logo
MMA Junkie Radio #3561: PFL guest Phil Davis, UFC Kansas City fallout, more

MMA Junkie Radio #3561: PFL guest Phil Davis, UFC Kansas City fallout, more

USA Today28-04-2025

MMA Junkie Radio #3561: PFL guest Phil Davis, UFC Kansas City fallout, more Monday's episode of MMA Junkie Radio with "Gorgeous" George and "Goze" is here.
Thursday's episode of MMA Junkie Radio with "Gorgeous" George and "Goze" is here.
On Episode #3,561, the fellas welcome in guest Phil Davis ahead of the PFL light heavyweight 2025 tournament. They also recap UFC Kansas City, take a look at the latest MMA news and much more. Tune in!

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Potential Matchups Spark Debate: Nurmagomedov vs. O'Malley, Sandhagen vs. Merab
Potential Matchups Spark Debate: Nurmagomedov vs. O'Malley, Sandhagen vs. Merab

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Potential Matchups Spark Debate: Nurmagomedov vs. O'Malley, Sandhagen vs. Merab

Potential Matchups Spark Debate: Nurmagomedov vs. O'Malley, Sandhagen vs. Merab originally appeared on Athlon Sports. UFC 316 saw the continuation of a dominant title reign for Merab Dvalishvili, who dispatched of the challenger and former bantamweight champion Sean O'Malley with a rare north-south Ezekiel choke. With his first finish since 2021, Dvalishvili is undoubtedly the king of the division. Now that the dust has settled, the division is ripe for new potential matchups that will bring fireworks to the deepest division in the UFC. Advertisement The UFC bantamweight division is heating up, and former UFC flyweight champion Demetrious "Mighty Mouse" Johnson has weighed in on the brewing debates. UFC CEO Dana WhitePhoto by Jeff Bottari/Zuffa LLC via Getty Images On The Mighty Guru show, the MMA legend laid out his ideal scenarios for the 135-pound title picture, emphasizing the need for fresh contenders and solid matchmaking. 'You can do Umar [Nurmagomedov] versus Sean O'Malley when Sean's ready to come back; that'll be a banger fight,' Johnson said, highlighting the fan-friendly potential of a clash between the rising Dagestani star and the flashy former champ. Both O'Malley and Nurmagomedov are coming off of failed title challenges against the current reigning champion, so a match between these two could rebuild both of their resumes with a high-profile win, keeping them around the top of the rankings. Advertisement With O'Malley now on a two-fight skid, Johnson's suggestion of booking him against Umar would allow Cory Sandhagen to step into a title eliminator or even a direct shot at Merab When bringing up Sandhagen, Johnson questioned the UFC's recent tendency to grant title shots off losses, arguing, 'Why not just give Merab vs. Cory? Have Umar fight Sean or Umar fight somebody else to let those guys [earn it]... stop giving title fights off of a loss, how about that?' Sandhagen, who recently rebounded with a technical submission win over former UFC flyweight champion Deiveson Figueiredo, has long been a top contender with a stellar resume but has yet to challenge for the undisputed belt. Sandhagen's case for a title shot is bolstered by his recent performances, including wins over Rob Font and Marlon "Chito" Vera. Despite a close loss to Umar in a title eliminator last year, "The Sandman" has consistently faced the division's toughest competition. Advertisement Merab, for his part, seems open to all challenges. After his latest title defense at UFC 316, he called out Sandhagen as the most deserving contender. "He's a new style and we know there is no MMA math,' said Dvalishvili in an interview with Ariel Helwani for Uncrowned. 'The style makes the fight, and Cory, he's a different style. It will be a test for me." Related: UFC Fighter's Brain Tumor Made Weight Cut Impossible, Now Promotion May Cut Her After Third Consecutive Loss Related: UFC 316 Nearly Derailed by Chaos as Crowd Barrier Collapses During Championship Walkout (Video) This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.

Heavyweight Drama: Jones vs. Ngannou 'Biggest Fight in UFC History'
Heavyweight Drama: Jones vs. Ngannou 'Biggest Fight in UFC History'

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Heavyweight Drama: Jones vs. Ngannou 'Biggest Fight in UFC History'

Heavyweight Drama: Jones vs. Ngannou 'Biggest Fight in UFC History' originally appeared on Athlon Sports. While heavyweight MMA legend Francis Ngannou left the UFC on bad terms, there have been rumblings of his potential return to the organization. Recently, his coach Eric Nicksick even hinted that he might be interested in coming back to fight for Dana White, given the UFC heavyweight division's stagnancy towards the top of the rankings. With Jon Jones hinting at retirement rather than face Tom Aspinall, the heavyweight division has been a mess, and the anticipation for a Ngannou return could revitalize a tired narrative of Jones ducking Aspinall. Advertisement The MMA world is again buzzing over a potential superfight between Jon Jones and Francis Ngannou, with UFC veterans Kamaru Usman and Henry Cejudo declaring it the "biggest fight in UFC history" on a recent episode of the Pound 4 Pound podcast. Feb 15, 2020; Rio Rancho, New Mexico, USA; UFC fighter Jon Jones attends the light heavyweight bout between Jan Blachowicz (blue) and Corey Anderson (red) during UFC Fight Night at Santa Ana Star Arena.© Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports Usman, a former welterweight champion, didn't hold back in his excitement, stating, "I'm telling you right now, the biggest fight in UFC history will be Jon Jones versus Francis Ngannou. I think this is the biggest fight that you can make right now." However, UFC CEO Dana White has shut down the idea, insisting that interim champion Tom Aspinall is next in line for Jones. Advertisement "It's Aspinall's fight," White declared, dismissing Ngannou's return as unlikely. "I don't have Ngannou under contract, and Aspinall is the guy." This stance is the polar opposite of PFL founder Donn Davis, who proposed a "winner takes all" co-promotion in a post on X (formerly Twitter), offering to let the victorious fighter's promotion claim all event profits. Meanwhile, Aspinall remains in limbo, waiting for Jones to commit to their unification bout. With Jones seemingly more interested in Ngannou, the UFC faces a dilemma of forcing Jones to face Aspinall or risk losing the biggest money fight in MMA to a rival promotion. For Jones, it's a chance to cement his legacy against a fellow all-time great. For Ngannou, it's an opportunity to prove he never needed the UFC to dominate. And for fans, it's the dream matchup that's been five years in the making. As Usman put it, this isn't just another fight—it's history. Advertisement Related: Dana White Adds Fuel to Jon Jones Retirement Rumors 'If He Wants to Retire, There's Nothing I Can Do" Related: Jon Jones Doesn't Care If UFC Strips Him of Heavyweight Belt, Says Head UFC Commentator This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 10, 2025, where it first appeared.

‘Boy George & Culture Club' Review: An Affectionate Look at the '80s Band and Its Flamboyant Frontman That Entertains but Treads Too Carefully
‘Boy George & Culture Club' Review: An Affectionate Look at the '80s Band and Its Flamboyant Frontman That Entertains but Treads Too Carefully

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

‘Boy George & Culture Club' Review: An Affectionate Look at the '80s Band and Its Flamboyant Frontman That Entertains but Treads Too Carefully

Earlier this month, The Hollywood Reporter published a sharp piece of cultural analysis titled 'Are Music and Other Celebrity Films Killing the Documentary?' Nonfiction filmmakers and programmers interviewed for the feature weighed in on the influence of the major streamers, shifting away from formal invention and probing investigation toward authorized, artist-friendly docs that function primarily as marketing, brand management and fan service. Alison Ellwood's Boy George & Culture Club is a solid example of this anodyne trend. It's candid but seldom reveals much that's fresh, as infectious as one of the Brit new wave band's earworm hits but about as weighty, too. Still, anyone with fond memories of Culture Club's heyday will likely be hooked from the moment the harmonica enters in the opening bars of 'Church of the Poison Mind,' still one of the catchiest bops of the 1980s, heard here in a concert performance that showcases the powerhouse backup vocals of Helen Terry. More from The Hollywood Reporter 'Outer Banks' Actor Jonathan Daviss to Star as Snoop Dogg in Universal Biopic Sony Music Publishing Acquires Hipgnosis Songs Group Finneas Says He Was Tear-Gassed at Los Angeles ICE Protest That song is a welcome reminder that while the band fronted with iconoclastic style by Boy George might have emerged out of the New Romantic scene, their musical influences ran from blue-eyed soul to reggae, Motown, calypso and even a dash of country on 'Karma Chameleon.' But although all four bandmates weigh in extensively in separate present-day interviews, the doc is disappointingly short on insight into how the music came together. As the film would have it, George wrote the lyrics — often displayed in candy-colored '80s-style graphics that mimic Culture Club album covers — while the tunes just sort of materialized once the musicians got together in the studio. There is of course something to be said for that kind of magical alchemy in a pop band. The name Culture Club itself is a reference to their unusually diverse makeup — a gay Irish lead vocalist; a Black Jamaican Brit bassist (Mikey Craig); a blond Englishman guitarist (Roy Hay); and a Jewish drummer from a punk background (Jon Moss). Perhaps one reason the four members are interviewed separately is that although they 'took some time' rather than officially breaking up in 1986 (and continued to tour on and off for three decades while also pursuing their own projects), the extent to which George's big personality and transgressive look overshadowed both his bandmates and the music itself — even his own vocal talent — seems to remain a mostly unaddressed sore point. Footage of the music video shoot for 'Karma Chameleon' on a Mississippi riverboat, with Mikey, Roy and Jon standing around looking uncomfortable in 19th century Southern gent finery, speaks volumes about the divide. Later, over a bonkers video for a rare ballad, 'Mistake No. 3,' which George describes as 'the pinnacle of our excess,' Hay observes: 'We were just like George's little dress-up things.' But it's hard to consider George insensitive when he looks back at it all through such a humorous lens. 'Yeah, I guess the other three felt like they'd been dragged into a gay circus,' he says with a chuckle. There's plenty of humor also in individual thoughts on their biggest but frothiest hit. 'I think we lost a lot of credibility with 'Karma Chameleon',' says Roy. 'But it's the thing we're remembered for.' Adds George: 'They say it was the nail in our cool coffin. But we were never cool! That song went to No. 1 and stayed there for weeks. Tortured everyone.' George acknowledges his dominant role but pretty much laughs off any frustration the other members might have felt. He comes across as a likeable, frequently very funny narcissist with a diva streak and an unapologetic sharp edge when challenged. That's not to say his soulful voice and attention-grabbing look were not the crucial ingredients in the band's 1982 breakthrough with the reggae-inflected single 'Do You Really Want To Hurt Me.' And nor do any of George's bandmates deny that he was their chief fame-driver. It's fun to learn how young working-class George O'Dowd transformed into fabulous Boy George, a fixture at clubs like Billy's and The Blitz, going from a punky blond dye-job at 16 or 17 to full drag within six months. The rise of David Bowie and Marc Bolan was formative, and he talks about the discovery of makeup as a liberation, taking inspiration from Siouxsie Sioux, Poly Styrene of X-Ray Spex and Ari Up from the Slits for the cascading dreadlocks. With his wide-brimmed hats, dramatic makeup and Technicolor muumuus, George couldn't help but become the focal point, and while the press mostly danced around the topic of his sexuality at first, he was dismissive of attempts to identify a political viewpoint in his androgynous persona. In one archival interview from the early days, he says they weren't trying to say anything with their music or fashion. In some ways, that's also reflective of Ellwood's doc, which touches on LGBTQ representation, homophobia and hypocrisy but does so with too little context or overarching perspective to be illuminating. It seems bizarre, for instance, that a film purporting to deal with these subjects in the first half of the '80s shows no curiosity about how the AIDS crisis might have fed into negative reactions. The band had reached its zenith, with Beatlemania-size crowds greeting them in Australia and Canada, and significant success cracking the American market. But the U.S. is where anti-gay sentiment gathered steam following George's 1984 Grammy Awards acceptance speech when Culture Club won for best new artist: 'Thank you, America. You've got taste, style and you know a good drag queen when you see one.' It seems inconceivable 40 years later (or would, if not for America's rabid neo-conservatism) that George referring to himself as a drag queen could spark scandalized pearl-clutching. But he says he was more amused than appalled when the family values mob started staging anti-LGBTQ protests outside concert venues. Moss provides a droll take on it when he recounts chatting with a Kansas fan who parroted one of the most widely used and offensive homophobic slogans, 'God Hates Fags.' When Moss asked the same person, 'Are you coming to the show?' they said, 'Oh yeah, we love Boy George.' In a Carson appearance, George points up the irony of being considered controversial in a country that had Liberace. The movie's most intimate thread concerns the relationship of George and Jon. George says it was 'love at first sight,' while Moss, who had never been romantically involved with a man, confesses to being 'absolutely smitten,' simultaneously confused and excited. Craig recounts his misgivings about their relationship potentially destabilizing the band. But by the time he voiced his concerns, Moss said it was too late since they had already slept together. 'We were the John and Yoko of the band for a while,' comments George about the resentment of the other two members. But while public displays of affection were the norm between them at the start, that stopped as soon as they had their first hit. Concerns grew that the 'secret' of their relationship being exposed could have a ruinous effect on the band. But the doc is inconclusive about the degree to which homophobia drove the backlash or factored in negative reviews of Culture Club's rushed third album, Waking Up With the House on Fire. (I was living in London during those years and have to admit I had always assumed George's sexuality and his relationship with Jon — an important gay dreamboat at the time — were common knowledge.) There are poignant moments in which Moss looks back on the relationship ('It was really proper love') and shares the painful process of getting out of it for his self-preservation, while George conveys a more equivocal view, albeit with sadness. One of the major contributing factors to its end appears to have been George's drug addiction, graduating from weed to heroin in a matter of weeks. The doc is frank about that dark period and George's erratic behavior as he began hanging out and getting wasted with fellow genderqueer '80s Brit-pop star Marilyn. George's drug use became tabloid fodder, with Rupert Murdoch's The Sun predicting he'd be dead before the year was over. Craig and Hay felt hurt at the time when they were excluded while George and Jon (as well as Marilyn) were invited to participate in the all-star recording of Bob Geldof's No. 1 Band Aid single, 'Do They Know It's Christmas?' And all three other members express regret about George's indecision costing the group a spot in the lineup for the historic marathon Live Aid concert at London's Wembley Stadium. George sought treatment after multiple friends died of overdoses — including one in the Culture Club singer's Hampstead mansion — and has been clean now for more than a decade. Is he contrite about the role his drug addiction played in the band's devolution? Maybe a little, though in his outsize blue velvet bowler and Liz Taylor Cleopatra eye makeup, he mostly comes across as a charming rascal, with not much use for guilt. That made him a great pop star though probably a difficult boyfriend and not the most egalitarian of band members. Ellwood gives Culture Club and its colorful frontman an affectionate salute that should please fans, even if, unlike the director's more forthright 2020 Showtime doc, The Go-Gos, she generally chooses diplomacy over a deep dive. Best of The Hollywood Reporter 13 of Tom Cruise's Most Jaw-Dropping Stunts Hollywood Stars Who Are One Award Away From an EGOT 'The Goonies' Cast, Then and Now

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