General Hospital Recap: Carly and Nina get physical
On today's General Hospital recap:
Paramedics are called and take Maxie to the hospital where Liz and Lucas work on her, while Lucy and Felicia stand vigil. Brook Lynn reaches out to both Lulu and Spinelli who head to the hospital. Spinelli gets upset so Lulu calls Emma to go over and stay with the kids and reassures him Maxie will be fine.
Lucas updates everyone that Maxie was having a heart attack and her heart did stop but they got her back. Lucas reassures them Maxie will be ok. Lucas asks Brook Lynn if Maxie ingested something as she might have had an allergic reaction to the facial cream. Lucy says they were all part of the product testing so it couldn't have been that.
Previous General Hospital (GH) Recap: Maxie Falls Out on Live TV
Sonny summons Michael to talk to Diane about the attack on Drew. Michael explains what happened and Diane points out how he had Tracy take Wylie away. She thinks Michael knew what he was doing when he hit Drew. Diane says they need to prove Drew approached Wylie and said terrible things to him.
Diane tells him he can go to the judge and petition to allow Willow visitation. Michael says he doesn't approve of that because he doesn't trust her anymore. He says Willow is out of control and both Sonny and Diane push for details. Michael says he believes Willow is responsible for what happened with Daisy.
Michael says he doesn't have proof and Sonny wants to know how to fix all of this. Diane says they need to find someone objective who saw Drew talk to Wylie and then saw the punch.
Drew is at the hospital to have his bruise documented by a doctor, but Liz points out it's not an emergency. Drew invokes Willow's name and says she'll get her kids back when the courts see how violent Michael is. Drew gets seen and leaves with documented proof of an injury.
Justine asks Anna to open an investigation into Drew. Anna wants details but Justine says she can't provide them. She says she knows he's been trampling people's rights. Drew interrupts to accuse Michael of attacking him.
Anna doesn't believe his story but Justine says they need to document everything Drew is telling them, including whatever proof he has. Justine says the case will be about the witnesses and who can corroborate his story.
Carly confronts Nina about her affair with Drew and how she could have saved Willow if she'd done the right thing. Carly says everything Willow has lost is Nina's fault. The two argue and scream at each other until Nina goes to hit her and Carly pushes Nina into the pool. Nina drags herself out of the pool for round 953 with Carly, who says Nina and Willow will never get near the kids again.
Vaughn and Josslyn have sex. Afterwards, she says they need to stay to find out what's going on. Josslyn says she needs to get Britt one on one and maybe she'll talk. They decide to go to her in the morning.
Jason tells Britt he saw her in Paris but Liesl still believes she's dead. He wonders if being dead was her choice. Jason says she can come home, but Britt says she's not going back to Port Charles again.
Britt asks how he survived the collapse and he explains about being an informant. She realizes he did it to protect Carly, which upsets her. Jason asks how she survived but she refuses to tell him, saying she grieved him. She calls him a selfish son of a bitch and that she's wasted too much time on him.
He turns it back on her, but she says she made the decision not to let her loved ones watch her deteriorate. Britt says she has a life here, living in a five star resort and that her Huntingtons is in remission. She tells him to leave, but Jason says the WSB has the place flagged which means she's in danger.
Jason says he can have her out by tonight, but Britt says she doesn't need him to save her. She kicks him out of her room then calls someone to tell them to fix the problem right now.
(** I get that they can't actually do CPR on a person, but they could make it look a wee bit more realistic. At one point, Liz' hands were on Maxie's neck. That's not how one does CHEST compressions!!! )
Keep checking back for the latest General Hospital recaps!
This story was originally reported by Daytime Confidential on Aug 19, 2025, where it first appeared.
Solve the daily Crossword
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Aljamain Sterling 'can see the light at the end of the tunnel' ahead of UFC Shanghai — but he's not done yet
If you ever doubt that former UFC bantamweight champion Aljamain Sterling has a sense of humor, just ask him how he'd like us all to think of him once his career is over. 'I want fans to remember me as the best damn actor to ever grace the Octagon,' he says with a perfect deadpan expression. 'Never forget that.' This, of course, is a joking reference to how he first claimed the UFC 135-pound title. You remember. How he took an illegal knee to the head from Petr Yan in their first title fight back in 2021? How many fans immediately accused Sterling of playing up the damage from the blow in order to draw a disqualification victory? How even now, more than four years later, the comments sections of his YouTube videos are regularly littered with references to that night in Las Vegas (though far fewer people think to mention that he won the rematch fair and square). 'But you know what, I can understand why there's still some people who think I was acting,' Sterling says. 'I do watch that clip sometimes and I go, 'OK, I understand why people feel the way that they do.' So I get it. But no, it wasn't an act. That really hurt.' It's not the kind of thing a 36-year-old former UFC champ would like to be known for, obviously. Personally, Sterling happens to think he has a lot of other memorable moments people could fixate over instead. And when he fights Brian Ortega on Saturday in the co-main event of a UFC Fight Night event in Shanghai, China, he's hoping for one more of those moments. But he's also a 14-year veteran of MMA with more than a decade of lived experience in the UFC, so he knows what to make of a matchup like this at a time like this. Here he is, coming off his first loss at featherweight in the UFC, thanks to what he still feels like was a bad judges' decision against Movsar Evloev at UFC 310 in December. And across from him is Ortega, a two-time title challenger who was knocked back down the ranks in a lopsided loss to Diego Lopes at last year's Noche UFC event. 'This is a crossroads fight for both Brian and I,' Sterling says. 'I think that's really it. One guy moves up, one guy moves down. And then whoever's on the losing side has to figure out what to do then. Because for me to lose two in a row — even though I still feel like I've won that last one — but for me to lose two in a row, it puts me in a spot where now I'm going to have to fight those young up-and-coming guys who are on a five- or a six-fight win streak. And then I have to make that decision of, do I want to do that?' It's a tricky and yet not uncommon place for an ex-champion of a certain age to find himself. Sterling has been around long enough to be a known quantity who needs no introduction or explanation. That means value for the UFC, which can put him on a fight card like this one as a way of adding a little oomph to the lineup. But it also means that matchmakers and fans alike are looking at him the way you might look at an aging dog who's struggling to make it down the back porch steps. You realize this can't go on forever. Maybe your mind even flashes forward to that inevitable day when you'll take him to the vet for the last time. You just don't know if it'll be this year or four years from now. One thing that sets Sterling apart is that doesn't kid himself about this reality. He knows what you're thinking. And, to be honest, he's thought it too. 'I can definitely see the light at the end of the tunnel,' Sterling says. 'Training hurts these days. It's weird, there's days I feel really good and I'm injury-free completely and then I'll ask for a fight. Then by the time I get the fight, because I've been waiting and waiting, it's another six or eight weeks and I'm already dealing with something that just came out of nowhere. "It's a young man's sport for sure. I mean, I can still compete with the young kids and the older guys. I don't think skill is a problem. It's just, will your body physically hold up?' It helps that, as he's gotten older, he's gotten smarter about maintenance. That's partly because he's had to, but also because he has more resources at his disposal after relocating to Las Vegas, where he can take advantage of the physical therapy and other benefits offered at the UFC Performance Institute, Sterling says. Still, he knows the end of his fighting days are out there somewhere. Which, after spending the majority of his adult life fanatically devoted to this sport, is a strange reality to confront. 'It's depressing, actually,' Sterling says. 'I got into the UFC when I was 24, so I was the young buck. I was the guy who came in, won his first four fights on his contract, three finishes in a row, 12-0, ranked six in the world after my third UFC fight. It just happened so fast. And now I'm like, damn, I'm Unc now. I'm an Unc. It's going to be sad to move on to something else completely. I have my rum company, Funk Harbor Rum, that I'm running and everything. I'm the founder and owner, and that's fun. It's exciting and everything, but this is what makes me feel alive. 'But I also always knew that this is something you could only do it for so long,' he continues. 'And then once that window of opportunity closes for you to compete, you can't do anything about it. You can't get those years back. You can't get back your speed, your reaction time, your chin. Those things, they just deteriorate and that's it. Knowing that father time will catch me soon and it's going to be knocking on the door and I just don't know when, it's tough. … I don't know which fight could be the last one. I think we're going to be able to tell from the performance, but I just don't want to be one of those guys who hangs around too long getting hurt and taking extra damage that doesn't need to happen.' If it ends on Saturday, Sterling says, he could be satisfied. He doesn't think it will end that soon, of course, but if it did then fine. He's been a champion. He's accomplished his goals. He'd still like to win another title as a featherweight. That's the competitor in him, and once that starts to go, he says, he'll go with it. He has no desire to just hang around the UFC for fun and a paycheck, or simply to delay the end. 'I understand how this business works, in terms of moving up and progressing, so I need to get this win,' he says. 'And I will get this win.' But how about the real answer to that question we started with? The end will eventually come. Every fighter knows that, whether he can get himself to truly understand and believe it or not. And when it comes for Sterling, he says, he wants people to remember how hard he fought and scratched and clawed for everything he got. Because, we must admit, it's not as if the powers that be in the UFC ever had any particular love for him. He was never the promoter's favorite and therefore never got any gifts he hadn't earned. 'I want people to remember that I was the guy who fought everybody,' Sterling says. 'Never got any handouts, always did it the hard way. Me and [current UFC bantamweight champion] Merab [Dvalishvili] both, we had to fight everybody. There was nothing given to us. "I fought all these guys who were on win streaks and I beat all these guys to get into title contention. I did it the hard way. I think that's what I'm most proud of.'
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dakota Johnson reveals 'weird' Madonna friendship
Dakota Johnson has been "weird friends" with Madonna for years. The 35-year-old star - whose parents are actors Don Johnson and Melanie Griffith - has opened up on her bond with the Queen of Pop, who she first met after Madonna worked with Dakota's stepfather Antonio Banderas on Evita in 1996. Dakota told E! News: "I really love her, we've been weird friends for a while. I met her when I was really young because she did a movie with my stepfather. "Then I got to know her later because we kinda worked together on something, we've always kind of circled each other." The Materialists actress described her friend as "an energy", while she still finds it surreal that they know each other. She added: "She is an energy to be near, but it is so beautiful and so wild and it's just cool that she wants to talk to me." Meanwhile, Dakota also reflected on her blossoming friendship with Splitsville co-star Adria Arjona after they grew close while filming the upcoming comedy. She said: "We love each other very much. When you're on location, you kind of band together. "We went to a hockey game and then we drank so much tequila." Adria admitted: "We drank a lot of tequila! I thought I could hang with Dakota." Dakota is also a producer on the movie, and she recently explained how she has relished the behind the scenes role because it helps her to put together a working environment that is "fun" and "fulfilling". She told Variety: 'If there's not a healthy collaboration, if it's not a good match, then it's not a good match. We really don't move forward if it's not a good match. 'I can't waste time on toxic sets anymore, or in situations that are not fun or fulfilling or healthy. That's one of the perks of [producing], because I get to put amazing people together and make something." Dakota didn't share any details of any past "toxic" experiences but stressed she has no desire to work with 'anybody who's mean or condescending or unkind.' She added: 'I don't want to face people who are not willing to collaborate, and then there are obvious things. 'We all know what a toxic set is by now. We're artists, so there's room for expansive personalities, and we're working with emotions.'
Yahoo
28 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Yahoo Sports Network, our first ever free, ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) channel
There are few better things than turning on the TV and watching your favorite sports shows, breaking news and everything in between. Now you can do that with Yahoo Sports Network, our first ever free, ad-supported streaming TV (FAST) channel. Yahoo Sports Network features more than 60 hours of original programming a week from shows that cover all your favorite sports, including the NFL, NBA, MLB, combat and more. This includes live programming such as The Ariel Helwani Show, Yahoo Sports Daily, Inside Coverage and Yahoo Fantasy Forecast, as well as recorded episodes of The Kevin O'Connor Show, Football 301, Network with Rich Kleiman and other fan favorites. [Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for the 2025 NFL season] Operated by category-leading FAST network, C15 Studio, Yahoo Sports Network is now available on LG Channels and Sling Freestream, and launching on Samsung TV Plus, Amazon Fire TV, Fubo, Plex, Prime Video and The Roku Channel over the coming weeks. Not only can you watch our best content on the big screen, you can watch even more Yahoo Sports video programming on In addition to distributing Yahoo Sports Network, houses highlights from most every major sports league, as well as content from partners such OneFootball and Motorsport Network. The following shows are available on the Yahoo Sports Network: Andy & Ari On3 Baseball Bar-B-Cast College Football Enquirer Fantasy Football Live Football 301 Good Word with Goodwill Inside Coverage (Live) Josh Pate's College Football Show Network with Rich Kleiman (launching in September) The Ariel Helwani Show (Live) The Boys in the Back (Live) The Cooligans The Craic with Petesy Carroll (Live) The Hard Count with J.D. PicKell The Inside Scoop | Rivals Football Recruiting Show The Kevin O'Connor Show Yahoo Fantasy Forecast (Live) Yahoo Sports Daily (Live) Yahoo Sports Network and mark day 17 of our 28 Days of Fantasy. Follow it all here.