Category 1

Frankie Muniz can't believe he – and Malcolm – are 40 in show's reboot

BURBANK, CA − It’s not just you.Frankie Munizalso can’t believe he’s 40.

USA TODAY

"I ride a Peloton, and now it says 'Frankie Muniz, 40s.' I'm like, 'Whoa bro, my mom's 40,' " Muniz tells USA TODAY. "She's not; she's 70, but in my head, I think that."

The character he’s best known for playing, Malcolm, is similarly not immune to the sands of time. Twenty years after we left him on the hit Fox series "Malcolm in the Middle," the smart-alecky, exasperated teen from the aughts is still just as embarrassed by his zany family inthe show's new Hulu revival, "Malcolm in the Middle: Life's Still Unfair" (all four episodes streaming April 10).

Muniz points out that he is not far from Bryan Cranston's age when the now 70-year-old started playing Malcolm's dad, Hal, in 2000.

"It's pretty wild when you think that because I remember thinking he's so old, you know?" Muniz confesses. "I'm not that old!"

Join our Watch Party!Sign up to receive USA TODAY's TV and movie recommendations right in your inbox

<p style=The show's creator, Linwood Boomer, told USA TODAY that he wasn't able to reel Sullivan (seen here in 2007) back in despite his best efforts; the former actor is now working toward his master's degree at Harvard University. "Eric Sullivan hasn't been an actor for decades. I asked him to repeat [Dewey]. We still talk all the time. I love him, and he didn't want to be an actor anymore," Boomer says. "He didn't like [acting] 10 years ago, and he sure doesn't now. I had to respect that."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

'Malcolm in the Middle' cast then and now – 2000s show to reboot

The show's creator, Linwood Boomer, told USA TODAY that he wasn't able to reel Sullivan (seen here in 2007) back in despite his best efforts; the former actor is now working toward his master's degree at Harvard University. "Eric Sullivan hasn't been an actor for decades. I asked him to repeat [Dewey]. We still talk all the time. I love him, and he didn't want to be an actor anymore," Boomer says. "He didn't like [acting] 10 years ago, and he sure doesn't now. I had to respect that."

After memory loss claims, Frankie Muniz says 'Malcolm' reboot 'brought back so many memories'

Cranston is the only costar Muniz has kept close contact with over the decades, an accomplishment he solidly credits to the "Breaking Bad" actor. Muniz admits his New Year’s resolution every year is "better communication, but that never works."

Nearly the entire original cast, which includes Jane Kaczmarek as matriarch Lois, Christopher Masterson as eldest brother Francis and Justin Berfield as second child Reese, came back for the reboot.

Frankie Muniz reprises his iconic role as Malcolm in the four-episode Hulu revival "Malcolm in the Middle: Life’s Still Unfair." He poses for photos on March 12, 2026, in Burbank, California.

And when the "Malcolm" familyreunited on the Canadian setlast year, it was "as if no time had passed." He adds, "You could have told me that it was a week after we wrapped in 2006."

Fans who have kept tabs on Muniz over the years might have some skepticism about the actor's recollections of the "Malcolm" days; much has made aboutthe actor allegedly suffering memory loss from brain injuries. He has since clarified that he's fuzzy on the details because he was working nonstop "in that time frame," booking roles in 2000's "My Dog Skip," 2002's "Big Fat Liar" and the "Agent Cody Banks" movies.

"I equate it to if I asked you about going to high school and I was like, 'What did you do in February of your sophomore year?' You'd be like, 'I don't know,' " Muniz explains. "But you'd remember highs, lows, stuff like that. And I have a lot of that, obviously, with the show."

Advertisement

The "Life's Still Unfair" team, which includes original series creator Linwood Boomer, sat the cast down in the impeccable replication of Malcolm's family's living room and jogged their memories by showing clips from throughout the seven seasons and more than 150 episodes.

Lois (Jane Kaczmarek, left) will do whatever it takes, even smashing the TV, to get the boys (Frankie Muniz, Erik Per Sullivan and Justin Berfield) to confess in “The Red Dress” episode of "Malcolm in the Middle" Season 1.

"I was surprised by how [many] of us were like, 'I don't remember that at all,'" Muniz says. Just being back in this room – where he and Berfield passed a football between doorways and a drunk Malcolm threw up into a turkey – "brought back so many memories of the seven years I spent in that house."

The memories are almost entirely from filming, as Muniz admits he hasn't watched the series in its entirety: "I watched Season 1 and just got so busy."

Frankie Muniz's son can be 'a mix' of all the 'Malcolm in the Middle' children

Muniz's son, Mauz, similarly has not seen "Malcolm in the Middle." That might be in part why the 5-year-old primarily considers his father's profession to be race car driver (Muniz drives in the NASCAR Craftsman Truck Series). But for "Life's Still Unfair," in which Mauz has a brief cameo, Muniz's son had the opportunity to see his dad doing a job that doesn't require so much protective gear.

Playing a parent onscreen for the first time, Muniz found some parallels between his character and his real life as a father of one. Just like the reboot's Malcolm, a single father who frets over daughter Leah (Keeley Karsten) and is intent on being the exact opposite of his parents Lois and Hal, Muniz is "constantly questioning [if I'm] doing it right."

Frankie Muniz, Justin Berfield, Christopher Masterson and Emy Coligado return in "Malcolm in the Middle: Life's Still Unfair" on Hulu.

"I want my son to just like me. We have a good relationship, but I want him to not be spoiled and I want him to listen," Muniz says. "He's pretty good, 90% of the time."

"Angel" Mauz is usually "perfect, really unbelievably smart, very articulate, [and has a] fun little personality," Muniz gushes. But that other 10%? Mauz can be a "mix of all the 'Malcolm' kids. Just crazy."

"Maybe he needs to go to military school like Francis," Muniz jokes.

<p style=Reality TV drama "The Hills," starring Whitney Port, Heidi Montag, Audrina Patridge and Lauren Conrad, first aired on MTV in May 2006. The show followed Conrad to Los Angeles after her graduation from "Laguna Beach."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

'Hannah Montana,' 'Dexter' and more favorite shows that aired 20 years ago

Reality TV drama "The Hills," starring Whitney Port, Heidi Montag, Audrina Patridge and Lauren Conrad, first aired on MTV in May 2006. The show followed Conrad to Los Angeles after her graduation from "Laguna Beach."

But he tries to not dwell on whether he's the perfect dad because "Malcolm and his family, sure, they struggled, but they really cared about each other."

"Malcolm turned out all right in the end, so the parenting, I guess, worked," Muniz says.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Frankie Muniz found Bryan Cranston 'so old' in 'Malcolm in the Middle'

Frankie Muniz can't believe he – and Malcolm – are 40 in show's reboot

BURBANK, CA − It’s not just you.Frankie Munizalso can’t believe he’s 40. "I ride a Peloton, and now it says 'Frankie Muni...
Designer drug stronger than fentanyl sparks an 'alarming' overdose trend

A designer drug described as 10 times more potent thanfentanylis causing an uptick in U.S. overdoses, according to health officials in multiple states.

USA TODAY

Known as cychlorphine, the synthetic opioid is relatively new, having first been identified overseas in 2024. A spate of overdose deaths in East Tennessee has been attributed to the drug, with the Knox County Regional Forensic Centersaying in a notice on Monday, April 6, that it has been linked to at least 41 deaths across 11 counties between July 2025 and February 2026.

"What’s especially troubling is that cychlorphine may have been circulating far longer than we know," Chris Thomas, chief administrative officer and director of the Knox County Regional Forensic Center, said in a statement. "And I’ve said this before – we don’t know if it’s contained to a limited supply or one bad batch, or if it’s representative of a longer-term shift in the drug supply. That’s what is really concerning."

"It has never been more dangerous to take street-level drugs than right now," he added.

Fentanyl from a pill press at Reuters' office in New York City on June 24, 2024.

Health officials in other states, includingFlorida,Kentucky,OklahomaandSouth Carolina, have also issued warnings amid the apparent proliferation of the drug, as toxicology data shows that roughly two dozen states have confirmed its presence locally.

The Center for Forensic Science Research and Education (CFSRE) likewiseissued a nationwide alertin January, saying cychlorphine is behind an "alarming" uptick in deaths both nationwide and globally.

Here's what ot know about N-Propionitrile chlorphine, also known as cychlorphine.

Sept. 15, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a boat allegedly trafficking drugs in the Caribbean Sea. Sept. 15, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a boat allegedly trafficking drugs in the Caribbean Sea. Oct. 3, 2025: The U.S. military killed four people in a strike on a vessel that was allegedly transporting substantial amounts of narcotics, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 3. Oct. 3, 2025: The U.S. military killed four people in a strike on a vessel that was allegedly transporting substantial amounts of narcotics, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 3. Oct. 17, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a vessel alleged to be smuggling drugs for Ejército de Liberación Nacional (ELN), Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 17. Oct. 17, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a vessel alleged to be smuggling drugs for Ejército de Liberación Nacional (ELN), Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 17. Oct. 21, 2025: The U.S. military killed two people in a strike on a vessel allegedly smuggling illicit narcotics in the Eastern Pacific, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 22. Oct. 21, 2025: The U.S. military killed two people in a strike on a vessel allegedly smuggling illicit narcotics in the Eastern Pacific, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 22. Oct. 22, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a vessel allegedly smuggling illicit narcotics in the Eastern Pacific, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 22. Oct. 22, 2025: The U.S. military killed three people in a strike on a vessel allegedly smuggling illicit narcotics in the Eastern Pacific, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 22. Oct. 24, 2025: The U.S. military killed six people in a strike on a boat in the Caribbean, alleged to be carrying narcotics, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 24. Oct. 24, 2025: The U.S. military killed six people in a strike on a boat in the Caribbean, alleged to be carrying narcotics, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced on Oct. 24.

US military conducts deadly boat strikes against alleged drug traffickers

What is cychlorphine (N-Propionitrile Chlorphine)?

N-Propionitrile chlorphine, also known as cychlorphine, is a synthetic or chemically manufactured opioid that global health officials began tracking in mid-2024. Like fentanyl, another highly potent synthetic opioid, it is used recreationally on its own or mixed with other drugs like heroin.

Advertisement

It was firstdocumented by CFSREas a designer drug, or a substance that is engineered to mimic the effects of an established drug (like morphine, for example) while technically skirting legal regulations and established drug tests. It is part of an emergent subclass of synthetic opioids often called “orphines" or "orphine analogues," which are often distributed in powder or tablet form. Early reports have traced the drug's origins to China, according to the Knox County Regional Forensic Center, from which it likely spread to Europe and beyond.

Like other synthetic opioids, which are aleading cause of overdose death in the U.S., its potency means it can rapidly overwhelm the respiratory system in even very small doses, quickly rendering a person unconscious or unable to breathe.

Experts are still learning about cychlorphine and its effects. Its novelty means it is harder to detect – most toxicology tests administered by hospitals, first responders and law enforcement are not equipped to catch it,according to the Addiction Center. Its strength means that the drug used to reverse opioid overdoses, naloxone, more commonly known as Narcan, may not be as effective and may require several doses to work.

The CFSRE said in its January public alert that the U.S., Canada, Europe and Oceania have seen an "alarming increase in deaths" linked to synthetic opioids; cychlorphine, specifically, has been detected in a notably increased number of fatal drug overdoses since mid-2025.

Early data from testing on samples showed the drug to be approximately 10 times more potent than fentanyl, said CFSRE, though how accurately this translates to real-world use is still unknown.

Where in the US has cychlorphine been found?

Health officials are still developing tools and techniques to track the prevalence of newer orphines and other synthetic drugs. In January, the CFSRE had confirmed the presence of cychlorphine in New York, California, Illinois, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Tennessee and Texas.

Local and state governments inFlorida,Kentucky,OklahomaandSouth Carolinahave issued warnings alerting the public to the known presence of cychlorphine in the region.

The drug has likewise been detected in recent toxicology reports from Arkansas, Indiana, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, New Hampshire, Ohio and West Virginia,according to Aegis Labs data.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:What is cychlorphine? Potent drug behind 'alarming' overdose deaths

Designer drug stronger than fentanyl sparks an 'alarming' overdose trend

A designer drug described as 10 times more potent thanfentanylis causing an uptick in U.S. overdoses, according to health officials in ...
What to know about the automatic system to register young men for the military draft

Young men in the U.S. will be automatically registered into the military draft pool by this December through a measure signed into law last December, formalizing a practice already conducted in much of the country.

ABC News

The measure was included in the annual National Defense Authorization Act, the must-pass legislation that sets the Pentagon’s budget and policy agenda, and has no relation to the current war with Iran.

The change follows years of debate on Capitol Hill over how, or whether, to reform draft registration, a system the U.S. hasn’t executed since 1973, when it shifted to an all-volunteer force.

Lawmakers have been split, with some pushing to expand registration to include women, while others have argued the system should be scrapped entirely.

STOCK PHOTO/Adobe - PHOTO: Saluting American soldiers.

For a century, men between 18 and 25 years old, including most immigrants, have been required to register for the draft manually, typically through a government website or at the local department of motor vehicles, with uneven compliance rates, federal data shows.

Advertisement

Army extends maximum recruitment age to 42, allowing older recruits to join

The Selective Service System, which governs the draft pool, has an annual budget of $30 million, spending much of that on outreach and other advertising campaigns.

Automatic registration is already conducted, in some form, in 46 states and territories, such as when a man gets a driver’s license, according to data from the Selective Service System.

Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, a Pennsylvania Democrat who introduced the change alongside Rep. Don Bacon, a Nebraska Republican, said in 2024 that automatic registration “saves taxpayers significant money and makes it easier for these men to follow the law and register with the Selective Service.”

The Selective Service System estimates the new platform will cost roughly $6 million to build the automated system.

What to know about the automatic system to register young men for the military draft

Young men in the U.S. will be automatically registered into the military draft pool by this December through a measure signed into law ...
Jayson Tatum scores 24 for Celtics in 1st game at Madison Square Garden since Achilles injury but Knicks win, 112-106

In his first game at Madison Square Garden sincesuffering a torn Achillesin last year’s NBA playoffs, Jayson Tatum scored 24 points in the Boston Celtics’ 112-106 loss over the New York Knicks on Thursday.

Yahoo Sports

The Knicks held a 72-59 lead at the 6:56 mark of the third quarter before Boston surged ahead with a 24-9 run to take a two-point lead into the fourth. The Celtics went ahead 89-83 on consecutive 3-pointers by Baylor Scheierman and Tatum before the Knicks tied the score at 92-92 after scoring seven unanswered points.

From there, Boston took the lead three times and the Knicks tied the score before finally going ahead 99-98 on a Karl-Anthony Towns 3-pointer. The lead changed four more times before New York went up 109-104 on a free throw from Jalen Brunson and 3-pointer by Josh Hart. After Nikola Vučević rebounded in a missed 3 by Peyton Pritchard, Hart followed up with the dagger from long-range for the final margin.

Advertisement

Hart finished with a game-high 26 points, followed by 25 and 10 assists from Brunson. Towns added 16 points and 12 rebounds for the Knicks, who improved their record to 52-28 to keep hold onthe third seed in the Eastern Conference.

The Celtics played without leading scorer Jaylen Brown, whosat out with tendinitisin his left Achilles tendon with the team playing the first of back-to-back games. Boston hosts the New Orleans Pelicans (26-54) at TD Garden on Friday.

This story will be updated with more information.

Jayson Tatum scores 24 for Celtics in 1st game at Madison Square Garden since Achilles injury but Knicks win, 112-106

In his first game at Madison Square Garden sincesuffering a torn Achillesin last year’s NBA playoffs, Jayson Tatum scored 24 points in ...
As ties warm, Vietnam's top leader scheduled to visit China

BEIJING, April 9 (Reuters) - Vietnam's top leader To Lam will visit China next week, Chinese state news agency ‌Xinhua said on Thursday, as ties between the two nations ‌continue to warm.

Reuters

Reuters first reported on the Vietnamese state president and party chief's planned visit ​to its much larger and economically significant neighbour from April 14 to 17.

In what would be his first overseas trip since he was elected state president, Lam will be meeting his counterpart, President Xi Jinping, according ‌to sources.

China and Vietnam have ⁠been growing closer, with cooperation breakthroughs in multiple sensitive fields, including rail links, special economic zones in Vietnam ⁠set close to China and having Chinese tech in Vietnam's 5G network.

Advertisement

With trade and investment the backbone of bilateral ties, officials have said both countries ​could ​sign new agreements on telecom infrastructures ​and other sectors during the ‌upcoming visit.

China is the Southeast Asian nation's largest trading partner, while Vietnam holds top spot in ASEAN as China's largest partner with deeply integrated supply chains.

Vietnam and China reaffirmed bilateral economic cooperation as recently as last month when Vietnam's Deputy Prime Minister Bui Thanh Son and China's ‌Foreign Minister Wang Yi met in Hanoi.

Lam's ​last visit to China was in August ​2024 during which Xi prepared ​a tea gathering at the Great Hall of the ‌People in Beijing. That was ​soon after Lam was ​appointed the general secretary of Vietnam's ruling Communist Party.

Still, historical sensitivities over maritime claims remain the most testy part of the ​neighbours' relations. Both communist ‌neighbours maintain differing views over boundaries in the South China ​Sea, which Vietnam calls East Sea.

(Reporting by Liz Lee; Editing ​by Jamie Freed and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

As ties warm, Vietnam's top leader scheduled to visit China

BEIJING, April 9 (Reuters) - Vietnam's top leader To Lam will visit China next week, Chinese state news agency ‌Xinhua said on Thur...
Savannah Guthrie returns to 'Today' anchor desk for first time since mother's disappearance

NEW YORK (AP) —Savannah Guthriewas back and almost all business at NBC's “Today” show anchor desk on Monday, marking a return for the first time in more than two months since her mother's disappearance. “Here we go, ready or not," Guthrie said as the show opened. “Let’s do the news.”

Associated Press This image released by NBC shows co-host Savannah Guthrie, center, with colleagues, from left, Jenna Bush Hager, Carson Daly, and Craig Melvin during the This image released by NBC shows co-host Savannah Guthrie, left, embracing a fan outside of Rockefeller Center during the This image released by NBC shows co-host Savannah Guthrie, right, walking with colleague Jenna Bush Hager outside of Rockefeller Center during the FILE - Savannah Guthrie visits the Today show at Rockefeller Plaza in New York on Thursday, March 5, 2026. (Photo by Charles Sykes/Invision/AP, File) FILE - A banner with notes from hundreds of well-wishers for Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of Religious cards left by a well-wisher are seen outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of

Savannah-Guthrie-Mom-Missing

After running through a series of news headlines, Guthrie said that “we are so glad that you started our week with us and it's good to be home.” Her co-host, Craig Melvin said that “it's good to have you back at home.”

She greeted longtime co-worker Al Roker with “Good morning, Sunshine,” when he noted that it was good to see her on the set. At the end of the first 25-minute portion of the show, she offered Melvin a high-five.

Emotions got the better of her before the last half hour, when she joined her colleagues in front of fans gathered at the show's Rockefeller Center studio. She fought back tears when one fan was seen with a “Welcome home Savannah” shirt, and clutched colleague Jenna Bush Hager's arm and thanked people for their support.

Guthrie says it's hard to go forward not knowing what happened

Guthrie, one of morning television's most recognizable faces, has been a “Today” host since 2012. She has acknowledged that she's a changed person and that it'shard to go forwardnot knowing what happened to Nancy Guthrie, who authorities believe was taken against her will from her Arizona home.

Despitean intense searchinvolving thousands of federal and local officers and volunteers, there has been no sign of the 84-year-old mother of three since she was reported missing Feb. 1.

The “Today” show has followed the story closely for the past two months, but it wasn't mentioned during the first hour of her return on Monday. Bringing things back to normal was clearly intentional: Her return wasn't referenced during interviews with NBC's Gabe Gutierrez at the White House and military analyst Steve Warren on the show's set.

Hoda Kotb, the former anchor who had filled in for Guthrie for much of the past two months and interviewed her former colleague, wasn't on set Monday.

“Today” has seen a ratings boost over the past two months and has even eclipsed ABC's “Good Morning America” as the leader in the morning show ratings. The shows aren't the profit generators they once were for the networks, but the rivalry is still intense.

“Today” averaged 3.1 million viewers for the first three months of the year, up nearly 9% in an era most broadcast programs lose viewers. It's hard to tell how much the Guthrie story had to do with that: NBC also aired the Super Bowl and the Winter Olympics in February, and both events tend to help a morning show's ratings.

“Good Morning America” averaged 2.93 million viewers, up 2% over 2025 while “CBS Mornings” plunged 17% to 1.76 million, according to the Nielsen company.

As part of avideo messagereleased by her New York church on Easter Sunday, Guthrie spoke about feeling “moments of deep disappointment with God, the feeling of utter abandonment.” But she said the resurrection is not fully celebrated “if we do not acknowledge the feelings of loss, pain, and yes, death.”

Advertisement

In announcing her return to NBC's flagship morning show, Guthrie said she was uncertain whether she'll feel like she still belongs.

“It’s hard to imagine doing it because it’s such a place of joy and lightness,” she said just over a week ago on “Today” duringher first interviewsince the disappearance. “I can’t come back and try to be something that I’m not. But I can’t not come back because it’s my family.”

She didn't anticipate faking her way through the show, which is normally light-hearted with a mix of serious, breaking news.

Guthrie's mom had made occasional visits to show's set

There had been a great deal of speculation about whether she would return.

“I want to smile, and when I do it will be real,” she told Hoda Kotb, who came back to “Today” to fill in while Guthrie focused on the search. “Being there is joyful, and when it's not I'll say so.”

Nancy Guthrie made occasional appearances on “Today” over the years, once taking part in a cooking demonstration and surprising her daughter on the set. When Savannah Guthrie returned to her hometown of Tucson in 2025 for a segment recorded for the show, the two visited one of their favorite restaurants and talked about their love of Arizona.

The Guthrie family has offered a $1 million reward for information leading to the recovery of their mother.

Authorities believe Nancy Guthrie waskidnapped, abducted or otherwise takenagainst her will after finding blood near the doorstep of her home in the foothills outside Tucson. The FBI laterreleased surveillance videosshowing a masked man on the porch that night. Volunteers and search teamsscoured the nearby desert terrainfilled with cactuses, bushes and boulders in the first weeks after she vanished.

But attention has faded from an investigation that was declared to be a top priority for the FBI and local authorities. Investigators have not released new evidence in weeks and say the number of tips has slowed. The FBI and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department both said late last week that they had no updates.

Early on, some media outlets reported receiving ransom messages tied to the case. Guthrie said she and her siblings responded to two that they believed were real and offered to pay.

Guthrie said her celebrity status might be the reason her mother was taken, but said that possibility was “too much to bear.”

Associated Press correspondents John Seewer in Toledo, Ohio, and Sarah Brumfield in Washington contributed to this report.

Savannah Guthrie returns to 'Today' anchor desk for first time since mother's disappearance

NEW YORK (AP) —Savannah Guthriewas back and almost all business at NBC's “Today” show anchor desk on Monday, marking a return for t...
“Survivor 50” recap: Coach has a haiku-making meltdown

Coach is looking sadSitting there in his hammockThe Tide Walker stews

Entertainment Weekly Benjamin 'Coach' Wade on 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

What up, y’all? I'm not sure if you know this about me, but I’m into haiku now! From what I can tell, they’re kinda like sonnets, only less pretentious. Or, wait… is itmorepretentious? Honestly. I’m not sure. But they are nowtotallymy jam! Check it out!

The Eilish idolCallout at Tribal CouncilWhere art thou Zac Brown?

I could do this all day — just kinda sitting in a corner of theEntertainment Weeklyoffice amusing myself with clever bon mots constructed in a 5-7-5 syllable structure while people look over and worry about my mental health. LET THEM WORRY! Little do they know that these are the kinds of exercises one needs to put oneself through to have even the slimmest chances of becoming one of the Four Horsemen. It’s a very exclusive club! Only four slots available!

My membership hopes were raised whenColby was voted outofSurvivor 50, opening up a coveted spot. But then,without any vetting whatsoever,Coachgoes and inductsRizointo the club to fill his spot. What the hell?!? That dude already has Tres Leches, for crying out loud! He also already has the longest nickname in reality TV history. Now that young punk gets to be in the Four Horsemen as well? HE DOESN’T EVENWANTTO BE IN THE FOUR HORSEMEN! Does this mean he also inherits the Oakbound Warrior nickname? Because this dude already has too many nicknames as it is. Man, this is some serious bulls---.

Jeff Probst and the cast of 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

This clear slight has me pissed off, which puts me in good company onSurvivor 50this week, with scores of contestants getting annoyed at each other. I wrote in thelatestSurvivor 50Mystery Boxabout how and why returning player seasons can lead to more raw emotions than a typical newbie edition, and we definitely saw that play out.

It all started withTiffanyon night 13 directly after Tribal Council. She was acting calm, cool, and collected to others, but letting it fly in her confessionals — dubbingJonathana “lying skank” and proclaiming in between random screams that “I feel like I have fire under my skin right now. I am so furious.”

And she was promising the thing we all asSurvivorviewers want to see more than anything else. More Zac Brown? NO! Revenge. “I am about to dance all over theirSurvivorgraves the minute I get the opportunity,” Tiff promised, which leads me to ask: Can someone please get this woman some dancing shoes?

It set the tone for what would turn out to be a delicious episode ofSurvivor, and that has nothing to do with the Chinese takeoutEmily Flippenwas shoving into her mouth faster than she could even chew. So with that, let’s recap everything that went down on episode 7 ofSurvivor 50before I start getting distracted by haiku again. (By the way, did you know the plural of haiku is…haiku? See, getting distracted already.)

Jonathan Young and Dee Valladares on 'Survivor 50'Credit: CBS

Tensions rise

Apparently, large men being sad on hammocks is a thing onSurvivor 50and needs to be immediately added to every Bingo card. Watching Coach crying gently on a hammock while saying “That’s not how I playSurvivor” to no one in particular may be my favorite moment of 2026. It was also a hilarious punctuation mark to a weird scene in which it at first looked likeDeeand Coach were going to have at it, but then Jonathan stepped in and was all,“I want a piece of this!” and started back in onthe Charlie voteas the two traded verbal blows.

“I’m shocked at Jonathan,” Dee told us. “At the same time, I’m not shocked because I always knew he didn’t have a brain.” Damn, she just went all scarecrow on his ass. Brutal. Meanwhile, half of the tribe is just sitting there taking it all in. I have never been more jealous ofRick Devensthan when he got to just walk up, take a seat, and enjoy the show. And then, it was time for the after-show!

The after-show consisted of Coach addressing the masses and proclaiming, “If anybody out here wants to run around and tell lies and play that kind of way inSurvivor 50, they ain’t winning the game. That’s a fact! Vote me out tonight, there will be hell to pay.”

Check out the Dragon Slayer threatening to poison the jury against anyone who takes him out of the game! It should be noted at this time that while I think poisoning the jury because you are suffering from an acute case of BJS (Bitter Jury Syndrome) is super lame, I have no issue whatsoever withthreateningto do that within the game if you think if will help you in some manner, because that lever is a tool at your disposal to pull should you choose to do so. I don’t think itdoesactually help and just gets people even madder at you so I would not advise it, but I don’t have any moral outrage over the move. Whether it falls under the “honor and integrity” banner is another question altogether.

For some reason, all this anger then inspired Coach to start composing haiku, using phrases like “Nobody tells the truth like Coach” and “War has been declared.” Not everyone was a fan, including…

Emily Flippen on 'Survivor 50'Credit: CBS

The curious case of Emily Flippen

Emily told Rick that Coach’s attitude was pissing her off, but Emily has made her own habit of pissing off her own allies this season. It is straight up comical how many times Emily Flippen has completely undermined people she has been playing alongside by being incapable of keeping any information to herself. They seriously should just start inserting a laugh track underneath any scene where she starts spilling state secrets and then her ally has to go and attempt to clean up the mess she created.

And this time, the damage Emily did may have been the straw that broke Dee’s back in the game. While the honor and integrity gang certainly had their sights set on Dee already, there was also a very powerful trio inCirie,Ozzy, and Rizo in the middle that could have played a pivotal role in potentially swaying the vote. But after Emily informed Rizo that Dee had told him about his idol, that was over. Her season 45 castmate was cooked. And by friendly fire, no less. (WHOOPS!) Emily Flippen continues to be a major person of interest this season.

Emily Flippen and Christian Hubicki on 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

Shouldering the pain

Anyone who actually watchedSnake in the Grasscould tell you two things. 1) Bobby Bones is noJeff Probst. And 2)Stephenie LaGrossa Kendrickis aterribleliar. The absolute worst. Go ask her. She’ll tell you herself. So the entire Journey this week was worth it just to watch her have to concoct an entire ruse about what happened when the boat took her away.

What really happened was Steph had to essentially hold her arm up in the air for an hour to win a Steal-a-Vote. But if her arm dropped, she lost her vote. But there was someSurvivorhistory at play here, because back on day 1 ofHeroes vs. Villains, Stephenie famously dislocated her shoulder. I was a few feet away when it happened and you can check out the raw footage I shot of the injury below.

Because of that injury, there was no way Steph was going to be able to hold that arm up for an hour, so she now had to do the contest with her left (non-dominant) hand. Not fun! Should I write a haiku about it? No? Fine. Your loss!

Anyway, we got a little Stephenie montage showing her radical transformation from super-fit twentysomething to… well… super-fit fortysomething. And by the time the montage was done, the woman had gone and won the Steal-a-Vote. But what would she tell her tribe?

Advertisement

Steph’s phony baloney story was that you got to keep your vote if you made it to 30 minutes, and got an advantage if you made it to an hour. While I will say that on its surface that is a decent enough fib that was not on anAubrylevel of unbelievability, but in modernSurvivor,if you come back with your vote and no advantage, nobody is likely to believewhateverstory you put out there. Especially not Cirie, who knows Stephenie too well after doing three different reality competition shows with her.

And the well is where Cirie pressed her on it a bit, and Steph came clean. “I promise you I will not say a word,” Cirie assured her before doing her best Emily Flippen impersonation and immediately going and telling Rizo.

Wow, in between Coach inducting Rizo into the Four Horseman, and Rizo’s polyamorous threesome with Cirie and Ozzy, it is amazing how well the R-I-Z-G-O-D has done in this game, especially seeing ashow wary the entire cast was of himbefore the season began. Cirie was straight-up making fun of the guy, and Coach was insistent on getting rid of the season 49ers, and here they both are wanting to work with the guy. Impressive. Most impressive.

Stephenie LaGrossa Kendrick on 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

Rock and roll

Look at this! A two-for-one! We get both a team (for reward) and an individual (for immunity) challenge all wrapped up in one. The first obstacle course team portion was navigating a massive boulder through a massive obstacle course. The only thing I didn’t like about it was the fact that the boulders never collided on the crisscross course, which is the whole reason you put a crisscross course in there in the first place, but it was still an exciting back-and-forth affair with another puzzle showdown betweenChristian(with Emily) andChrissy(with Coach).

Actuary Hofbeck dominated Professor Hubicki the last time they squared off. This one appeared to be… a draw. Yes, Christain’s teal team very narrowly scored the Chinese take-out victory, but they also started their puzzle first, so no true bragging rights on this one.

But it meant Christian, Ozzy, Rick, Emily, Dee, Stephenie, andJoewould all compete for individual immunity in theSurvivorboom mic challenge. I kinda felt bad for Steph having to hold her arms upyet again, but my joy at watching reality TV contestants suffering for our entertainment overrides that type of legitimate concern any and every day of the week.

It eventually came down to Ozzy versus Joe, with the grizzled veteran taking down Club Condo for his eighth individual immunity win over his entireSurvivorcareer — one less than record holderBoston Rob. Now he, Rizo, and Cirie can all get kinky with the necklace.

Emily Flippen, Joe Hunter, and Christian Hubicki on 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

Coach loses it

With Dee not winning immunity, her fate seemed pretty sealed, but damn if Coach didn’t do the best he could to shift the target… to himself. First, he was annoyed that everyone wanted to put their split votes on Dee instead of Tiff so they didn’t have to piss off someone still in the game. And then, he blew a gasket once word got back to Christian about the split vote. His most unhinged moment came when he started trashing Christian to Rick — the guy universally recognized as Christian’s biggest ally.

It got so bad that Rizo had to go calm Coach down, while telling us after the fact that it was “embarrassing” that a guy who had never even been on the island three months ago had to teach Coach how to playSurvivor. “We slay dragons at Trbal,” he told the legend. “We don’t slay dragons at camp.”

Meanwhile, Rick and Emily were done taking marching orders from the Tide Walker, even theorizing about turning the vote against him. But it didn’t feel like it had any real momentum behind it.

Dee’s wild scrambling at Tribal confirmed that she was in major trouble. Meanwhile, Coach was liberally paraphrasing from Ursula K. Le Guin'sA Wizard of Earthsea…as one does:“Only in silence, the word. Only in darkness, the light. Only in dishonesty, truth.”

Benjamin 'Coach' Wade of 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

Apparently, that is less egregious than comparingSurvivorto a fire house, because lord did that take on a life of its own. And then you also had Jonathan giving us the true full-circle episode moment of once again calling out Dee for lying in the game.  That is something — and this is news to me after covering this show for 26 years — you are apparently not allowed to do onSurvivor.  SHAME ON YOU, DEE VALLADARES! You were even a cohost on the now mysteriously absentOn Firepodcast! You should know there is no crying in baseball and there is no lying inSurvivor.

This was easily the most entertaining Trbal of the season, and that was even before we got to Tiffany telling off Coach while voting with: “You’re a self-righteous hypocrite and I hope I get to write your name every single day until you go home.”

And then there was the whole wacky Aubry situation. Wanting to save her Boomerang idol for a rainy day, she chose not to play it at the previous Tribal, and then explained — and I swear to theSurvivorgods I am not making this up — that she simplyforgotto play it. A four-timeSurvivorplayer forgot to play an idol? That’s more hilarious thanGenevieve’s reaction toJeff Probst’s rapping.

The interesting thing aboutSurvivor 50is you have these returning all-stars and they are making big mistakes, just like newbies would. The difference, however, is they recognize them as unforced errors. We’ve seen players like Aubry, Dee, Coach, and Emily all insert feet in mouth (don’t getQstarted on feet!) but immediately realize their mistakes.G.I. Joealways taught me that knowing is half the battle, so I guess that’s a step in the right direction. As far as the other half of the battle, I believe that can be found in a haiku somewhere.

Aubry Bracco on 'Survivor 50'Credit: CBS

Dee-lightful

It was indeed Dee’s time to go in the biggest (in terms of number of players) Tribal Council ever, and it was in Dee-cisive fashion. While technically the votes were split to protect against an idol, it was essentially a unanimous vote (except for Dee ally Tiffany). This is the exact sort of big group post-merge vote-dumping situation Iwrote about last weekin explaining why the show likes to break the players up into smaller groups where more unpredictable votes can shake things up.

So after Dee’s Shot in the Dark scroll read Not Safe, that was pretty much the end of it. Dee was definitely mentioned by the cast as one of the biggest threats before the game, so being the last winner around and making it all the way to the jury has to feel like a win. (A win without a $1 million check attached, however.)

Dee Valladares on 'Survivor 50'Credit: Robert Voets/CBS

Dee will be the first to say (as she did in this episode) that she played far from a perfect game. Her decision to make so many enemies by taking out Charlie was probably not prudent at that time, but I knew fromtalking to her out therethat she was determined to play a fast, aggressive game, and that’s exactly what she did once she finally got a chance to go to Tribal Council. That’s what I want to see from mySurvivorplayers, and that’s what I saw from Dee this season.

What kind of Dee will we see during my exit interview with the season 45 champ? You’ll have to tune in to see. Also make sure to vote in ourextremely important pollregarding Probst's best baseball hat color, and see what hue theSurvivor 50the cast chose. While you’re off doing that, I’ll start getting to work on next week’s scoop of the crispy, and I promise that one will be haiku-free.

Want to be kept up with all things Survivor? Dig deep and sign up for Entertainment Weekly'sfree Survivor Weekly newsletterto have all the latest news, interviews, and commentary sent right to your inbox.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Survivor 50” recap: Coach has a haiku-making meltdown

Coach is looking sadSitting there in his hammockThe Tide Walker stews What up, y’all? I'm not sure if you know this about me,...

 

COSMO NEWS © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com