cliff reflects on the long, hard road his son faced to get here, Theo's real triumph is different, and more significant. He's no longer feigning confidence or struggling to understand why the things that come easily to others are so difficult for him. He won't become a doctor or a lawyer. After years of effort, he's defined what personal success means to him. A sense of direction is what his parents have wanted for him all along. And now he's found it for himself.

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