logo
The biggest news (so far) from San Diego Comic-Con 2025

The biggest news (so far) from San Diego Comic-Con 2025

Yahooa day ago
It may be a relatively quiet, Marvel-less edition, but San Diego Comic-Con is now underway. On Friday and Saturday, we've so far gotten updates on Predator, Coyote Vs. Acme, and plenty in between. You can check out all of The A.V. Club's coverage of Comic-Con 2025 below. We'll keep this post updated throughout the rest of the weekend. While we may not get any news on the level of Robert Downey Jr. returning to the MCU this year, we're still expecting news out of AMC's Anne Rice franchise and maybe even some news out of DC Studios.
Beavis And Butt-Head are solid-gold idiots in new Comedy Central trailer
Wait, is that a Hans Zimmer-fied fantasy cover of a Styx song in this Percy Jackson Comic-Con teaser?
Spinal Tap has a lot of famous friends, slightly fewer jokes in sequel trailer
Death comes for Jamie Fraser in Outlander's final season trailer
AMC to kill off The Walking Dead: Daryl Dixon after 4th season
Rick And Morty is giving Keith David's president his own spin-off
A new cut of Predator: Killer Of Killers comes to Hulu tonight
The slasher scandal of 1984 gets an update in Silent Night, Deadly Night remake teaser
Hamish Linklater gets to chew a little scenery, as a treat, in Gen V season 2 trailer
Coyote Vs. Acme finally gets an August 2026 release date at very chaotic Comic-Con panel
The Simpsons taps The Onion cartoonist Stan Kelly for 'Treehouse Of Horror XXXVI'
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds boldly finding out if 'puppet episode' still feels like a creative gimmick
First Star Trek: Starfleet Academy trailer knows not to skimp on the Holly Hunter
Ozzy Osbourne scores first trailer for Peacemaker season two
Anne Rice's Talamasca is here to observe all those other vampires and witches on AMC
AMC offers proof of Interview With The Vampire life with BTS look at Lestat's rock career
It: Welcome To Derry trailer reveals townwide demonic clown infestation
More from A.V. Club
The biggest news (so far) from San Diego Comic-Con 2025
What's on TV this week—Chief Of War and Eyes Of Wakanda
R.I.P. Tom Lehrer, mathematician and musical satirist
Solve the daily Crossword
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves and Reds set to break attendance record
MLB Speedway Classic between Braves and Reds set to break attendance record

Yahoo

time9 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

MLB Speedway Classic between Braves and Reds set to break attendance record

Major League Baseball will soon see one of its highest-attended games ever on August 2. MLB announced that the Speedway Classic, featuring the Atlanta Braves vs. the Cincinnati Reds, at Bristol Motor Speedway in Tennessee, has already sold over 85,000 tickets. The game is set to surpass the previous regular-season game attendance record of 84,587, established on Sept. 12, 1954, when Cleveland Stadium hosted the New York Yankees. August 2 will not only feature the game, but also concerts headlined by Jake Owen, Tim McGraw, and Pitbull. [DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks] It will also be the first MLB game ever in the state of Tennessee. The first pitch will be between two Hall of Famers: The Braves' Chipper Jones will pitch to the Reds' Johnny Bench. The all-time attendance record was set during an exhibition game between the Los Angeles Dodgers and Boston Red Sox on March 29, 2008, at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, with 115,300 fans in attendance. TRENDING STORIES: Walton County family sues after home sold using forged deed PHOTOS: Best 25 public middle schools in Georgia Geo-fencing technology leads to arrest in 71-year-old grandmother's cold case murder [SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]

A Podcast for the Questions Rarely Asked
A Podcast for the Questions Rarely Asked

New York Times

time11 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A Podcast for the Questions Rarely Asked

Times Insider explains who we are and what we do and delivers behind-the-scenes insights into how our journalism comes together. When Wesley Morris, a critic at large for the Culture desk at The New York Times, was brainstorming what he wanted to do with his new podcast, he had carte blanche to invite pretty much any guest he wanted. But he didn't just want to talk to celebrities. Mr. Morris, who has won two Pulitzer Prizes for criticism, wanted to talk to the people who write about culture and the artists who make it, whether they were his friends or colleagues, or someone else who might have interesting things to say about why a particular show, character or maker had cut through the noise. 'The thing about having critics and writers come on is that they're used to talking about art and culture,' Mr. Morris said. 'But artists would love to talk about things they're not normally asked about.' In the new weekly conversation show he is hosting, 'Cannonball,' which debuted last month and drops new episodes on Thursdays, Mr. Morris said he seeks to explore culture 'in the broadest possible sense.' So far, that has brought us conversations with the writer Mark Harris about the new Pee-wee Herman documentary and what it means for artists to publicly come out, and with the chef and cookbook author Samin Nosrat about her love-hate relationship with FX's restaurant industry drama 'The Bear.' In an interview, Mr. Morris shared his favorite podcasts and his dream guest for 'Cannonball.' These are edited excerpts from the conversation. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store