logo
Kevin Bacon reflects on ‘Apollo 13' anniversary as NASA astronauts return to life on Earth: ‘I did feel for those people'

Kevin Bacon reflects on ‘Apollo 13' anniversary as NASA astronauts return to life on Earth: ‘I did feel for those people'

Yahoo01-04-2025

For Kevin Bacon, the 30th anniversary of his blockbuster film Apollo 13 couldn't have come at a more uncanny time.
The 1995 Ron Howard-directed drama about astronauts aboard the 1970 moon-bound spacecraft who experience an accident that has mission control scrambling for a way to get them back to Earth, had striking similarities to recent news about U.S. astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams. After spending an unexpected nine months in space, the pair finally returned home on March 18, much longer than the originally planned eight days.
'I did feel for those people,' Bacon, who stars in The Bondsman on Prime Video, told Yahoo Entertainment. 'Especially in their case, where you took off and you thought you were coming right back home.'
'There must've been such a challenge for everybody involved,' he added. 'I guess that's part of what you signed up for and the courage it takes to go up there.'
While Bacon, who plays a demon bounty hunter in the new horror-comedy series that starts streaming April 3, said he 'doesn't really think back on my movies that much unless I'm being asked to remember,' he acknowledged that he's had to do that more than a few times, given his long career.
'I've made so many movies that they keep having these anniversaries. I just had the 40th of this one and the 25th of that one,' he said. 'It's like, there's a weird thing that happens in one's life, I think, as time moves on.'
In his latest project, about murdered Georgia bounty hunter Hub Halloran who's been resurrected by the devil to destroy demons and send them back to hell, Bacon also plays a father to a teen son (Maxwell Jenkins) and ex-husband to Maryanne, played by country music singer Jennifer Nettles. The man who orchestrated his killing (Damon Herriman) is now dating his ex and wants him out of the picture by any means necessary.
Killing demons in a variety of gory ways meant that Bacon, who is also an executive producer on the show, performed many of his own stunts — some he literally dove into.
'Battling the demon cheerleader underwater is like, it's one of those moments where you go, 'God, I got the coolest gig in the world. This is so fun and weird and hard and physical and cold,'' Bacon said, referring to one of his fight scenes. 'But at the end of the day, that feeling that between the woman playing the cheerleader and our underwater camera crew and our regular crew and our directors and our stunt people, you go like, 'Yeah, we did something unusual today.''
Music also plays a pivotal role in the series. In addition to killing demons, which becomes a family affair with Hub's mother (Beth Grant) along with his ex-wife and son, the bounty hunter also writes and performs songs with Maryanne. Bacon himself is one-half of folk-rock duo the Bacon Brothers with his brother, Michael.
Nettles told Yahoo Entertainment that collaborating with the multi-hyphenate on the show's music was a big thrill for her.
'It was very natural. It was very easy. He is a fantastic writer,' Nettles said of working with her co-star. 'He is an amazing lyricist, storyteller and musician. And we really had a very natural and immediate flow with each other.'
While Nettles typically doesn't opt for 'slasher stuff,' she said being a part of those scenes in The Bondsman made for some of her favorite moments on set.
'Whenever there's blood and gore and everything all over all of us, as actors, obviously, that's a big part of the show,' Nettles said. 'So people are walking around looking crazy half the time. That's very, very fun.'
With scenes featuring squished heads and slit throats held together by duct tape, Bacon said it's all part of the show's mix of horror and comedy.
'The gore is so over the top that it kind of leans into the humor of what we're trying to do,' he said. 'That's just the tone of this show, which is just fun.'
All eight episodes of are available to stream April 3 on Prime Video.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

2025 is the year creator platforms will drive more ad revenue than old media, a new WPP forecast says
2025 is the year creator platforms will drive more ad revenue than old media, a new WPP forecast says

Business Insider

time4 hours ago

  • Business Insider

2025 is the year creator platforms will drive more ad revenue than old media, a new WPP forecast says

YouTube has blown past prestige streamers like Netflix and Disney+ to become the biggest TV company by viewership. And the traditional media business is about to get another wake-up call. This year, ad revenue from creator-driven platforms like YouTube, TikTok, and LinkedIn will exceed ad revenue driven by studios and media companies known for their professionally made content, WPP Media's new mid-year global ad forecast says. WPP Media — a part of ad holding company giant WPP — estimated that the ad revenue generated by those creator-driven platforms would just exceed the $235 billion driven by TV, audio, print, and cinema companies this year. That's a shift from 2019, when WPP estimated that professional content companies' share of content-based ad revenue topped 70%, with creator-driven platforms driving the rest, said Kate Scott-Dawkins, global president of Business Intelligence at WPP Media. WPP acknowledged that the definition of the creator economy can be blurry. It adjusted for the fact that some of the revenue generated by those creator-driven platforms comes from professional sources, as when companies like Disney and Comcast put clips on YouTube. WPP also categorized some of the biggest YouTubers, like MrBeast, who's made the jump to Amazon's Prime Video with a competition show, as professional content creators. While WPP's estimate includes TikTok, it excludes China-based companies. WPP separately calculated the revenue going to creators directly. The firm estimated revenue would total about $185 billion in 2025, up 20% from 2024, and double to more than $376 billion by 2030. WPP estimated that about 60% of that revenue comes in the form of brands and sponsorship deals, with the remainder from other sources, including the revenue split that platforms like YouTube share with creators. WPP said that sources of revenue for traditional media are largely declining. TV advertising is slated to grow just 1% this year, to $162.5 billion. A quarter of that comes from streaming, which is expected to grow rapidly, by 12.5% in 2025 and to about $72 billion by 2030. Audio (which includes video advertising formats attached to podcasts) will be flat at $26.5 billion this year. Print will continue its decline, shedding about 3% to $45.5 billion, according to WPP. Overall, WPP projects global advertising will grow 6% to $1.08 trillion in 2025, a downgrade from its December forecast of 7.7%. The figure excludes US political advertising.

Amazon doco 'cathartic' for CA after Sandpapergate
Amazon doco 'cathartic' for CA after Sandpapergate

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Amazon doco 'cathartic' for CA after Sandpapergate

The door remains ajar for another season of the hit series, The Test, that Prime Video believes was "cathartic" for Cricket Australia following Sandpapergate. Launching amid the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, The Test gave viewers a raw, behind-the-scenes glimpse into the Australian men's cricket team's road to redemption. The previous season was released in 2024, focusing on the eventful 2023 Ashes showdown in England. Prime Video have "nothing to announce" about a potential season four, but The Test remains a much-loved program of their stable of original content. The first season was all about Australia attempting to recover from the 2018 ball-tampering scandal that rocked cricket. Justin Langer was installed as the new coach, while star batters Steve Smith and David Warner served one-year bans until returning for the 2019 ODI World Cup. Everyone remembers Ben Stokes' special Ashes innings a year ago today 💫But don't ever forget Justin Langer's bin kick + bonus clean-up 😂#TheTest — Amazon Prime Video Sport (@primevideosport) August 25, 2020 "It was almost cathartic, I think, for Cricket Australia, and we were privileged to be able to capture that within the documentary, and offer it to the public," Prime Video Sport's managing director Alex Green told AAP. "It was just one of those fortuitous moments when I think the sport (and CA), as well as we wanted to bring something that was a big change in the way cricket, and perhaps sport, generally, had been watched before." Since launching The Test, Prime Video won the rights to broadcast all ICC events into Australia until 2027. The World Test Championship final between Australia and South Africa, starting at Lord's on Wednesday, will be shown exclusively on Prime Video in Australia. When the deal was announced, it was a dramatic change to how viewers had experienced world cups and international tournaments. "We've faced this multiple times," Green said of the public reaction to watching sport on a service that wasn't free-to-air or traditional pay-TV. "For the very first Premier League (EPL) deal, we were then going to be the third broadcaster of Premier League in the UK. "In reality, because the reach of Amazon Prime is so vast, it's on the way to being free-to-air. "We don't see ourselves, and generally, the public don't see us as another sports subscription service, we're something much wider than that." Amazon have also been linked to the NRL, with Australian Rugby League Commission Peter V'landys currently negotiating the next broadcast deal. When the AFL's last TV contract was struck back in 2022, Prime Video were also reported as being interested in the rights. "We don't speculate on specific future rights," Prime Video's Australia and New Zealand head of content Alexandra Gilbert told AAP. "We're building that groundswell around cricket, and then NBA, so that's where we're focused now. "We're always assessing opportunities to add value for Prime members. "Absolutely we'd love to do another version of The Test, whether it's with a different sport, or something that resonates strongly, but what that is is sort of TBD (to-be-determined)." The AFL documentary, Making Their Mark, which followed some players, coaches and administrators during the COVID-affected 2020 season was also a Prime Video original. This AAP article was made possible by support from Amazon Prime Video, which is broadcasting the World Test Championship final.

YouTuber who gave $10 million to Bay Area man says he has to borrow money for upcoming wedding
YouTuber who gave $10 million to Bay Area man says he has to borrow money for upcoming wedding

San Francisco Chronicle​

time7 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

YouTuber who gave $10 million to Bay Area man says he has to borrow money for upcoming wedding

Internet personality and reality game show host MrBeast has revealed he is short on cash months after giving away $10 million to a Bay Area resident on his Prime Video reality competition series. The social media star, whose real name is James 'Jimmy' Stephen Donaldson, revealed on the social platform X that he is strapped for cash despite having an estimated net worth of around $1 billion and more than 400 million subscribers on YouTube. 'I personally have very little money because I reinvest everything,' he wrote in response to a post that described him as 'the only billionaire under 30 to have not inherited his wealth.' 'But sure, on paper the businesses I own are worth a lot.' He added that his team plans to spend roughly a quarter of a billion dollars on content this year, and said that as a result, he is borrowing money from his mother to pay for his upcoming wedding to fellow content creator Thea Booysen. MrBeast first rose to prominence online in 2017, and has since become known for hosting challenge videos during which he donates large sums of money to his viewers. In December 2024, he launched his reality television show, 'Beast Games,' on Prime Video, which challenges competitors in a series of mental and physical challenges over the course of 10 episodes. In February, he gave away $10 million to San Mateo resident Jeffrey Randall Allen, who beat out 1,000 contestants. Allen's win made history as the largest prize ever awarded on a game show. Prime Video has since renewed the show for a second and third season. During the NBA All-Star Game at San Francisco's Chase Center, just a few days after the Season 1 finale of 'Beast Games' aired, MrBeast gave away $100,000 to East Bay college student Jaren Barajas. He beat Milwaukee Bucks guard and Oakland native Damian Lillard in a shooting contest to secure the money. MrBeast's next venture is a bid to build up his nonprofit, Beast Philanthropy. The YouTuber is offering an exclusive weekend on the set of 'Beast Games' to the first 40 people who make $100,000 donations to the organization, which focuses on food insecurity and disaster relief. The lucky donors will be able to bring two guests for a tour of MrBeast's North Carolina studio, a private Q&A with his production team and a visit to Beast Philanthropy's food pantry on June 27-29.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store