Hollywood’s Most Disturbed Dancer

Hollywood’s Most Disturbed Dancer


March 25, 2025 | Samantha Henman

Hollywood’s Most Disturbed Dancer


Unlike many of today’s stars, the legendary Leslie Caron doesn’t seem to have had a publicist telling to keep her lips sealed.


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January 30, 2026 J. Clarke

Movies That Never Should Have Had A Sequel, According To Fans

Some movies end so perfectly that audiences walk out satisfied, emotionally complete, and ready to move on with their lives. Naturally, Hollywood looks at that moment and says, “But what if we did it again… worse?” Sequels can be incredible when there’s a real story left to tell, but when the original already wrapped things up neatly, a follow-up can feel less like a continuation and more like an awkward reunion no one asked for.
January 30, 2026 J. Clarke

If You Know These Reggae Songs, Your Music Taste Is Elite

Anybody can toss on a “reggae classics” playlist, hear Three Little Birds once, and declare themselves spiritually Jamaican. But really knowing reggae—the songs that built the sound, pushed the culture forward, and got sampled, covered, and quoted into eternity is a whole different thing. This genre isn’t just beach vibes and good moods. It’s love, protest, faith, survival, celebration, sometimes all in the same track.
January 29, 2026 J. Clarke

When Elton John came out publicly, he risked everything—and ended up becoming one of the most beloved figures in music.

For years, Elton John was already one of the biggest stars on the planet before the public had any real idea who he was offstage. He wore outrageous costumes, wrote intensely emotional songs, and built a persona that felt flamboyant but carefully controlled. In an era that wasn’t exactly welcoming to queer artists, that distance wasn’t accidental—it was survival.
January 29, 2026 J. Clarke

Let’s Be Honest: The 2000s Was The Best Era For Animated TV

There’s a reason so many adults can still quote cartoon dialogue from memory. The 2000s weren’t just a strong decade for animated TV—they were a creative explosion where writers, artists, and networks stopped playing it safe and started trusting kids (and adults) to handle smarter jokes, bigger emotions, and stranger ideas. These shows didn’t talk down to their audiences. They grew with them, shaped their humor, and quietly became cultural cornerstones.
A Bronx Tale scene, De Niro, Brancato
January 29, 2026 Jesse Singer

Lillo Brancato Jr. starred opposite Robert De Niro in A Bronx Tale. A decade later, he was involved in a police officer’s death and facing prison.

When A Bronx Tale was released in 1993, Lillo Brancato Jr. looked like a sure thing. He was young, charismatic, and held his own opposite Robert De Niro—something many actors far more experienced have struggled to do. Hollywood took notice, and the industry seemed ready to slot him into the next wave of serious leading men.
January 28, 2026 J. Clarke

If 2016 Is Really Making A Comeback, These Songs Are Non-Negotiable

Some years don’t fade—they hover. And 2016 is one of those years that still shows up uninvited, sliding into your playlists like it pays rent. If the cultural mood is looping back (again), then the soundtrack has to come with it: the pop confessionals, the late-night bangers, the gleeful earworms, the songs that made you text someone you absolutely should not have texted. Here are the 21 tracks that defined the year—and if 2016 is truly returning, they’re not optional.


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