
The Gilded Age season 3 premiere recap: Everything we know so far
HBO's The Gilded Age is back, and Season 3 is already stirring up drama in 1880s New York. Julian Fellowes's show about wealth, power, and scandal has fans buzzing with its mix of fancy costumes and messy family fights. The new season started airing on June 22, 2025, and here's everything you need to know about what's going down with the Russells, van Rhijns, and more. When and Where to Watch The Gilded Age Season 3
The third season hit HBO and Max on June 22, 2025, at 9 p.m. ET/PT. You'll get eight episodes total, dropping every Sunday, with the big finale set for August 10, 2025. If you're itching to see it early, the first episode screened at the Tribeca Film Festival on June 12, 2025, with the cast and Fellowes spilling some tea afterward. Want to catch up? Seasons 1 and 2 are streaming on Max, and Season 3 episodes are there too, ready for your weekend binge. What's the Story This Time?
Season 3 picks up right after Bertha Russell (Carrie Coon) won the Opera War in Season 2, snagging the Duke of Buckingham for her Metropolitan Opera opening. The show's all about the 1880s, a time when money and status ruled New York, but nobody got to the top without some serious sacrifices. Bertha's chasing an even bigger win to cement her family's spot in high society, while her husband, George (Morgan Spector), is betting it all on a wild plan to build a railroad from Chicago to Los Angeles. He's out in Arizona trying to buy mines in Morenci, but the local miners aren't making it easy, and it could cost him big.
Over at the van Rhijn house, things are tense. Agnes van Rhijn (Christine Baranski) is not thrilled that her sister Ada Forte (Cynthia Nixon) is calling the shots now, thanks to a surprise inheritance. Marian Brook (Louisa Jacobson) and Larry Russell (Harry Richardson) are sneaking around, falling for each other behind everyone's backs. Meanwhile, Peggy Scott (Denée Benton) is catching feelings for Dr. William Kirkland (Jordan Donica), but his snooty family isn't exactly rolling out the welcome mat for a Black journalist. The season's got some heavy stuff too, like divorce—super scandalous back then. Aurora Fane's husband, Charles, wants out of their marriage, and there's talk it might be because he's hiding who he really is. Plus, expect some dark twists, like a freak accident and a violent moment that shakes things up. Who's in the Cast?
The main crew is back: Carrie Coon as the fierce Bertha, Morgan Spector as George, Christine Baranski as the sharp-tongued Agnes, and Cynthia Nixon as the newly empowered Ada. Louisa Jacobson keeps Marian's story moving, and Denée Benton's Peggy is getting more to do this season. You'll also see Taissa Farmiga as Gladys Russell, Harry Richardson as Larry, Blake Ritson as Oscar van Rhijn, and Donna Murphy as the queen of society, Mrs. Astor.
New faces are shaking things up. Phylicia Rashad plays Elizabeth Kirkland, a tough Newport socialite, with Brian Stokes Mitchell as her preacher husband, Frederick. Their son, Dr. William Kirkland (Jordan Donica), is Peggy's new love interest. Victoria Clark joins as Joan Carlton, an old-money type, and you've got Merritt Wever as Bertha's sister Monica O'Brien, plus Bill Camp as J.P. Morgan himself. Other newcomers like Leslie Uggams, Lisagay Hamilton, and Andrea Martin add more spice to the mix. Episode 1 Recap
The season kicks off far from New York's fancy ballrooms, in dusty Morenci, Arizona. George is trying to lock down those mines for his railroad dream, but the miners want a union, and he's not having it. Back home, the van Rhijn house is a mess. Ada's leaning into the temperance movement after losing her husband, Luke, and Agnes is grumpy about playing second fiddle. Peggy gets sick with pneumonia, and a racist doctor refuses to help her, which hits hard and forces her family to step in.
At the Russells', Bertha's pushing Gladys to marry the Duke of Buckingham (Ben Lamb), but Gladys is sneaking off with Billy Carlton (Matt Walker) instead. When Bertha finds out, it's fireworks. Marian and Larry are keeping their romance quiet, but it's getting serious. Larry also ditches his business partner Jack on a clock project, which stirs up trouble. The episode sets up a season that's not afraid to get gritty while still delivering the glitz.
Ahmedabad Plane Crash
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Q&A: Pulitzer Prize winner Robin Givhan chronicles Virgil Abloh's rise to fashion fame
NEW YORK (AP) — With his calm and cool demeanor, fashion disruptor and multi-hyphenate Virgil Abloh artfully challenged the fashion industry's traditions to leave his mark as a Black creative, despite his short-lived career. In the years since his 2021 death at just 41, his vision and image still linger. Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Robin Givhan sheds new light on how Abloh ascended the ranks of one of the top luxury fashion houses and captivated the masses with her latest book, 'Make It Ours: Crashing the Gates of Culture with Virgil Abloh.' In the book out Tuesday, Givhan documents Abloh's early life growing up as the son of Ghanaian immigrants in Rockford, Illinois, his days as graduate student studying architecture and his working relationship and friendship with Kanye West. Before taking the helm of Louis Vuitton as the house's first Black menswear creative director, Abloh threw himself into his creative pursuits including fine art, architecture, DJing and design. Abloh remixed his interests with his marketing genius and channeled it into fashion with streetwear labels like Been Trill and Pyrex Vision. These endeavors were the launchpad for his luxury streetwear label Off-White, known for its white diagonal lines, quotation marks, red zip ties and clean typeface. Off-White led to Abloh's collaboration with Ikea, where he designed a rug with 'KEEP OFF' in all-white letters and also with Nike where he deconstructed and reenvisioned 10 of Nike's famous shoe silhouettes. Throughout his ventures, Abloh built a following of sneakerheads and so-called hypebeasts who liked his posts, bought into his brands and showed up in droves outside his fashion shows. Social media made Abloh accessible to his fans and he tapped into that. Off-White had built a loyal following and some critics. Givhan, a Washington Post senior critic-at-large, openly admits that she was among the latter early on. Givhan said she was fascinated that Abloh's popularity was more than his fashion. 'For me, there was something of a disconnect really,' she said. 'That here was this person who had clearly had an enormous impact within the fashion industry and outside of the fashion industry, and yet it wasn't really about the clothing. It was about something else.' For her latest project, Givhan spoke with The Associated Press on how she approached each of Abloh's creative undertakings and his legacy during a period of heightened racial tension in America. This interview has been edited for brevity and clarity. AP: Tell me why you felt it was important to include the context of what was happening at the time Abloh was growing up as well as on his rise up through the fashion industry, with him ultimately ending up at Louis Vuitton. GIVHAN: Fashion doesn't just sort of happen in a vacuum. People are the product of their parents, their family, their environment, their timing, their interests, all of those things. I always like to see, what is swirling around people when they make certain decisions? What is sort of in the water that you're absorbing, that you are not even conscious that you're absorbing it. AP: Can you talk about the process of writing about all of his creative endeavors and how they shaped his career? GIVHAN: The skater culture — in part because it was such a sort of subculture that also had a very specific aesthetic and was such a deep part of the whole world of streetwear — and then the DJing part intrigued me because so much of his work as a designer seems to reflect a kind of DJ ethos, where you're not creating the melody and you're not creating the lyrics. You're taking these things that already exist and you're remixing them and you're responding to the crowd and the crowd is informing you. And so much of that, to me, could also be used to describe the way that he thought about fashion and the way that he designed. AP: What role would you say that Virgil has had in the fashion industry today? GIVHAN: He certainly raised the question within the industry of what is the role of the creative director? How much more expansive is that role? ... And I do think he has really forced the question of how are we defining luxury? Like what is a luxury brand? And is it something that is meant to sort of have this lasting impact? Is it supposed to be this beautifully crafted item? Or is it really just a way of thinking about value and beauty and desirability? And if it's those things, then really it becomes something that is quite sort of quite personal and can be quite based on the community in which you live. AP: How did he use social media to his advantage and to help catapult his career? GIVHAN: He really used social media as a way of connecting with people as opposed to just sort of using it as kind of a one-way broadcast. He was telling his side of things, but he was also listening to other people. He was listening to that feedback. That's also what made him this larger-than-life person for a lot of people, because not only was he this creative person who was in conversation with fans and contemporaries, but he was this creative person inside. He was this creative person at the very top of the fashion industry. For a lot of people, the idea that you could ostensibly have a conversation with someone at that level, and they would seemingly pull back the curtain and be transparent about things — that was really quite powerful. AP: You write about his relationship to Kanye in the book. Were you able to get any input from him on their relationship for the book? GIVHAN: Their individual ambitions, aesthetic ideas and curiosity kind of propelled them forward in separate directions. I did reach out to Kanye after a lot of the reporting because he obviously is this thread that is woven throughout the book. And, ultimately, he elected not to engage. But I was lucky enough to get access to an unpublished conversation that Virgil had had around, I think it was 2016-ish, where he talked at length about his working relationship with Kanye and sort of the differences between them and the similarities and the ways in which ... Kanye inspired him and sort of the jet fuel that he got from that relationship. More than anything, because Virgil's personality was in so many ways kind of the opposite of Kanye's, that for every door that Kanye was kind of pounding on, Virgil was able to politely sort of walk through. AP: Why do you think his legacy continues to persist? I've been thinking about how Virgil might have responded, how his creativity might have responded to this moment because so much shifted post-George Floyd that like this is another inflection point and it makes me wonder, 'OK, how would he have responded today?' And with the person who said, 'I'm not a rebel and I'm not a flame thrower,' would he have picked up some matches? I don't know.


Tom's Guide
an hour ago
- Tom's Guide
How to watch the documentary 'Enigma' online from anywhere
"Enigma" gets to the big questions at the heart of current debates about transgender identity and rights. It does this through the prism of iconic pioneers April Ashley, Amanda Lear and others and their point of contact at Le Carrousel, an underground Parisian nightclub where trans women enjoyed a safe space to express themselves in the 1950s, before bringing the story up-to-date today. Here's how you can watch "Enigma" online around the world and from anywhere with a VPN. "Enigma" premieres on Tuesday, June 24 at 9 p.m. ET/ PT on HBO and will also be available to stream at the same time on Max.• U.S. — HBO/Max/Max on Prime Video• CAN — Crave• AUS — Max• Watch anywhere — try NordVPN risk-free With archival TV interviews and footage, plus home movies, the lives and experiences of Ashley (Vogue model who went through very public divorce from minor member of aristocracy in the late 1960s) and Lear (the so-called 'White queen of Disco' in the 70s and early 80s) - in the main - are used as an avatar to show how far transgender politics has come. Not without much personal pain and suffering, Ashley emerged as a 21st century advocate for the Gender Recognition Act 2004 and was honored as a member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (MBE) in 2012. Ashley died in 2021 but Lear continues to inspire as a performer and, as the publicity for the film puts it, "Define her own legacy." The two women had a strong relationship when they first met at La Carrousel but later fell out. There stories remain intertwined however. Read on and discover how you can watch "Enigma" online with all the streaming details you need below. "Enigma" premieres on Tuesday, June 24 at 9 p.m. ET/ PT on HBO and will be available to stream at the same time on Max. Max prices start at $9.99/month if you don't mind ads, going to $16.99/month for ad-free and $20.99/month if you want the option to watch content on up to four devices and in 4K. For even better value, you can pay for a whole year upfront and effectively get 12 months for the price of 10 on any of its tiers. HBO can also be added to OTT streaming services such as Amazon Prime Video. Traveling outside the States? You'll need to use a VPN to unblock Max when abroad. If you're traveling overseas and "Enigma" isn't airing where you're currently located, that doesn't mean you have to miss the show while you're away from home. With the right VPN (virtual private network), you can stream the show from anywhere. We've evaluated many options, and the best VPN you can get right now is NordVPN. It meets the VPN needs of the vast majority of users, offering outstanding compatibility with most devices and impressive connection speeds. You can try it risk-free for 30 days if you take advantage of NordVPN's no-quibble money-back guarantee. There's a good reason you've heard of NordVPN. We specialize in testing and reviewing VPN services and NordVPN is the one we rate best. It's outstanding at unblocking streaming services, it's fast and it has top-level security features too. With over 7,000 servers across 110+ countries, and at a great price too, it's easy to recommend. You can even get an Amazon gift card included if you purchase a select plan now. Get over 70% off NordVPN with this deal Using a VPN is incredibly simple. 1. Install the VPN of your choice. As we've said, NordVPN is our favorite. 2. Choose the location you wish to connect to in the VPN app. For instance, if you're visiting the U.K. and want to view a U.S. service, you'd select a U.S. server from the location list. 3. Sit back and enjoy the show. Head to your streaming service app — so Max, for example — and watch "Enigma" online from wherever you are in the world. "Enigma" premieres in Canada on Crave on Tuesday, June 24 at 9 p.m. ET/ PT. Crave subscriptions start at $9.99/month for its Basic plan (720p video, includes ads) all the way up to $22/month for Premium (ad-free, 4K, downloadable shows). However, right now you can pick up brilliant discounts for three months until July 7: Outside Canada right now? We recommend using NordVPN to watch your usual streaming services. There is no "Enigma" release date at the time of writing but, when it does, it will almost certainly be on Sky. Americans on vacation in the U.K. who want to watch via their usual domestic streaming platform need a good streaming VPN to log in back home. We recommend NordVPN. "Enigma" premieres in Oz on Max on Wednesday, June 25. Plans start with Basic with Ads at $11.99 per month, Standard at $15.99 per month and Premium at $21.99 per month. Those traveling outside of Oz can still watch the show from their usual domestic streaming platform with a VPN. We recommend NordVPN. Ashley married Hon. Arthur Corbett (later 3rd Baron Rowallan), heir of Lord Rowallan, in 1963 but the marriage soon deteriorated. A messy legal battle after Ashley had an affair saw her lawyers demanding maintenance payments in 1966 and Corbett responding a year later by filing suit to have the marriage annulled on the grounds that Ashley was male. It was granted in 1970 even though he had known about her history when they married. No, not right now. Those looking to watch "Enigma" will have to go Max (US & Aus) or Crave (Can). We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.


USA Today
an hour ago
- USA Today
See the exclusive trailer for Hulu's 'epic' adventure 'Washington Black'
For all the dreamers out there, Sterling K. Brown's got the summertime TV escape for you. There's danger, romance, comedy and joy aplenty in 'Washington Black,' a new Hulu fantasy adventure (streaming July 23) based on the 2018 Esi Edugyan novel. USA TODAY has the exclusive debut of the first trailer for the series that Brown, a star and executive producer, calls 'an epic coming-of-age tale full of magic and possibility.' The 19th-century historical fiction centers on George Washington 'Wash' Black (Eddie Karanja), an inventive 11-year-old enslaved boy born on a Barbados sugar plantation. The plantation owner's scientist brother, Titch (Tom Ellis), notices the kid's scientific mind and the two become friends. But when Wash's life is at stake after an incident on the property, he and Titch escape on a nifty flying airship called "The Cloud Cutter," beginning a globetrotting odyssey. Years later, a grownup Wash (Ernest Kingsley Jr.) settles in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and forms a bond with town leader Medwin Harris (Brown). Although Wash is born into harsh circumstances, "he does not allow his present limitations to keep him from future possibilities. Wash is a dreamer who knows that his life is not worth living if he is not in active pursuit of making those dreams come true,' Brown says by email, adding that the characters he encounters along the way 'either try to claim this young man's talents as their own, prevent him from using those talents, or protect him.' Medwin is among the latter. The 'de facto mayor' of the Black part of Halifax, he 'relishes his role in creating community, knowing that there is safety in numbers,' Brown says. 'But through his relationship with this young man, he learns that being safe and being free aren't necessarily the same thing. And while he tries to teach Wash what is necessary to survive, Wash winds up showing him what it means to truly live.' Brown feels 'Washington Black' is a period show with a powerful message full of belief and hope for modern audiences. 'It's full of whimsical elements that aren't typical to stories featuring Black bodies. As I often say to my friends, 'Black folks like whimsy, too!' ' Brown says. 'And while people of the African diaspora are front and center, the themes are universal. Everyone grows up, everyone seeks out love and community, and if we are blessed enough, everyone wants to live the life of their dreams.'