Star Search Reboot to Stream Live on Netflix — Get Details
Netflix will (as the saying goes) 'reach for the stars… and grab 'em' with a reboot of the iconic Star Search talent competition, the streamer announced Wednesday at its annual Upfront presentation.
The syndicated Star Search originally aired from 1983 to 1995, with Ed McMahon, who passed away in 2009, serving as host. In the Netflix update, 'The talent is bigger, the stakes are higher, and the format is more interactive than ever,' we are told.
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Episodes will air twice weekly, live, to allow voting in which viewers determine which contestants move forward.
Each episode will spotlight the best up-and-coming performers across four categories – Music, Dance, Variety/Comedy, and Kids – 'as they compete for their shot at stardom' and face weekly eliminations.
The reboot is described as a 'nostalgic yet fresh entry in the talent competition space' and 'draws on the rich legacy of Star Search, which helped launch the careers of global icons like Beyoncé, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, Dave Chappelle, Christina Aguilera, Adam Sandler and many others.'
Jason Raff, who lorded over NBC's America's Got Talent for 19 seasons, will serve as showrunner, while the executive producers include Jesse Collins, Dionne Harmon, Madison Merritt and Elaine Metaxas.
A host, judges and the premiere date will be announced at a later time.
Think that have 'star' quality in either the music, dance, variety/comedy or kids categories? Applications are now being received at StarSearchLiveCasting.com.
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Total: £32.73 Day Three 8 a.m. — I wake up to the cat sleeping next to me — always great! I love WFH days because my joint pain causes disrupted sleep and the extra time to lie in is amazing. Eat Weetabix and oat milk. 8:45 a.m. — Do yoga and then interrupt my sessions to Google hair accessories. I find a compromise vintage-esque jewel headband on Monsoon that might work and order urgent delivery, £28.60. 9:30 a.m. — Start work and do my first proper meeting with an author on behalf of my boss. I enjoy it so much, especially as we talk about access accommodations, which I find really interesting in a world that is generally not that accommodating. 12 p.m. — I eat minestrone soup and the Italian bread, which I'm impressed by. 12:45 p.m. — Spend my lunch break talking to my access worker for my Arts Council application, which is funded by the Arts Council. The access worker is amazing and I feel so energised by them, but I still return to work absolutely exhausted from having no genuine break. My job is very computer-based and Kindle-based. Afterwards, I eat olives for a snack. 1 p.m. — I spend the afternoon reading and pinching my cheeks to keep myself awake (I think I'm having new medication side effects). I move positions regularly to avoid joint pain, but this also helps me keep conscious! I then report on my thoughts on the book. 5:30 p.m. — Finish work and head on the tube to North London for a pub dinner with a friend, E, before we go to the theatre, £3.80. I have seafood linguine, £28.60, which is amazing as usual and I stroke a massive beast of a dog too. 7:45 p.m. — We see a play about hoarding and though I really like it, I have a relative who is a hoarder and I felt a certain lack of realism. I read an interview with the playwright in the programme who confirmed that they mostly watched hoarding documentaries for research. 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It goes well aside from me saying please too many times. 3:30 p.m. — I try to get the rest of my work done in a frantic rush before going on holiday and get very stressed, especially when an envelope gets rejected by DHL for a second time for inexplicable reasons. 5:30 p.m. — I leave work and feel an immediate sense of freedom. Ten days of not working! I take the Tube home and it's sardines, which makes me feel less free, £3.80. 6:30 p.m. — The headdress has arrived and I'm happy with it, as it lies fairly flat on my head! I eat a fishcake, pasta with parmesan and olive oil, and peas. 7 p.m. — I work on speed writing an application to work with a disabled theatre company, as I need to send it off tomorrow. I hate doing things at the last minute, but I've had too many deadlines recently. 10 p.m. — Bed and light off with no reading. By 10 p.m. my body stops when I'm overdoing it. Total: £7.60 Day Five 8:30 a.m. — It's civil partnership eve! I wake up with unusually bad lower back pain. I lay awake thinking about everything I have to do today. I eat Weetabix and oat milk and put a wash on. 9 a.m. — I start editing my disabled theatre application and make good progress. 10:30 a.m. — B returns from a driving lesson. I put the washing out. We plan for the day's chores and I berate him for having forgotten to get our travel money out near his workplace, so now I have to do it while he food preps. It's just another thing in a too-full day. 11 a.m. — B heads out to Lidl to get most of the remaining food, but my parents kindly insisted on paying for the reception food when they found out we were getting civilly partnered. His purchases include eggs, brioche buns, sweet potatoes, mushrooms, peppers, tomatoes, courgettes, mincemeat, crisps, and cream crackers. Meanwhile, I shave my legs, deal with neglected upper lip moustache hair and botch my way through painting my toenails and fingernails. 12 p.m. — I have a lunch of Mexican bean soup and brown bread. 1 p.m. — I meet with my access worker and finalise my Arts Council application. They will now submit it for me, but there is less than a 5% chance of receiving funding in London. 1:30 p.m. — I have a really annoying and slow bus journey into a local (fancier) area, full of people playing videos out loud and shouting into their phones, £1.75. I wear Loop earplugs daily to deal with my noise sensitivity (connected to my neurodivergence), but it doesn't block out jerks. Once there, I collect the two pre-paid for cakes (chocolate cake and vegan lemon drizzle). I also pick up shampoo, conditioner, and moisturiser from Boots, £6.60. I decide that I'm too tired to get the travel money, so I will get it tomorrow. 2:30 p.m. — I get the Tube back, despite being worried about dropping the cakes down the stairs, as I can't do the bus again, £1.30. I get them home intact. 3 p.m. — I head back out to M&S to buy a few fancier bits, but get really stressed as I can't find anything, the vegan selection is terrible and holding everything in the basket is hurting my wrists. I buy oat milk, macaroons, tomato juice, cheese, haloumi quarter pounders, dips, butter, pastries, carrot batons, olives, mozzarella bites, olives, and hummus. This is paid by my parents. 4 p.m. — I charge my way through cleaning various parts of the house, including pouring boiling water on the weeds between the paving stones in the garden so I can pluck them tomorrow and they won't grow back. 8 p.m. — Just as I'm halfway through cleaning the bathroom, my friend and witness for tomorrow, Z, arrives to stay the night. We have a Chinese takeaway, £23.11 for my share as we cover the meal for Z. She brings us a bowl for our cat with D's name on it and a John Lewis voucher — I promptly cry about the cat bowl. We then have a few glasses of champagne that was given by B's colleagues and a cosy chat before bed. Total: £87.08 Day Six 7 a.m. — Civil partnership day! I wake up earlier than I planned to finish my final chores. I consider waiting for Z to have breakfast, decide this is an absurd idea and eat Weetabix and oat milk. I then finish cleaning the bathroom, tidy the bin area, and weed the garden. 9 a.m. — Z and I hop into an Uber to save time and go to Boots for my makeover, £16. However, the makeup artist isn't in, so once we realise nothing is happening here, we move on to a nearby department store. There I collect 500 EUR in cash, £216.84 for my share, then we start trying to find a makeup stand that will do a last-minute makeover. Eventually, the lovely team at Clinique help us out and make me up with a natural look and I buy foundation, concealer, and mascara, £91. As I've spent basically £0 on makeup since I was 18, the price makes me wince, but the products are great, I get lots of free items and the team deserve to make a reasonable sale from me after being so kind (but also just for doing my makeup). We get an Uber back home, £9.99. 10:45 a.m. — Rush home and my parents have classically arrived early. As more of our guests arrive, I put on my dress (£45 from a charity shop, but bought last year) and then my sister-in-law helps me put my headdress on and ties a silk flower on a ribbon around my wrist. 11:45 a.m. — We are all off in three Ubers to the registry office, £13 for my share. 12 p.m. — We wait outside in the park and take photos. Me and B are then ushered in for our pre-civil partnership interview to check all our details are right for the certificate. B has forgotten his Mum's middle name spelling and the order of her two surnames, which causes some consternation. 12:30 p.m. — We walk hand-in-hand into the smallest room in the registry office where our guest are assembled, which cost £450 total (already paid). I think it's a bit pricey for the amount of work a civil partnership takes on the council's side, especially as some of the council systems have been horrible to navigate and one staff member was rude about it. I'm aware that most people pay a lot more for the venue when they're getting married/civilly partnered, but I don't like paying more than a small sum for legal rights. We have a really minimal ceremony, with one chosen vow from the council's list, which is a little bit, but not too, cringey. B puts my ring on too early and I spend some of the ceremony trying not to laugh, but we get through it. My mother-in-law spontaneously decides to video the whole ceremony from behind the 'altar' and we now wish this footage didn't exist, as we look so awkward. We take more photos around the outside of the building. 1:30 p.m. — We get three Ubers home, £13 for my share. 2 p.m. — B fires up the BBQ and we get out the snacks, while we wait for the food to cook. What follows is quite overwhelming, as I try to talk to all of the eight guests. I can't imagine coping with circulating around more people noise-wise, or energy-level-wise — even this doesn't feel quite like my day sometimes. But the food is good with lots of veggie and vegan options and I spend some time hiding in the kitchen doing prep, or ignoring the guests and watering my plants when I'm too overwhelmed. All the guests behave! 7 p.m. — The guests go home, except for my sister-in-law, J, who is staying the night. B immediately falls asleep and J and I take some alone time. I can't relax, so I attempt to do some emails and some packing, but I don't have enough energy to actually do anything. 9 p.m. — I eat four slices of the excellent chocolate cake for dinner before asking J if she will walk to Tesco to get soil so we can pot my new Kilimanjaro shrub. She agrees for some reason and gets two bags of soil for £9.50. She then shows me how to pot the shrub properly, as I'm new to gardening. 10 p.m. — B wakes up and has dinner. I have a frantic hour of a little bit of tidying and lots of packing. 11 p.m. — A short read and then sleep! Total: £369.33 Day Seven 7 a.m. — Honeymoon day! I wake-up and eat a decadent breakfast of leftover salmon and roasted vegetables plus some more chocolate cake. Next, I pack and tidy up with B so that B's friend, Y, can stay over to look after our cat. 9:30 a.m. — We spontaneously get yet another Uber to the Tube station then get the train to Gatwick Airport. I look like such a liar claiming that I never take Ubers. My share of the Uber and train tickets are £13.79. 11:30 a.m. — We go through security and B then horrifies me by buying a 50ml bottle of Garnier suncream for £8 (!) because it's the only one that has factor 50 as I wanted. B gets me into a lounge with his Amex card. I've never been to an airport lounge before and it was really quiet, so great for avoiding overwhelm, but the food was terrible. If I hadn't gone on B's Amex card, I would absolutely not have paid £42 for the privilege. But it's free and I love things that are free, so I eat up. 2:30 p.m. — We take off to Kefalonia. I mostly nap on the plane and occasionally walk around looking like an idiot with my giant travel pillow around my neck. I'm moving towards embracing my eccentricity. I buy some snacks on the plane, a cookie, a Kit Kat and some water, £7.05. 6 p.m. — We land in Argostoli Airport. It's a fantastic airport: really quick to get through and there's a man on the door greeting us as we enter the terminal, which I've never seen before and loved. 7 p.m. — Our taxi driver meets us to take us to the northern fishing village of Fiskardo. Kefalonia is the most beautiful place I've ever seen and there are goats wandering up the cliffs! However, the roads are windy and our driver goes fast and I soon become violently travel sick. I end up asking to pull over multiple times and being sick on the side of the road and down myself. The driver is extremely lovely about it. The taxi cost 90 EUR and we tip 10 EUR (paid in cash already purchased). 8:30 p.m. — We get to our villa (which has had the key left in the lock because Fiskardo is very safe) and I put the sick dress in a plastic bag and collapse on the bed. B goes out to get food and discovers that there is only one extremely expensive supermarket in Fiskardo. He buys waffles, cream cheese, and Haribo, £4.37 for my share. By the time he returns, I've revived enough to sit on the terrace, looking at the beautiful view of the neighbouring island of Ithaca while eating Haribo. I'm excited about seeing the view in the light tomorrow. 9:30 p.m. — Sleep. Total: £33.21 Conclusion "It was a highly unusual week and I made lots of purchases that I wouldn't have made in my normal life. That said, my parents covering our reception food saved us a lot of money and the civil partnership costs were very minimal comparably to other similar events (less than £1,200 including the food), even if I did let myself buy things that I wouldn't normally allow. I notice that I had no entertainment spend because my only entertainment was a night at the theatre that I already paid for and it was a week of mostly doing writing applications and chores. I typically have a little more fun across the week and I also don't normally work quite as hard as this because I literally can't due to fatigue. 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Jason Isaacs approves of Johnny Flynn casting as Lucius Malfoy in 'Harry Potter' series: 'Just please don't make him sing'
The big-screen version of the villainous Lucius Malfoy has spoken. Jason Isaacs, who portrayed the wizard in several films based on J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter saga, approves of Johnny Flynn being cast in the role of the father of Draco Malfoy in the upcoming TV adaptation for HBO. A fantastic actor, a lovely man and, irritatingly, a rather brilliant musician too. Couldn't have handed the snake-topped baton on to anyone better. Just please don't make him sing…#HarryPotter #JohnnyFlynn#KillTheElfEarly — Jason Isaacs (@jasonsfolly) June 9, 2025 "A fantastic actor, a lovely man and, irritatingly, a rather brilliant musician too," Isaacs posted Monday on X. "Couldn't have handed the snake-topped baton on to anyone better. Just please don't make him sing...." The actor is known for starring in the Netflix series Lovesick, which aired from 2014 to 2018, and for the 2020 movie Stardust, in which he portrayed the late David Bowie. Flynn also appeared in the 2020 version of Emma. In the streamer's 2024 drama series Ripley, he played the ill-fated Dickie Greenleaf. As Isaacs noted, Flynn is a singer and songwriter who's released several albums and soundtracks. The younger actor is one of more than a dozen cast members headed to Hogwarts, following the phenomenal success of the movies and books following the adventures of the boy wizard and his friends attending a school of magic. Isaacs has said that he thinks he will be but a memory, if anything at all, once the new show has debuted. "I have to say, I'll milk this, because this time next year, there's gonna be another Lucius Malfoy, and he's gonna be fantastic, and I'll be long forgotten," he said in April on the Awards Chatter podcast. "So I am savoring every round of applause I get." He said he wasn't looking for compliments, but being realistic. "I'm just saying, they are making the TV series, and it will be brilliant," Isaacs said. "And I will be — just like I'm now last season's White Lotus actor — I will be the [previous] iteration of Lucius Malfoy, and that's fine by me. I've had a good run." While the cast includes other showbiz veterans, such as John Lithgow, Janet McTeer, and Nick Frost, it also features several newcomers: Dominic McLaughlin, Arabella Stanton, and Alastair Stout will play Harry and his closest friends Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley. Read the original article on Entertainment Weekly