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‘The White Lotus' Returns with Top-Tier Performances: Episode 1 Review

‘The White Lotus' Returns with Top-Tier Performances: Episode 1 Review

Yahoo17-02-2025

How is the White Lotus still in business? The luxury resort that functions as a setting for each season of Mike White's eponymous HBO series has blood on its hands — and that doesn't change in Season 3, Episode 1: 'Same Spirits, New Forms.'
While other seasons opened with the discovery or body or reveal that someone died, Season 3's cold open unfolds at the White Lotus in Thailand, where Zion's (Nicholas Duvernay) meditation is interrupted by gunshots. He's immediately terrified for the safety of his mother — as are all viewers who put together that this is Belinda's (Natasha Rothwell) son — and then a body floats toward him.
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It's shrewd of White to start the season this way, immediately delineating Season 3's death from its predecessors. It could still have been an accident, but the implied violence and visibly widespread fear add new tension (as does a fresh theme song from Cristobal Tapia de Veer). Belinda is the only returning character this season; not only would her death sting worse after her Season 1 arc, but the scene with Zion demonstrates how much he'd hate to lose her.
'Same Spirits, New Forms' skillfully introduces a large ensemble (as viewers can count on White to do, from experience). This would be the moment to highlight those who stand out, but everyone shines in this episode. Michelle Monaghan, Carrie Coon, and Leslie Bibb's trio says everything about their dynamic with furtive looks and forced smiles (and some unforced smiles, to be fair); Parker Posey and Jason Isaacs debut their North Carolina accents and work tirelessly to convince the White Lotus staff that their family is 'normal.' Lisa Manobal and Tayme Thapthimthong reveal a charming rapport, and Rothwell seems right at home in her return to the resort. What Aimee Lou Wood conveys with an energetic smile and exclamation, Walton Goggins portrays with a scowl and an expletive.
That connection is particularly compelling; on the outside there's obviously a gap in age and verve, but they also seem genuinely comfortable in the relationship. Even as Goggins' Rick grumbles and pulls away, Wood's Chelsea stays optimistic, calls him out, and tries not to let it get in the way of her vacation. On most shows — and indeed, in real life — it's the kind of partnership where the Rick inevitably explodes with anger if not violence. That could still happen in the remaining seven episodes, but doesn't seem to currently factor into their relationship.
It's an astute contrast (or parallel) to Chelsea's new friend Chloe (Charlotte Le Bon) — and her own older partner, the surprisingly resurfaced Greg (Jon Gries). That's two returning characters with a direct link between them — a dead link, as it happens, which connects all three seasons in a tangle of timing, threads, and danger. For now, they all begin their week at the White Lotus blissfully unaware of the shocking events to come. Tragedy is just around the corner, but for many of the characters it's already unfolding in ways that are all-too familiar.
New episodes of 'The White Lotus' air Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on HBO.
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Why Warner Boss Zaslav Is Having to Split Up the Media Empire He Built
Why Warner Boss Zaslav Is Having to Split Up the Media Empire He Built

Wall Street Journal

time2 hours ago

  • Wall Street Journal

Why Warner Boss Zaslav Is Having to Split Up the Media Empire He Built

Warner Bros. Discovery WBD 5.00%increase; green up pointing triangle Chief Executive David Zaslav loves the 1941 Humphrey Bogart classic 'The Maltese Falcon' about a group of unsavory characters searching for an elusive statuette of a gold jewel-encrusted falcon. The falcon is 'the stuff dreams are made of,' Bogart's character famously says, driving people to do just about anything to possess it. Combining Warner with Discovery was Zaslav's Maltese falcon. And like the movie's protagonists, Zaslav couldn't secure it. His old world entertainment titan's ambition collided with the realities of a media business in turmoil. Now, three years after he closed on a deal that merged his Discovery cable TV networks with AT&T's WarnerMedia business, Zaslav is breaking it into two separate companies. The CEO, who has enjoyed industry-topping paydays throughout the tumultuous three-year marriage, will sit atop the company home to Warner movie and television studios and HBO Max streaming service. The second will consist primarily of cable channels such as CNN, TNT and Food Network, and own a 20% stake in the other. 'We now have healthier, sturdier businesses that can be separated and grow and soar,' Zaslav said in an interview. Accelerated cord-cutting, streaming's ascendance, Hollywood labor strikes and AI's rapid development reshaped the media and entertainment industries while the merged company grappled with a hefty debt load and deep cost cuts. But the company was also plagued by Zaslav's own bad bets and missteps. The biggest problem: Zaslav took on more than $50 billion in debt to do the deal. The company couldn't shoulder a sum that large. To pay it off, Zaslav cut $5 billion in costs. Warner laid off thousands of workers. It scrapped high-profile movies and canceled television shows and the CNN+ streaming service. The belt-tightening hurt the company's ability to compete and grow. Morale sank. Workers were especially angry with Zaslav's opulent lifestyle and $140 million in compensation over the last three years. 'The merger of the companies was ill advised because of the massive debt it took to make it happen, and because the brands never fit together as neatly as advertised,' said Paul Verna, Emarketer's vice president of content. Ultimately, Zaslav's 'only option was to undo much of what he engineered with the merger of Discovery and Warner Media.' Warner's fortunes sank. Last year, it took a $9.1 billion write-down on the value of its cable networks. Wall Street soured. Since the company's creation in 2022, the stock has lost 60% of its value. Under pressure from an activist, the company earlier this year added a private-equity veteran to its board. A protégé of the late Jack Welch, who ran General Electric when it owned NBC, Zaslav got his start as a lawyer at the conglomerate making deals for its cable networks. He helped launch CNBC and MSNBC and quickly rose in the industry. After taking the helm of Discovery in 2006, Zaslav doubled down on low-cost reality shows, rather than the low-rated educational fare the company was built on, boosting ratings and revenue as well as expanding globally. He also laid off 20% of the staff. Zaslav built Discovery through acquisitions, culminating with the 2018 $12 billion deal to buy Scripps Networks and its channels including Food Network and HGTV. Yet he feared Discovery was too small—and wanted movie and television studios to help build a global streaming service for the new era of television. When AT&T was looking to unload WarnerMedia, he pounced. The deal went through a lengthy regulatory process. When the companies combined, Warner staffers hoped Zaslav would put an end to AT&T's restructuring. Yet more and more consumers were cutting the cord, hurting cable viewership and sinking ad revenue. 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24 Weird And Wonderful Products You Won't Regret Buying
24 Weird And Wonderful Products You Won't Regret Buying

Buzz Feed

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24 Weird And Wonderful Products You Won't Regret Buying

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Netflix's #1 Show 'Sirens' Is Bringing Preppy Back—Here's How to Wear It This Summer
Netflix's #1 Show 'Sirens' Is Bringing Preppy Back—Here's How to Wear It This Summer

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Netflix's #1 Show 'Sirens' Is Bringing Preppy Back—Here's How to Wear It This Summer

PureWow editors select every item that appears on this page, and some items may be gifted to us. Additionally, PureWow may earn compensation through affiliate links within the story. All prices are accurate upon date of publish. You can learn more about the affiliate process here. You can learn more about that process here. Yahoo Inc. may earn commission or revenue on some items through the links below. Read the original article on Purewow. The White Lotus might be over, but there's a new show all about wealth and power that everyone's talking about right now—Sirens. The Netflix series follows sisters Simone and Devon DeWitt, as Simone is drawn into the glamorous world of a wealthy Port Haven family while Devon questions what's really going on. And it's not just the twisty plot that has viewers hooked—the fashion is just as captivating. 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The straps are adjustable thanks to the tie-back design, and you have a bunch of colors to choose from—so go ahead and get one in your cart while you still can. $88 at Free People Buck Mason You simply can't build a preppy seaside wardrobe without a good Breton tee. I can confirm just how good Buck Mason's cotton shirts are, and this one's bound to be no exception—especially if you take reviewers' words for it. One shared, "This knit is outstanding. [It's] substantial but not bulky and [easily] sheds wrinkles (after I had the sleeves tucked and rolled the entire day). [It] would be great for travel use, work at home, lounge—whatever you need, this will do it." 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