“The Testaments ”stars and showrunner unpack surprise cameo on “Handmaid's Tale ”sequel premiere

This article contains spoilers forThe Testamentsseason 1, episodes 1-3.

Entertainment Weekly Elisabeth Moss in 'The Handmaid's Tale'Credit: Steve Wilkie/Disney

Gilead is back. But not for long, if June Osborne has anything to say about it.

Elisabeth Mossmakes a stunning surprise appearance at the end of the first episode ofThe Testaments, the sequel to the series that made her an Emmy winner,The Handmaid's Tale.

But that's not all — her inveterate freedom fighter June, who was nearly killed countless times plotting the demise of the series' central fascist republic, returnsagainfor a thrilling two-hander with newcomer Lucy Halliday in episode 3, both of which debuted on Hulu on Wednesday.

Before the premiere, Halliday, her co-stars, Chase Infiniti, Ann Dowd, and Mabel Li, as well asThe Handmaid's TaleandThe Testamentsshowrunner Bruce Miller, tookEntertainment Weeklyinside Moss' grand return to Gilead. That is, her return to theHandmaid's-verse, more hell-bent than ever on bringing Gilead down.

Elisabeth Moss on 'The Handmaid's Tale'Credit: George Kraychyk/Hulu

The long road toThe Testamentsbegan even before acclaimedHandmaid's Talesource author Margaret Atwood published her sequel novel of the same name in 2019. "She started to work on the book and I had these little hints," Miller recalls of which characters to keep alive... or not.

The Handmaid's Taleseries was only in its third season, and June (spoiler alert for a seven-year-old novel) barely appears in Atwood'sTestaments. Still, Miller cites "many factors involved" when ultimately getting hisTestamentsoff the ground. The first he names — "whether Elisabeth Moss is available that week or not, decides whether she's in the show or not."

The Testamentsswitches focus from the abject degradation of the handmaids stratum of Gilead's repressive society, where misogyny is codified as law, to the rarefied echelon of the Commanders' daughters. These children of privilege, led by Infiniti's Agnes MacKenzie, haven't a clue what June's ilk endured four years before, where the events ofThe Handmaid's Taleended inThe Testaments' timeline.

But still, "having the journey of June felt — it could not end until certain things fell into place," Miller says. "That character really felt like she needed, still needs — she had work to do."

The Testamentstells the tale of Agnes' entwined fate with Daisy (Halliday), a rebellious young woman from Toronto who is spirited into Gilead as an agent of subversion after her parents are killed by republic operatives in a targeted bombing.

June, of course, does the spiriting.

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Daisy's parents are eventually revealed as part of Mayday — the resistance network that June joins and ultimately leads significant portions of by the close of theHandmaid's Tale. June is briefly seen at the end of episode 1, lingering in Daisy's parents' shop before the bombing. After the fallout from their deaths in episode 3, she takes Daisy under her wing, making her essentially into a mini-June.

"Elisabeth Moss is the embodiment ofThe Handmaid's Tale. So getting to share the screen with her is a privilege. I was acutely aware of that," Halliday says with earnest conviction. "I think I just found myself watching her a lot. Like, I'd sit in silence between takes, just watching her, because she knows everything about this world.

Lucy Halliday on 'The Testaments'Credit: Disney

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"The more time I spent watching Elisabeth Moss, the more I realized just how important that feature of your work ethic actually is," she continues. "I'm realizing just how important it is as an actor to be fully prepared, and fully immersed in an environment and in a world and asking every question that you can ask. Because that's your duty in undertaking a role, to be as well-informed in portraying someone's life, and doing it to the best of your ability, and doing it justice."

Chase Infiniti and Lucy Halliday on 'The Testaments'Credit: Disney/Russ Martin

If anyone knows how Moss works on camera, it's Dowd. For six seasons she played the imperious Aunt Lydia, head of the Aunts, the only faction of women in Gilead with any power, and with no compunction against turning it on their fellow woman. And for six seasons June gave it right back to her.

June ultimately prevails, which Dowd describes in characteristically riveting fashion: "We see her at the end ofThe Handmaid's Taleon her knees in full remorse, begging for forgiveness. In other words, what June Osborne has done is crush her, and Lydia does not push back and say, 'No, uh-uh, you don't understand me.' She allows herself and the walls around her to crumble."

Ann Dowd with a statue of Aunt Lydia in 'The Testaments'Credit: Courtesy of Disney

Unfortunately for June, and honestly for Lydia too, they're built back up, fortified, and painted shades of blush and bashful inThe Testaments.Unlike Lydia, however, Dowd absolutely beams when discussing her old sparring partner.

"Oh God, that was such terrific news," the actress says, reflecting on learning of Moss' return. "I love Elisabeth. She has been the heart and soul ofThe Handmaid's Tale, and when she came to be our director, that was so extraordinary. She was hands-down remarkable. So Lizzie has a very special place in my heart, and always will. Any chance to reunite with her is a beautiful one."

Lydia's new whipping post, her second-in-command at Agnes and Daisy's elite girls' school, is Mabel Li's vicious Aunt Vidala. Li reflects that "as someone who was a fan ofThe Handmaid's Tale, when I watched [The Testaments] for the first time and Lizzie turns around, I was like, 'Oh, God.' Her presence is so palpable. It's so powerful. And we know what it means when she shows up somewhere — that resistance is happening."

"Yes," Dowd says, knowingly. "Mayday is there."

The Testamentspremieres new episodes Wednesdays on Hulu.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“The Testaments ”stars and showrunner unpack surprise cameo on “Handmaid's Tale ”sequel premiere

This article contains spoilers forThe Testamentsseason 1, episodes 1-3. Gilead is back. But not for long, if June Osborne has any...
Yahoo Finance

By Kavya Balaraman

Reuters

April 9 (Reuters) - Big Tech is reshaping the funding landscape for new nuclear technologies as it seeks to bolster electricity supply for power-hungry AI data centers, inking deals that offer nuclear companies both funding and a clearer path ‌to making money.

Several U.S. firms are developing new modular reactors that are smaller, more advanced and scalable than conventional nuclear plants. ‌But none have begun commercial electricity production yet as projects face challenges such as financing constraints and first-of-its-kind risks.

However, the race to secure adequate energy to power data centers amid ​the burgeoning demand from AI is giving a fresh boost to the sector.

In January, Meta agreed to help fund the development of two Terrapower units capable of providing as much as 690 MW of power. It has also signed a deal with Oklo to develop a 1.2 GW nuclear technology campus in Ohio.

Amazon, meanwhile, is working with X-energy to bring online more than 5 GW of small modular reactors in the U.S. by 2039, while Alphabet's ‌Google has signed an agreement with Kairos Power, aiming ⁠to bring online its first small modular reactor by 2030.

With these deals, tech giants introduce their top-rated corporate balance sheets into a sector historically reliant on the very regulated utility rate bases, said Shioly Dong, senior analyst ⁠at BMI, a unit of Fitch Solutions.

"They create the revenue certainty that commercial banks will require for the construction debt," she said.

INVESTORS INTERESTED, BUT CAUTIOUS

U.S. electricity use is poised to increase by 1% this year and 3% next year, according to the Energy Information Administration, driven largely by data center demand.

Against this backdrop, ​small ​modular reactors are emerging as more financeable nuclear alternatives because their modular scale and ​shorter construction timelines reduce upfront capital exposure, said Tim ‌Winter, portfolio manager of the Gabelli Utilities Fund (GABUX) at Gabelli Funds, adding that he is closely monitoring companies like NuScale and Oklo.

"The industry needs "someone" to take on the risks of cost overruns and delays. The degree the hyperscalers are willing to do that will determine just how much of a boost (these agreements give the sector)," he added.

AI demand is prompting customers to enter into long-term agreements that can support project development, said Oklo spokesperson Bonita Chester. The company's agreement with Meta, for instance, includes funding to help secure nuclear fuel and advance the first phase of its Ohio project.

The ‌prospect of long-term power buyers is also drawing the interest of some institutional investors ​to the sector, which has historically depended on government support and venture capital funding.

"We ​have started to hear that banks are getting excited and interested ​in deal-making in the space, which would be a big development – we haven't seen that yet," said Tess Carter, ‌associate director of the energy and climate practice at Rhodium ​Group.

However, the industry - described by analysts ​and experts as "advanced nuclear" - still faces many hurdles, including high construction and technology risks, due to which institutional investors, while interested, are not yet stepping into the sector at scale.

A looming skills shortage and competition with other industries - including data centers - for workers like ​electricians and pipefitters could become a chokepoint as ‌the industry looks to scale up, a recent report by the Nuclear Scaling Initiative noted.

"Commercialization and large-scale deployment still depend on ​execution across licensing, fuel supply, construction and financing, so demand alone is not the only factor in accelerating commercialization of ​advanced nuclear," said Oklo's Chester.

(Reporting by Kavya Balaraman; Editing by Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)

Yahoo Finance

By Kavya Balaraman META ...
Woman Goes Viral for Dramatic Video Demonstrating How Her Uggs ‘Saved My Life’ (Exclusive)

A woman's platform Uggs unexpectedly came to her aid when she stepped on a rusty screw

People Charlize Esguerra's Uggs.Credit: Charlize Shaye/Instagram (2)

NEED TO KNOW

  • Luckily, her Uggs contained a foam platform sole, which provides extra height — and extra protection

  • "I definitely won't be going barefoot in the malls after this," she jokes to PEOPLE

A woman is giving her Uggs a shoutout after the cozy shoes' platforms unexpectedly came to her aid.

Charlize Esguerra, a 23-year-old living in Canada, was just walking through a mall when she felt something underneath her tan platform Uggs. At first, she assumed it was just a piece of trash or gum that had gotten stuck, maybe even a tack — until she took a closer look and discovered a sizable screw.

Esguerra recently went viral on Instagram after sharing the surprising find. Hervideofirst depicted the screw, apparently lodged vertically into the shoe's sole, then captured the moments afterward in which her boyfriend worked to twist it out of the foam.

Luckily for Esguerra, her Uggs featured a thick layer of foam on the sole, giving about an inch of extra height — and extra protection, apparently — to the wearer.

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"I was very grateful to be wearing my platforms. If I hadn't been wearing such tall shoes, the screw would have gone through the shoe and likely into my foot," Esguerra tells PEOPLE. "It was also extremely rusty, which could have caused infections."

In the video, after he removed the entire screw, her boyfriend held it up to show how far the piece of metal had punctured the sole — and how close it had been to Esguerra's foot. He then held the same screw up to Esguerra's grandmother's boot, showing that the same incident on another shoe could have been more painful and dangerous.

After her video went viral, social media users in Esguerra's comments were divided. Some said she was being dramatic about the whole situation, while others defended Esguerra's genuine concerns.

"All I know is my day would have gone a lot differently if I had a rusty nail going through my foot instead of the bottom of my shoe," she tells PEOPLE.

"Stay safe, wear your platforms," she joked in her comments, and to PEOPLE, she quipped, "I definitely won't be going barefoot in the malls after this."

Read the original article onPeople

Woman Goes Viral for Dramatic Video Demonstrating How Her Uggs ‘Saved My Life’ (Exclusive)

A woman's platform Uggs unexpectedly came to her aid when she stepped on a rusty screw NEED TO KNOW Luckily, h...
Justin Bieber is headlining Coachella this month: How the pop star is forging a new path

Justin Bieber is back. For the first time in his nearly two-decade-long career, the artist is headlining Coachella, performing on Saturday, April 11, and Saturday, April 18.

Yahoo Entertainment

The singer, who previously appeared on the Indio, Calif., music festival stage as a guest artist alongsideacts like Tems, will reportedly receive amassive $10 million payday— a deal he supposedly negotiated directly with festival promoter Goldenvoice.

Bieber’s greatly anticipated Coachella performances come after a series of career highs — and lows. His 2025 two-part album,Swag, received four Grammy nominations and becamea criticaland commercial success. However, that same year, a series of interactions with paparazziraised alarms over Bieber’s health— audio from which Bieberincluded onSwag. (​​“It’s not clocking to you that I’m standing on business, is it? I’m a human being, you’re standing around my car, at the beach,” Bieber says on the appropriately titled track “Standing on Business,” featuring Druski.)

Swagcame after the “Yukon” artistended his 2022Justicetour early. He initially postponed dates, citing exhaustion and a desire to make health a priority. That same year, Bieber wasdiagnosed with Ramsay Hunt syndrome, which left his face partially paralyzed.

The singer alsoparted ways with longtime manager Scooter Braunin 2023 after Braun stepped back from artist management, further suggesting a crossroads in Bieber’s career. That same year, he sold the rights to his catalog of music released through 2021 to Hipgnosis Songs Capital,reportedly for more than $200 million.

But now Coachella could mark a major milestone for the pop star.The father of Jack Blues Bieberhas already been giving fans something to look forward to in performances leading up to the main event.

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Justin Bieber played a surprise show in Los Angeles ahead of Coachella

Before this month’s music festival, Bieber stepped out fora series of intimate, invite-only performancesin Los Angeles. In March, he performed at the Roxy Theatre, before hitting the stage at the Troubadour in April. At both shows, he sang songs exclusively offSwag, like "Daisies," "Yukon," "Go Baby" and "Devotion." Bieber shared videos of the performances onInstagram.

Typically, Coachella has performers sign a (somewhat controversial)“radius clause,”which prevents artists from performing in Southern California from the December before Coachella takes place through the May after the festival. The goal of the clause is to ensure that Coachella will benefit from the artist’s placement on its lineup. However, artists can occasionally get around the clause or adjust it in their contract.

Justin Bieber and Hailey Bieber at the 68th Grammy Awards.

While it’s unclear whether Bieber’s Los Angeles shows offer a preview of his entire Coachella setlist, it’s worth noting that becauseBieber sold the rights to his back catalog of musicto all songs he released through 2021, he will not receive performance royalties for older tracks.

Bieber recently performed at the Grammys

Bieber’s small shows in Los Angeles weren’t his only performance ahead of Coachella: He also took the Grammys stage in February, where he stripped down to just shorts and socks tosing hisSwagtrack “Yukon.”His wife, Hailey Bieber, was emotional in the audience as Bieber showed off a back tattoo that wassupposedly a portrait of the Rhode Beauty founder.

The awards show’s executive producer, Ben Winston, said that Bieber’s rehearsal for the set moved quickly.

“He came to the stage, he did it once,” the producer told the podcastRolling Stone Music Nowafter the show. “It was brilliant. We are seven minutes into his hour-and-a-half rehearsal. And he goes, ‘How’d it look to you? You happy with it?’ And I was like, ‘Oh, my God. It looked beautiful. I loved it.’ And he went, ‘OK, fantastic. See you Sunday!'”

Justin Bieber performs onstage during the 68th Grammy Awards.

The stripped-down number was the first time Bieber performed at the Grammys in four years. In 2022, he was joined by Daniel Caesar and Giveon fora performance of “Peaches,”off his 2021 album,Justice.

Justin Bieber is headlining Coachella this month: How the pop star is forging a new path

Justin Bieber is back. For the first time in his nearly two-decade-long career, the artist is headlining Coachella, performing on Satur...
Michael Patrick, Irish actor known for Shakespeare roles and “Game of Thrones”, dies at 35

Michael Patrick, an Irish actor known for his turns in several high-profile Shakespearean stage productions, as well as on series likeGame of ThronesandThis Town, died on April 7 at the age of 35.

Entertainment Weekly Actor Michael PatrickCredit: Michael Patrick/Instagram

Patrick's wife, Naomi Sheehan, announced his death in anemotional Instagram poston Wednesday.

"Last night, Mick sadly passed away in the Northern Ireland Hospice. He was diagnosed with Motor Neurone Disease 1st February 2023," Sheehan explained in the caption of a picture of the couple at their wedding. "He was admitted 10 days ago and was cared for by the incredible team there. He passed peacefully surrounded by family and friends.""Words can’t describe how broken-hearted we are," she wrote.

According to theCleveland Clinic, Motor Neurone Disease (MND) is a progressive neurological condition that slowly degrades the body's motor neurons, which enable normal muscle functions like moving, speaking, eating, and breathing. There is currently no cure for MND.

Sheehan continued in her post, "It’s been said more than once that Mick was an inspiration to everyone who was privileged enough to come into contact with him, not just in the past few years during his illness but in every day of his life. He lived a life as full as any human can live. Joy, abundance of spirit, infectious laughter. A titan of a ginger haired man."

Patrick's wife extended gratitude "for every person who supported us through the last few years," and left off with a quote that Patrick "loved" from renowned Irish poet Brendan Behan: "The most important things to do in the world are to get something to eat, something to drink and somebody to love you."

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A Cambridge graduate, Patrick appeared in several productions of Shakespeare at the esteemed Royal Shakespeare Company in London, includingMeasure for MeasureandThe Taming of the Shrew.

Michael Patrick on FacebookCredit: Michael Patrick/Facebook

Even after Patrick's MND diagnosis left him using a wheelchair, he continued turning in acclaimed stage performances, appearing in the title role in aproduction ofRichard IIIat Belfast's Lyric Theatre in 2024.

On TV, Patrick appeared as a wildling rioter in the sixth season ofGame of Thrones. He also starred in several BBC series, includingThis TownandBlue Lights.

An image shared on Michael Patrick's GoFundMeCredit: GoFundMe

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In hisfinal Instagram poston Feb. 6, Patrick commemorated three years since his diagnosis with MND.

"My neurologist gave us the news that I likely have about 1 year left," he wrote, but vowed that he still had "lots to live for and lots planned."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Michael Patrick, Irish actor known for Shakespeare roles and “Game of Thrones”, dies at 35

Michael Patrick, an Irish actor known for his turns in several high-profile Shakespearean stage productions, as well as on series likeG...

 

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