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Ransom Canyon Star Teases Potential Shake-Up for Lucas in Season 2 (And More Skinny-Dipping!)

Ransom Canyon Star Teases Potential Shake-Up for Lucas in Season 2 (And More Skinny-Dipping!)

Yahoo27-04-2025
If you've two-stepped your way through all 10 episodes of Ransom Canyon's first season, you've already had the pleasure of meeting Lucas Russell. Now, get to know the man behind the boy next door.
'Playing Lucas, I got to become the cowboy that I've always dreamed of being,' actor Garrett Wareing tells TVLine. The full-circle role also brought him back to Texas, having grown up in College Station before moving to Los Angeles to pursue an acting career. 'Funny enough, this dream brought me right back to my roots, which I think is pretty cool,' he says.
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The self-proclaimed 'small-town kid' spent his childhood on ranches, surrounded by horses and cows. And if all goes according to plan, he'll end up right back where he started. 'My dream after all of this is to have my own farm one day,' he says. 'It runs in my blood, this Texas lifestyle.'
A misunderstood dreamer with a huge heart, Lucas is the kind of guy you can't help but root for, especially when it comes to his Romeo and Juliet-esque relationship with cheerleader Lauren.
'In some ways, Lucas represents that idealistic, all-American boy next door, and the same exists within Lauren,' Wareing says. 'It's always nice to watch a good love story, and to be able to bring that to life was an honor. What you see on screen between Lizzy Greene and I was true. I got to go to work every day with my best friend, and she's talented as hell. She made me a better actor because she is who she is, and I'm so thankful to her.'
And nothing says true love like a little skinny-dipping! 'It was cold, I'll say that,' Wareing recalls of Lucas' bold romantic gesture. 'It was freezing cold. It was actually a really fun, sweet day. I'm all about body positivity. I look for a good challenge, and that was a wonderful challenge that I accepted with open arms.'
You probably also found yourself surprisingly invested in Lucas' unexpected friendship with Lauren's ex-boyfriend Reid, which is exactly what Wareing and co-star Andrew Liner were hoping for.
'Drew and I really wanted to build out what a modern bromance could look like,' Wareing explains. 'Most of the friends in my life, we go through patches, we get over hurdles, and I think you become closer together because you overcome these hurdles. Seeing that represented between two men on screen was nice to be able to play.'
But one of his 'biggest honors' of the season, Wareing says, was getting to be on set for an exciting cameo in Episode 9. 'There's a character named Billy Brinks, and you might miss it if you're not an eagle-eyed viewer, but he's played by Dan Reynolds, who is [Minka Kelly's] partner and also the lead singer of Imagine Dragons,' Wareing explains. 'That was a really cool moment for me.'
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So, what's next for the goodest boy in all of Ransom Canyon? The finale ends with Lucas receiving acceptance letters from several prestigious universities, but Wareing is more interested in matters closer to home.
Although 'the trajectory of Lucas is to be determined,' Wareing says he 'would love to see a mysterious character from his past come back into play.' More specifically, he'd like to meet Lucas and Kit's father, someone about whom we still know very little. 'I would love to see how that could shake things up in Ransom Canyon if he returns.'
Also on Lucas' to-do list for a potential second season: 'I'd like to have some scenes with Yancy and Quinn, and I'd love to ride more horses,' Wareing says. 'And I'd love to skinny dip again.'
OK, let's talk: Did you fall head-over-boots for Lucas in Season 1? And what are your hopes for a potential Season 2? Grade Netflix's new rodeo romance in our poll below, then drop a comment with your thoughts on all things .
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Pete Davidson didn't know 'SNL' was still on before he auditioned
Pete Davidson didn't know 'SNL' was still on before he auditioned

New York Post

time14 hours ago

  • New York Post

Pete Davidson didn't know 'SNL' was still on before he auditioned

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Bob Odenkirk Talks Potential ‘Nobody' Quadrilogy, ‘Pluribus' Hype and Not Missing Saul Goodman
Bob Odenkirk Talks Potential ‘Nobody' Quadrilogy, ‘Pluribus' Hype and Not Missing Saul Goodman

Yahoo

time15 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Bob Odenkirk Talks Potential ‘Nobody' Quadrilogy, ‘Pluribus' Hype and Not Missing Saul Goodman

Nobody has had a career quite like Bob Odenkirk. It was one thing to go from a comedy writer and performer on SNL in the late '80s to his own beloved HBO sketch comedy series, Mr. Show with Bob and David, in the mid-'90s. But to reinvent himself as an equally effective comedic and dramatic actor in his late 40s and 50s — largely due to his roles as Saul Goodman and Jimmy McGill on Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul — is something nobody saw coming. The later career twists and turns for the 7-time-Emmy-nominated actor weren't over yet, as Odenkirk took on yet another challenge that nobody anticipated: action franchise star. 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In the now well-received Nobody 2, Hutch, his wife Becca (Connie Nielsen) and their two kids are all leading separate lives and sorely need a vacation to reestablish their familial bond. So Odenkirk once again channeled his real life by having the Mansells travel to a waterpark-centric town à la the Wisconsin Dells that his family of origin twice went to in the '70s. 'The family I grew up in, we went on two vacations in my life. There were seven kids in my family, and we didn't have enough money to go to Hawaii or Disneyland,' Odenkirk recalls. 'So we went to the Wisconsin Dells in a station wagon, and the kids were in the back, sweating and complaining. Of course, the Dells was not as impressive as it is now.' As a result, Nobody 2 director Timo Tjahjanto combined the thrilling mechanics of Naishuller's Nobody with elements of National Lampoon's Vacation. 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The same goes for Hutch Mansell, but Odenkirk is still keen to make a couple more Nobody films so that he can keep developing the Mansell family's dynamics. 'Both Hutch Mansell in Nobody and Saul Goodman in Better Call Saul have a lot of impacted frustration inside them. They're guys who, for different reasons, have pretty big chips on their shoulders, and that's hard to play after a while,' Odenkirk admits. 'You can't just carry that guy around all the time. So I'm fine with moving on from them both, although I would do more Hutch. I would do a third or fourth [Nobody] film.' Below, during a recent conversation with THR, Odenkirk also discusses the reason why he had to pump the brakes on Nobody 2, as well as the unsung hero behind his transformation into an action star. *** The first came out in March 2021 during COVID, and it did very well by pandemic standards. Did you still have to twist some arms to get the sequel greenlit? No, not at all. The biggest challenge was finding the right story. (Odenkirk apologetically asks for a brief pause.) My wife had some furniture redone and it weighs a lot. So I didn't want to watch this guy try to carry it on his own; he could have hurt himself. So thank you for waiting. Oh, don't mention it. We played around with different stories for Nobody 2, and it was hard to find a story that felt right. I kept asking myself, 'What is the real reason people liked the first one so much? What is it?' And I didn't mean the obvious stuff like the fights being good and a little more visceral than what you're used to seeing. At the core of Nobody was this guy, his family and the tensions within it that all seemed authentic. You could almost say that everything up to the bus scene is an independent movie or a Richard Linklater film about a couple coming apart because of a stupidly mishandled home break-in. But then it ramps up into this magical world that only exists in movies. So if the couple were somehow chummy and on good terms again at the end of the first film, how are they now feeling tension again? There was a lot of back and forth and a lot of outlines and even a lot of screenplays. [Co-screenwriter] Derek Kolstad and I talked all the way through it, and then all of a sudden, Universal was like, 'Okay, we're going to make it.' And we were actually like, 'Well, we haven't got the script figured out completely.' We definitely had the bones of what you see now, but it wasn't like, 'Ah, now it's done. Can you please make it?' I didn't feel that way. So we had to get to work and really focus on it, and then we arrived at a script that I thought was good. One of my goals in this story was to not have the first bad guy you meet be the actual bad guy. There's this middleman, John Ortiz's Wyatt Martin, who is a mirror of Hutch because Hutch also works for somebody [Colin Salmon's The Barber]. Are you from the Midwest? Have you been to Wisconsin Dells? I'm not from the Midwest, but I lived there for a few years and visited the Dells during that time. The Tommy Bartlett Show, Tommy Bartlett's [Exploratory], Tommy Bartlett's everything. [Writer's Note: Bartlett was a Wisconsin showman whose water-ski show served as a popular tourist attraction at the Dells from 1952 to 2020.] Wyatt Martin is our Tommy Bartlett. He owns the town [and the Tiki Rush waterpark]. He's the bad guy who's sitting behind the sheriff's desk when you meet him, but he's really under the thumb of [Sharon Stone's Lendina]. So the first film's mechanics that I thought really worked for the audience, I wanted to go through a version of those again. [Writer's Note: Odenkirk met Stone at an awards show and eventually wrote her a note to see if she'd play a James Bond-type baddie.] Some Odenkirk family misfortune inspired the aforementioned home invasion in the first film, and you previously told me that you tapped into those negative experiences during Hutch's phenomenal bus fight. Did any Odenkirk family vacation stories work their way into ? Yes, but not my current family. The family I grew up in, we went on two vacations in my life. There were seven kids in my family, and we didn't have enough money to go to Hawaii or Disneyland. So we went to the Wisconsin Dells in a station wagon, and the kids were in the back, sweating and complaining. Of course, the Dells was not as impressive as it is now. It's got six waterparks now that are amazing. So we wanted to have Hutch take his family to a place [called Plummerville], which, in his mind, is the coolest place [from his childhood]. 'You can't believe it, the waterpark is so huge!' And then his kids, who are 13 and 18, get out of the car and go, 'What? This isn't huge.' And he's like, 'Oh, right,. I was nine when I came here.' The fact is [Plummerville] is just a little rinky-dink for his kids' ages, but they're making the best of it. We wanted to have that series of disappointments that can happen when you're a parent and you take your kids on this trip that you're so excited about doing. The unimpressive waterpark is then closed when you get there, and you even booked the wrong hotel rooms. You didn't think twice about putting the two kids in the same room. You just weren't thinking, and you go, 'Shit, this is supposed to be fun. Fuck.' You kept your training going in between films. Was it less about a potential sequel and more about the fact that it was credited with saving your life on the set? No, it was more that you've got to exercise when you get older, and it's a more interesting workout than almost any workout I've ever seen anyone do. It involves boxing, sometimes. It involves yoga, sometimes. It involves all these different disciplines. [David Leitch's] 87North and [Chad Stahelski's] 87eleven are two different concerns now, but [Dave and Chad] were together at the beginning. They've done all the John Wick movies and Deadpool 2. They lift from every kind of fight tradition, so there will be people at their gyms who do jiu-jitsu, karate, judo and boxing. So they steal from all of these different fighting styles, and it just makes for a more entertaining workout. Did anyone ask you to pace yourself or dial yourself back given your health scare between films? Yeah, there was a point where I was losing a lot of weight. And people … I didn't hear about it directly, but I did eventually. I could tell people were worried, but I feel fine. (Laughs.) When you get closer to filming, you do two workouts a day, and when you're doing that, you're stressing as well. Stress drains your brain, it drains your energy and it drains your body of minerals. Did you know that? I did not. It does. 'And that's why you should take a multivitamin,' said the old man. My dad just got on me about this. I don't have a writer's credit, but I was deep into the writing on these films, especially the second film. So I didn't go home and have a massage and go to sleep. I went home and worked on the next day's screenplay: what we were going to actually say and do, and what changed and what didn't work. It always amuses me how Daniel Bernhardt keeps dying in these 87North and 87eleven movies and returning as new characters. It's a great running gag. Absolutely. There's a lot of conversation about what facial hair he can have to feign towards the idea that he's a different human. I love Daniel, and he is the man who trained me to do this. He's put in so many hours, and I have deep respect and appreciation for his friendship and skills. So I love the guy, and as far as I'm concerned, if I ever get to make another action film, he's in it. He was here yesterday. We did a workout together. Do you have another in you for a proper trilogy? Well, I genuinely like doing action scenes. They're fun to invent. They're actually similar in creative joy to sketch writing. They're three-to-six minute pieces, generally, and if you do them right, they have a story to them. You should be able to describe a fight with a few words; you shouldn't say, 'And then they fight!' Because then you're just making a blah action film. You should say, 'The duck boat fight is a fight where he's trying not to fight. This is a supremely out of control fight. He's lost control, completely. He is genuinely out of energy, and he really won't make it through this.' Each fight should have a character unto itself, and it should have a little bit of a journey, just like a sketch. So I was surprised to find that parallel, and I spent so much of my life writing sketches and loving that form. So I'd do more [Nobody]. I'd love to do more of it, but I don't think I'm going to dig right in. I have another action film called Normal that's coming out [at TIFF 2025], so that's already in the can. But, right now, I think I want to do some comedy if they'll let me. You recently reunited with your collaborators Vince Gilligan and Rhea Seehorn at San Diego Comic-Con. How much have you let them tell you about their new series ? Nothing. I don't know a damn thing. But I know it's going to be massive. Massive! It's going to be the biggest thing, well, since sliced bread, but really since Game of Thrones. You probably know what's biggest [lately], but probably since Severance. I know Severance, in its way, is a big, big effort. So I think that [Pluribus] is going to be the next big show, and I can't wait. comes out three years to the day since went off the air. You played that collective character of Jimmy/Saul for 14 years. Do you miss him at all? No! He was great, and I enjoyed playing him. Both Hutch Mansell in Nobody and Saul Goodman in Better Call Saul have a lot of impacted frustration inside them. They're guys who, for different reasons, have pretty big chips on their shoulders, and that's hard to play after a while. You can't just carry that guy around all the time. So I'm fine with moving on from them both, although I would do more Hutch. I would do a third or fourth [Nobody] film. It would be about the journey of the family and the tensions that change as you move from one chapter to the next. You tell yourself, 'This is going to be it now. I'm going to enjoy this chapter of my life and I'm going to be carefree.' (Laughs.) But then you find that it has just as many frustrations and shortcomings as the last chapter. Earlier this year, you also reunited with your brother, Michael McKean, on Broadway in . Was that new context both strange and interesting after three years together on ? Broadway was a strange experience. It was very unique in its tensions and pressures, but Michael has done it many times. So he was actually a source of calm and confidence and joy because he's a blast. Nobody got more laughs than Michael McKean in that show. He was so funny, and he's one of the funniest and best actors in America. God, what a blast it was to be around him for that. ***Nobody 2 opens Aug. 15 in movie theaters nationwide. Best of The Hollywood Reporter The 25 Best U.S. Film Schools in 2025 The 40 Greatest Needle Drops in Film History The 40 Best Films About the Immigrant Experience Solve the daily Crossword

Sure, These Comics Can Make You Laugh. But Can They Hit a Jump Shot?
Sure, These Comics Can Make You Laugh. But Can They Hit a Jump Shot?

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

Sure, These Comics Can Make You Laugh. But Can They Hit a Jump Shot?

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