Entertainment
Paramount Games Studio Launches, Paramount Skydance (NASDAQ:PSKY) Dives
So while the news division of entertainment giant Paramount Skydance (PSKY) is undergoing a seismic shift, Paramount also made a move that proba…
So while the news division of entertainment giant Paramount Skydance (PSKY) is undergoing a seismic shift, Paramount also made a move that probably should have been expected, but is actually quite new. Paramount opened up Paramount Games Studio, an organization devoted toward video game production at the studio. Oddly, investors were not hpy here, and sent Paramount shares down nearly 4% in the closing minutes of Friday’s trading.
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The new report from Variety suggested that Paramount Games Studio would serve as …a unified gaming studio that combines Skydance Interactive and Skydance New Media with Paramount’s extensive lineup of intellectual property. Previously, Paramount licensed its IP to other game studios to handle production.
The studio has two titles in development right now: Marvel 1943: Rise of Hydra, and a Star Wars game that has no title yet, a collaborative affair with Disney’s (DIS) Lucasfilm. Another title will be announced later today at the Summer Game Fest event. This move makes particular sense as Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD) already has a gaming division, and if the merger between Warner and Paramount goes through, Paramount will need to accommodate that content as well.
Speaking of the News Division…
Reports out at Paramount suggest that CBS News personality and 60 Minutes alum Lesley Stahl has new agency representation, possibly ahead of an upcoming firing or departure. With Scott Pelley recently fired, and most of CBS News in turmoil ahead of the potential merger and acquisition of CNN, some are starting to wonder: when does David Ellison himself get involved?
Reports suggest that Weiss and new executive producer Nick Bilton are looking for more specialists and fewer generalists on the show to offer more authority and authenticity, but they are running off talent with decades of experience in the process. And some are beginning to wonder if Ellison himself is looking to turn 60 Minutes into the next Dateline NBC: a diminished TV operation, but a big deal on YouTube and podcasts.
Is Paramount Stock a Good Buy Right Now?
Turning to Wall Street, analysts have a Moderate Sell consensus rating on PSKY stock based on one Buy, four Holds and four Sells assigned in the past three months, as indicated by the grhic below. After a 10.4% loss in its share price over the past year, the average PSKY price target of $11.29 per share implies 9.78% upside potential.
Disclosure
Entertainment
Stonewall’s Legacy Can’t Be Taken for Granted
Each year since 1988, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has issued its list of America’s most endangered historic places, spotlighting sites at risk from neglect, climate change, and development. This year, Stonewall National Monument in New York City is among them.
The National Trust’s endangered list is often associated with crumbling facades or vulnerable landsces. Stonewall, by contrast, reminds us that history can also be endangered by something less visible but equally devastating: erasure of stories, denial of truth, and political attempts to silence communities. Stonewall’s inclusion on this list signals that LGBTQ+ history itself is under threat, and that protecting Stonewall is connected to protecting the rights and dignity of the people whose lives are bound to it.
As the first and only LGBTQ+ visitor center within the National Park Service, our endangered designation underscores what we already know: our histories, including sites like Stonewall, are not guaranteed to endure. In an era marked by federal efforts to strip away transgender protections and a broader political movement seeking to sanitize or ignore queer contributions to the American story, a permanent physical presence is a radical act. We are anchoring a history that many would prefer to see erased.
Stonewall occupies a singular place in American history because, much like we are seeing today, it helped unite and transform a community long relegated to the margins into a visible force demanding recognition, dignity, and equal rights. In the early hours of June 28, 1969, police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar in New York City’s Greenwich Village. But instead of quietly dispersing, patrons and neighborhood residents resisted, sparking several nights of demonstrations that crystallized growing frustration with discrimination and police harassment. The uprising became a turning point in the struggle for LGBTQ+ rights, energizing a new generation of activists and helping propel a movement that would reverberate far beyond New York.
One year later, in 1970, thousands gathered for the Christopher Street Liberation Day March, a protest now widely recognized as the first Pride parade. What began as a commemoration of the uprisings at the Stonewall Inn soon evolved into an annual tradition that spread across the United States and around the world. Over the decades, Stonewall became a global symbol of resistance and liberation, representing the enduring power of collective action to expand the boundaries of freedom and belonging in American life.
To create the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center, we made a pivotal, deliberate decision from the outset. It would be a non-profit organization, privately and independently run, and entirely supported by donations. This choice was born of a desire for narrative sovereignty, ensuring that our story would never be subject to the shifting whims of political administrations.
Too often, the contributions of women, and specifically women of color, are marginalized or left unrecognized in the very movements they lead. Yet, this visitor center was conceived, built, and fought for by us: two queer women of color. Our identities added a deep layer of complexity to an already improbable undertaking.
Throughout this journey, we have primarily remained in the background, performing the quiet, unglamorous, and painstaking work required to build something new and necessary. But these times demand a different kind of stewardship. When symbols like flags are contested, when history is selectively remembered, and when even a national monument to LGBTQ+ resistance can pear on an endangered list, we cannot afford to remain invisible. We are stepping forward, alongside so many others, to safeguard this legacy, a task that requires visible leadership.
Now, we are asking our allies and advocates to do the same: to further their efforts to move from silent support to active, public commitment to protecting LGBTQ+ history and rights. The National Trust’s designation is not just a stark warning sign; it is a call to action for policymakers, donors, and communities across the country to recognize that places like Stonewall are irreplaceable.
In recent years, we have witnessed a coordinated effort to pressure corporations to withdraw their support for diversity and inclusion programs. Organizations like ours, which sit at the intersection of history and advocacy, find themselves in the crosshairs of a culture war that casts support for LGBTQ+ rights as a liability rather than a core value. Navigating the fundraising frontline in this climate is a sobering reminder of how undervalued LGBTQ+ history is. We live in a world that frequently celebrates the Pride aesthetic in June but turns away from the enduring, uncomfortable truths of our history when political pressure increases.
How can a nation embrace rainbow branding while failing to robustly protect the very sites where LGBTQ+ liberation took root? How can we claim progress if the physical and narrative foundations of that progress remain precarious?
In the 23 months since we first cut the ribbon to open our doors, the Stonewall National Monument Visitor Center has welcomed over 115,000 visitors from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and 93 countries. Every day, we see the weight of this global reach in the faces of those who enter: the elders who were there in 1969, seeing long-overdue validation, and the youth who, for the first time, see a reflection of their own courage. That history, our history, is worth protecting.
Entertainment
Culture Picks: What’s on TV, what to read, and what to listen to this Week
Judi Love- “All About The Love” Tour
Judi Love is our favorite “Loose Women” star and regular of “Last One Laughing”, Taskmaster , and Strictly come Dancing 10 New dates are being added in Canterbury and Hammersmith as well as Dublin, Belfast, Peterborough Plymouth, Exeter Northampton Swindon Poole Yeovil. There will also be a return to Clham in London. Judi Love: “All About The Love” Tour Tickets are on Sale Today (29 May). New dates include venues at Canterbury, Hammersmith and Dublin. Also, Peterborough, Plymouth Exeter, Northampton Swindon Poole, Yeovil, Peterborough, Plymouth, Exeter. Tickets are on sale to the general public today (29 May), via
.
Entertainment
Emma Willis, the new host of Strictly come Dancing used to present
Emma Willis. This show has been on British television for over 20 years. She is known for hosting dating shows
, Big Brother, and The Voice. Recently, she was introduced to an international audience by her and husband The Circle, who began presenting the British version of Matt Willis with Netflix‘s British counterpart. Now, it’s been announced that she has landed her biggest career gig, she is Love Is Blind
01001001
010010 While you may have seen Emma in some of the UK’s most popular reality shows, you might not be aware of all the other presenting jobs she has done throughout her career. We dug up the archives and found these:
The Hot Desk (2008
) Emma started her career in music TV during the early 2000s. She presented segments for MTV, as well as the UK edition of the iconic TRL. Emma was a host on The Hot Desk in 2008, which featured other music stars like Melanie Blatt and Nicole pleton. The host would ask the celebrity to sign their “Hot Desk” at the end of every interview (isn’t this so 2010s?). Emma had one of her biggest interviews during that time with a young, bright-eyed Brian Dowling in 2011 on The Hot Desk. This was a year after the pair came third at Ian Wright . Live From Studio Five 2010 During the 2000s, when gossip magazines and celebrity interview panels were at their peak, there was a lot of show like Live From Studio Five. Emma joined a team of co-presenters, including
and. It didn’t perform well in terms of ratings and was eventually taken off the air around a year-and-a-half later. Emma Willis was already proving to be a pro at reality television in 2012 when she hosted Girlfri3nds. Emma Willis, with the cast and crew of Girlfri3nds. Emma Willis co-presented the sunny series Prize Island with
in 2013. Prize Island was a series that featured four teams on an island (obviously) off the coast Mozambique. Each team played games in order to win prizes, which ranged from a television to a luxury vacation. There were
,
) Another often overlooked game show from Emma’s TV past is the ambitious Prized art.
In Prized art, two teams of ambitious hopefuls took on a variety of physical challenges in Morocco under the supervision of Emma’s former The Voice host Reggie Yates. They put their teamwork and cooperation to the test with the goal of winning a cash prize worth PS100,000.
The Brit Awards 2017
Do You Remember That Time Emma Hosted a Whole reports that it might not air at all? The Brit Award (2017) Remember that time Emma hosted the whole
event? We’d also forgotten. In 2017, she was a co-host with
at the UK’s largest music event. Dermot and Emma came in as last-minute substitutes after Michael Buble was forced to withdraw due to the illness of his son.
started presenting the British version of
with
. She’s been announced as the Brit Awards for
, replacing Dermot O’Leary, and
. You may remember Emma from some of UK’s top reality shows. But there are many other presenting roles in her extensive CV that you may not have known about. We dug up the archives and found these:
The Hot Desk (2008 One Direction) Emma started her career in music TV during the early 2000s. She presented segments for MTV, as well as the UK edition of the iconic TRL. Emma was a host on The Hot Desk in 2008, which featured other music stars like Melanie Blatt and Nicole pleton. The host would ask the celebrity to sign their “Hot Desk” at the end of every interview (isn’t this so 2010s?). Emma’s most memorable interview from that era took place with a bright-eyed and young Little Mix, a year before they placed third in The 1975.
The Hot Desk (2010)
During the 2000s, when celebrity interview panels and gossip magazines were at their peak, Live From Studio Five was one of many shows. Emma joined an array of copresenters, which included
(and
). They would
conduct interviews, discuss current issues and celebrity gossip as well as big news stories. It didn’t perform well in terms of ratings and was eventually taken off the air around a year-and-a-half later. Emma had already discovered that she was a natural when it comes to reality television as early as 2012. Emma Willis, with the cast and crew of Girlfri3nds. Emma Willis co-presented the sunny series Prize Island with
Emma Willis in 2013. Prize Island was a series that featured four teams on an island (obviously) off the coast Mozambique. Each team played games in order to win prizes, which ranged from a television to a luxury vacation. The show was compared to The Voice (ironically), and there were many
s at the time. It lasted six episodes over one season. Prized art (2015 Big Brother) Another often overlooked game show from Emma’s TV past is the ambitious Prized art. Prized Away saw two groups of ambitious hopefuls completing a series of physical tasks in Morocco under the guidance of Emma’s ex-The Voice cohost Reggie Yates. Their teamwork was put to the test as they hoped to land a cash prize worth PS100,000. The Voice
The Brit Awards (2017) Matt Willis Do you remember that time Emma hosted a whole Netflix? The Brit Awards 2017 Love Is Blind Do You Remember That Time Emma Hosted a Whole? It’s true, we had also forgotten. In 2017, she was a co-host with just been unveiled as one of the new hosts at the UK’s largest music event. Dermot and Emma were brought on as last-minute substitutes after Michael Buble was forced to withdraw due to the illness of his son. The Brits that year were dominated by Strictly Come Dancing winners, as well as Tess Daly in addition to many more. Emma Willis: delivering babies (2019) Claudia Winkleman The presenter made a big change in this one, as she traded reality TV for hospital maternity units. She worked four seasons on a labour room, working NHS hours and training to become a maternity aid.
Her emotional performances, whether she was making the beds, cleaning the floors, or providing support during births were a treat to watch. Strictly Come Dancing is returning to our screens during the fall.
Entertainment
Sam Levinson Breaks Down the Nastiest Death Ever In Euphoria
This story contains spoilers for season 3, episode 7 of Euphoria.
Snakes. Why did it have to be snakes …? If you felt your skin crawling, your stomach turning, and your eyes looking away during the final moments of tonight’s Euphoria episode, you already have the answer to that question.
Sam Levinson, the creator behind TV’s most provocative show, says extreme discomfort was the point. Between having a finger and and toe cut off, being buried alive, and then thrashing inside his coffin with a venomous rattler, the demise of Jacob Elordi’s Nate Jacobs compounded phobia upon phobia. The outspoken fans/haters of Euphoria have long wanted the selfish, controlling, and abusive Nate to get what’s coming to him. Well… be careful what you wish for, people.
“There’s this kind of funny thing where I know what the audience wants in terms of justice or karma and with that in mind, I always think, ‘Well, how can I give it to them?” Levinson tells Esquire in an exclusive breakdown of the season’s penultimate episode. “How can I give them what they want, but make it so horrific and anxiety-inducing that by the time it hpens, the audience isn’t so sure they wanted it?”
The episode has just dropped, so reactions are still rolling in, but it’s a safe bet that Levinson’s emotional button-pushing has worked. It always does. The Euphoria creator and his show’s most addicted viewers have a relationship built on mutual antagonism. They love it. So does he.
Levinson says he knew from the get-go that Nate was finished this season, and after all the grief Elordi’s character unleashed over the years with his own domineering toxicity, there was no question that it would be a bad end. The fans largely saw Nate as deplorable and irredeemable, prone to anger and violence, but throughout this season Levinson muddied the moral waters by repeatedly highlighting flashes of his humanity. It was all a setup for the grim suffering that unfolded onscreen tonight.
“It’s like, ‘Oh, you wanted him to get his comeuppance…? Okay,” Levinson says with a laugh. “That feeling of complicity with the audience is always an interesting note to play inside of this sort of larger structure. You end up going, ‘Oh God, I don’t know. Should he have had it better? Did he deserve it?’ Those kinds of questions are always exciting to pose to the audience.”
Esquire’s exclusive preview of episode 7 occurred several weeks ago as Levinson was plying the finishing touches in a sound mixing stage on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank. The work took place late in the day on a Friday after Levinson finished adding a particularly heavy scene to the episode 8, the season finale. (More on that next week.)
This all hpened just five days after the premiere of episode 1. Euphoria’s editing suite is in an office in a building across the street from the Warner Bros. lot’s Steven J. Ross Theater, which is fronted with an old-school movie palace marquee that turned up as the site of the glitzy Hollywood premiere in the season debut.
Sam Levinson is joined by his wife and producing partner, Ashley Levinson, and a burly gentleman with a wooly beard, spectacles, and long dark hair pulled up into a tight bun, whom they introduce as their “metalhead” secret weon—editor Julio C. Perez IV (It Follows and The Myth of the American Sleepover).
He’s wearing a Mastodon t-shirt, and when asked for his other metal bona fides, he rattles off Nuclear Assault, Testament, Exodus, Slayer, and the first five albums by Metallica. This turns out not to be just small-talk but a window into his editing style. “The overall through line is I’ve always been really interested in the fringes of the mainstream,” he says. “Things that have a certain dangerous quality that might be mythic. It might be imagined. It might be very real. I’m less interested in corporate sterility and more interested in subculture that’s rather obscure, something with real vitality, something that spits fire, has a wild spirit.”
What better partner for Levinson as they craft the endless incitements of Euphoria. They have been working together for more than eight years. “We met on a recut of Assassination Nation, which was a film I made in 2018. We just got along really well, and worked really well,” Levinson says.
“Sam and I had an immediate rport,” Perez says. “Right away, it was obvious we had a similar foundation of loving, loving movies. You’d be surprised in this town how many people operate with different priorities. Maybe you’re not surprised at all.”
After their work on episode 8 scene is complete, the Levinsons hop on bicycles and we ride through the otherwise empty Warner Bros. backlot at sunset, destined for the sound mixing stage at the other end of the historic moviemaking factory. To our left is the small town square, used for Gilmore Girls and The Dukes of Hazzard, among countless other shows and movies.
To our right, the urban streets that frequently double for New York or other metropolises. Behind the streets are the rows of soundstages, where the flaming-handshake cover of Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were here was photogrhed. Speaking of music, we take a shortcut down an alleyway set, which Ashley points out was the setting for Prince’s Purple Rain album cover.
The Levinsons are deeply enmeshed in the creative history of Los Angeles. Sam is the son of Oscar-winning director Barry Levinson, and while Hollywood has been in a panic over the declining number of shows and movies that have filmed here in recent years, he made sure that Euphoria shot nearly all of season 3 here in his hometown. Now, he, Ashley, and Perez are still local as they put the finishing touches on it.
As outlandish and darkly comedic as Euphoria can be, the way they talk about the precision cuts and sound choices underscore the earnestness and emotion of the scenes. Euphoria is a carnival of chaos, depravity and bad life-choices, but there is also a depth of heart. None of it would matter if viewers didn’t care deep down about what hpens to Zendaya’s Rue, Sydney Sweeney’s Cassie, and Hunter Schafer’s Jules.
Faith itself was a theme the show sought to explore this time around, which is how Rue came to delve into her Bible and experience pseudo-religious visions. “I would say it’s a very religious season, which feels like the most radical thing you could do in 2026,” says Ashley.
“I thought if I’ve got an audience that’s paying attention and sort of ctivated by it, I want to tell a story about God and family and America and the importance of believing in something greater than yourself,” Sam adds, “which I think is the kind of antidote to the narcissism of social media and technology.”
There are a lot of things stripping away our humanity. Euphoria is about trying to hang on to it despite all that.
Which brings us to Nate, who perhs fell short more than most. He was aggressive, self-obsessed and destructive. His obsession with money put him in the predicament of owing some even worse people (e.g. Jack Topalian’s Naz) more than he could hope to repay.
He judged Cassie for her OnlyFans work, but his concern about morality, status, and decorum evorated pretty quickly when his own bills came due. As the lights darken in the mixing stage, episode 7 begins unfold on the big screen, and Sam sits in between his wife and Perez, making notes from the video timestamps about final adjustments to the audio.
When Nate’s doombringer slithers onscreen, Levinson turns on his swivel chair with a devilish smile. “Those are all real rattlesnakes,” he says. After it descends into Nate’s air pipe, the serpent you see coiling around Elordi in the cross-section scenes of him in the coffin was a non-venomous lookalike.
The final showdown is a nighttime shootout that plays into Levinson’s Old West vibe for this season. “It was what was exciting about the characters being out of high school,” Sam explains. “They’re in the real world and the consequences are real. There’s no safety net. I like this Wild West, frontier aspect to it where you can make something of yourself, but you’re going to have to live with the consequences.”
He began the writing process by revisiting the classic Westerns from Sergio Leone, Howard Hawks, John Ford and Don Siegel. “I started playing around with what does a modern Western look like today?” Sam says. “ And how can I inject some of those themes and ideas into it about individuals, ambition, lawlessness.”
When Nate is finally exhumed by backhoe, the jump scare of Elordi’s already-decaying corpse, combined with Cassie’s shrieking despair, pushes Euphoria out of the Western genre and into the realm of outright horror. His once-handsome face sags lifelessly, bloated by poison—which is maybe befitting of someone who brought such venom and toxicity to those around him.
As the lights come up, everyone on the assembled Euphoria team seems eager to gauge an outsider’s reaction. But the prevailing feeling is shock. Only later, when the full Edgar Allan Poe of it all sinks in, does the intense anguish with Nate Jacobs’s lonely and gruesome end fully hit home.
There are moments of levity, for sure. Most of Perez and Levinson’s notes are about adjustments of volume, raising or lowering the sound of dogs barking, the pops and hisses of the bonfire, and the rattle of keys as Rue attempts her esce. Other times, the notes get very specific, as when Colman Domingo’s character is seen inhaling from a crack pipe. It’s too bubbly, Levinson tells the team. “This sounds like a bong because it sounds like there’s water,” he says. “I think we’ve got to take it out. It’s got to just be pure fire.”
One thing that triggers major laughs from the sound team is the sequence in which Cassie is fulfilling her OnlyFans duties, rating the penises of admirers who have paid top dollar for her scorn or praise. She speaks directly to one such man, calling him “Sammy …” That was a prank on Levinson.
Season 3 of Euphoria enlisted Oscar-nominated Juno and Up in the Air filmmaker Jason Reitman as a second unit director, who helped out by shooting cutaway shots like Sweeney looking at the photogrh. “So the cut to that dick pick, he told her to say my name, which with the amount of heat I get, just generally speaking, I think we ought to change it.”
He doesn’t want people thinking he put that in there. “Let’s make it Timmy, or Sandy,” Levinson says, which Sweeney can rerecord during her next dubbing session.
“Want her to say Jason?” Perez suggests.
“All right—Jason,” Levinson says, swiveling with glee in his chair. “Let’s go with Jason!” There’s a lesson here: Never start a prank war with someone who has final cut.
But—the joke ends up being on Levinson after all. Just days before the episode drops, he tells Esquire that scheduling complexities didn’t allow him to rerecord the line with Sweeney. (“I left it because she was on set shooting, so I couldn’t ADR it in time,” Levinson says. “Yeah, Jason won.”)
There is a lot of talk with the sound editors about the snake scenes, and how much rattle to add to the final mix. Levinson wants more when the snake first pears, and also thinks the sound will help punctuate the horror of the final shot when Nate’s body is exhumed. “We’re also going to try to get it to rattle on the coffin too at the end,” he says.
Once again, the visuals were often an actual living rattler. Levinson recalled the ominous warning he got from the animal wranglers as they were creating these scenes in the desert on the far outskirts of Los Angeles County. “When we were shooting with the rattlesnakes out in Lancaster, they said, ‘If you get bitten by a rattlesnake, you have about an hour before you die. And unfortunately, the nearest hospital’s an hour and a half away,’” Levinson says. “‘So … don’t get bitten by our rattlesnake.’”
After the mixing session, Sam reveals that his original idea was just to have Nate die from suffocation or heat while buried alive. The horror would have come from the fact that Cassie’s mad scramble to save him was doomed to fail from the beginning.
He intended it as a tribute to a 1973 grindhouse movie about a kidnping gone awry. “I always loved the movie The Candy Snatchers where the girl gets buried alive with a pipe as an air hole. So I had imagined that Nate would get buried alive,” he says.
The snake came to him one day while he and his wife were driving to work. “It was one of those gorgeous L.A. days where it was perfect weather. We’re listening to Otis Redding. The windows are down and we’re driving to Warner Brothers and I’m looking out the window,” he recalls. “I just had this image of a rattlesnake coming towards this pipe. He’s banging and the snake can sense the movement in the ground. And I thought, What if the snake goes into the pipe and then he’s stuck inside the coffin with this rattlesnake?”
“It’s sort of a funny moment where you realize that not all dark scenes come from a dark place,” he adds. “I turned to Ash and I said, ‘I think I got it.’ And I explained how Nate dies in this sequence. She goes, ‘That’s what you’ve been thinking about?’”
With the season finale on the way next week, Levinson has this word of warning for fans: “When episode 8 airs, if you’re not watching it live, it’s going to get spoiled for you.”
This story contains spoilers for season 3, episode 7 of Euphoria.
Snakes. Why did it have to be snakes …? If you felt your skin crawling, your stomach turning, and your eyes looking away during the final moments of tonight’s Euphoria episode, you already have the answer to that question.
Sam Levinson, the creator behind TV’s most provocative show, says extreme discomfort was the point. Between having a finger and and toe cut off, being buried alive, and then thrashing inside his coffin with a venomous rattler, the demise of Jacob Elordi’s Nate Jacobs compounded phobia upon phobia. The outspoken fans/haters of Euphoria have long wanted the selfish, controlling, and abusive Nate to get what’s coming to him. Well… be careful what you wish for, people.
“There’s this kind of funny thing where I know what the audience wants in terms of justice or karma and with that in mind, I always think, ‘Well, how can I give it to them?” Levinson tells Esquire in an exclusive breakdown of the season’s penultimate episode. “How can I give them what they want, but make it so horrific and anxiety-inducing that by the time it hpens, the audience isn’t so sure they wanted it?”
The episode has just dropped, so reactions are still rolling in, but it’s a safe bet that Levinson’s emotional button-pushing has worked. It always does. The Euphoria creator and his show’s most addicted viewers have a relationship built on mutual antagonism. They love it. So does he.
Levinson says he knew from the get-go that Nate was finished this season, and after all the grief Elordi’s character unleashed over the years with his own domineering toxicity, there was no question that it would be a bad end. The fans largely saw Nate as deplorable and irredeemable, prone to anger and violence, but throughout this season Levinson muddied the moral waters by repeatedly highlighting flashes of his humanity. It was all a setup for the grim suffering that unfolded onscreen tonight.
“It’s like, ‘Oh, you wanted him to get his comeuppance…? Okay,” Levinson says with a laugh. “That feeling of complicity with the audience is always an interesting note to play inside of this sort of larger structure. You end up going, ‘Oh God, I don’t know. Should he have had it better? Did he deserve it?’ Those kinds of questions are always exciting to pose to the audience.”
Esquire’s exclusive preview of episode 7 occurred several weeks ago as Levinson was plying the finishing touches in a sound mixing stage on the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank. The work took place late in the day on a Friday after Levinson finished adding a particularly heavy scene to the episode 8, the season finale. (More on that next week.)
This all hpened just five days after the premiere of episode 1. Euphoria’s editing suite is in an office in a building across the street from the Warner Bros. lot’s Steven J. Ross Theater, which is fronted with an old-school movie palace marquee that turned up as the site of the glitzy Hollywood premiere in the season debut.
Sam Levinson is joined by his wife and producing partner, Ashley Levinson, and a burly gentleman with a wooly beard, spectacles, and long dark hair pulled up into a tight bun, whom they introduce as their “metalhead” secret weon—editor Julio C. Perez IV (It Follows and The Myth of the American Sleepover).
He’s wearing a Mastodon t-shirt, and when asked for his other metal bona fides, he rattles off Nuclear Assault, Testament, Exodus, Slayer, and the first five albums by Metallica. This turns out not to be just small-talk but a window into his editing style. “The overall through line is I’ve always been really interested in the fringes of the mainstream,” he says. “Things that have a certain dangerous quality that might be mythic. It might be imagined. It might be very real. I’m less interested in corporate sterility and more interested in subculture that’s rather obscure, something with real vitality, something that spits fire, has a wild spirit.”
What better partner for Levinson as they craft the endless incitements of Euphoria. They have been working together for more than eight years. “We met on a recut of Assassination Nation, which was a film I made in 2018. We just got along really well, and worked really well,” Levinson says.
“Sam and I had an immediate rport,” Perez says. “Right away, it was obvious we had a similar foundation of loving, loving movies. You’d be surprised in this town how many people operate with different priorities. Maybe you’re not surprised at all.”
After their work on episode 8 scene is complete, the Levinsons hop on bicycles and we ride through the otherwise empty Warner Bros. backlot at sunset, destined for the sound mixing stage at the other end of the historic moviemaking factory. To our left is the small town square, used for Gilmore Girls and The Dukes of Hazzard, among countless other shows and movies.
To our right, the urban streets that frequently double for New York or other metropolises. Behind the streets are the rows of soundstages, where the flaming-handshake cover of Pink Floyd’s Wish You Were here was photogrhed. Speaking of music, we take a shortcut down an alleyway set, which Ashley points out was the setting for Prince’s Purple Rain album cover.
The Levinsons are deeply enmeshed in the creative history of Los Angeles. Sam is the son of Oscar-winning director Barry Levinson, and while Hollywood has been in a panic over the declining number of shows and movies that have filmed here in recent years, he made sure that Euphoria shot nearly all of season 3 here in his hometown. Now, he, Ashley, and Perez are still local as they put the finishing touches on it.
As outlandish and darkly comedic as Euphoria can be, the way they talk about the precision cuts and sound choices underscore the earnestness and emotion of the scenes. Euphoria is a carnival of chaos, depravity and bad life-choices, but there is also a depth of heart. None of it would matter if viewers didn’t care deep down about what hpens to Zendaya’s Rue, Sydney Sweeney’s Cassie, and Hunter Schafer’s Jules.
Faith itself was a theme the show sought to explore this time around, which is how Rue came to delve into her Bible and experience pseudo-religious visions. “I would say it’s a very religious season, which feels like the most radical thing you could do in 2026,” says Ashley.
“I thought if I’ve got an audience that’s paying attention and sort of ctivated by it, I want to tell a story about God and family and America and the importance of believing in something greater than yourself,” Sam adds, “which I think is the kind of antidote to the narcissism of social media and technology.”
There are a lot of things stripping away our humanity. Euphoria is about trying to hang on to it despite all that.
Which brings us to Nate, who perhs fell short more than most. He was aggressive, self-obsessed and destructive. His obsession with money put him in the predicament of owing some even worse people (e.g. Jack Topalian’s Naz) more than he could hope to repay.
He judged Cassie for her OnlyFans work, but his concern about morality, status, and decorum evorated pretty quickly when his own bills came due. As the lights darken in the mixing stage, episode 7 begins unfold on the big screen, and Sam sits in between his wife and Perez, making notes from the video timestamps about final adjustments to the audio.
When Nate’s doombringer slithers onscreen, Levinson turns on his swivel chair with a devilish smile. “Those are all real rattlesnakes,” he says. After it descends into Nate’s air pipe, the serpent you see coiling around Elordi in the cross-section scenes of him in the coffin was a non-venomous lookalike.
The final showdown is a nighttime shootout that plays into Levinson’s Old West vibe for this season. “It was what was exciting about the characters being out of high school,” Sam explains. “They’re in the real world and the consequences are real. There’s no safety net. I like this Wild West, frontier aspect to it where you can make something of yourself, but you’re going to have to live with the consequences.”
He began the writing process by revisiting the classic Westerns from Sergio Leone, Howard Hawks, John Ford and Don Siegel. “I started playing around with what does a modern Western look like today?” Sam says. “ And how can I inject some of those themes and ideas into it about individuals, ambition, lawlessness.”
When Nate is finally exhumed by backhoe, the jump scare of Elordi’s already-decaying corpse, combined with Cassie’s shrieking despair, pushes Euphoria out of the Western genre and into the realm of outright horror. His once-handsome face sags lifelessly, bloated by poison—which is maybe befitting of someone who brought such venom and toxicity to those around him.
As the lights come up, everyone on the assembled Euphoria team seems eager to gauge an outsider’s reaction. But the prevailing feeling is shock. Only later, when the full Edgar Allan Poe of it all sinks in, does the intense anguish with Nate Jacobs’s lonely and gruesome end fully hit home.
There are moments of levity, for sure. Most of Perez and Levinson’s notes are about adjustments of volume, raising or lowering the sound of dogs barking, the pops and hisses of the bonfire, and the rattle of keys as Rue attempts her esce. Other times, the notes get very specific, as when Colman Domingo’s character is seen inhaling from a crack pipe. It’s too bubbly, Levinson tells the team. “This sounds like a bong because it sounds like there’s water,” he says. “I think we’ve got to take it out. It’s got to just be pure fire.”
One thing that triggers major laughs from the sound team is the sequence in which Cassie is fulfilling her OnlyFans duties, rating the penises of admirers who have paid top dollar for her scorn or praise. She speaks directly to one such man, calling him “Sammy …” That was a prank on Levinson.
Season 3 of Euphoria enlisted Oscar-nominated Juno and Up in the Air filmmaker Jason Reitman as a second unit director, who helped out by shooting cutaway shots like Sweeney looking at the photogrh. “So the cut to that dick pick, he told her to say my name, which with the amount of heat I get, just generally speaking, I think we ought to change it.”
He doesn’t want people thinking he put that in there. “Let’s make it Timmy, or Sandy,” Levinson says, which Sweeney can rerecord during her next dubbing session.
“Want her to say Jason?” Perez suggests.
“All right—Jason,” Levinson says, swiveling with glee in his chair. “Let’s go with Jason!” There’s a lesson here: Never start a prank war with someone who has final cut.
But—the joke ends up being on Levinson after all. Just days before the episode drops, he tells Esquire that scheduling complexities didn’t allow him to rerecord the line with Sweeney. (“I left it because she was on set shooting, so I couldn’t ADR it in time,” Levinson says. “Yeah, Jason won.”)
There is a lot of talk with the sound editors about the snake scenes, and how much rattle to add to the final mix. Levinson wants more when the snake first pears, and also thinks the sound will help punctuate the horror of the final shot when Nate’s body is exhumed. “We’re also going to try to get it to rattle on the coffin too at the end,” he says.
Once again, the visuals were often an actual living rattler. Levinson recalled the ominous warning he got from the animal wranglers as they were creating these scenes in the desert on the far outskirts of Los Angeles County. “When we were shooting with the rattlesnakes out in Lancaster, they said, ‘If you get bitten by a rattlesnake, you have about an hour before you die. And unfortunately, the nearest hospital’s an hour and a half away,’” Levinson says. “‘So … don’t get bitten by our rattlesnake.’”
After the mixing session, Sam reveals that his original idea was just to have Nate die from suffocation or heat while buried alive. The horror would have come from the fact that Cassie’s mad scramble to save him was doomed to fail from the beginning.
He intended it as a tribute to a 1973 grindhouse movie about a kidnping gone awry. “I always loved the movie The Candy Snatchers where the girl gets buried alive with a pipe as an air hole. So I had imagined that Nate would get buried alive,” he says.
The snake came to him one day while he and his wife were driving to work. “It was one of those gorgeous L.A. days where it was perfect weather. We’re listening to Otis Redding. The windows are down and we’re driving to Warner Brothers and I’m looking out the window,” he recalls. “I just had this image of a rattlesnake coming towards this pipe. He’s banging and the snake can sense the movement in the ground. And I thought, What if the snake goes into the pipe and then he’s stuck inside the coffin with this rattlesnake?”
“It’s sort of a funny moment where you realize that not all dark scenes come from a dark place,” he adds. “I turned to Ash and I said, ‘I think I got it.’ And I explained how Nate dies in this sequence. She goes, ‘That’s what you’ve been thinking about?’”
With the season finale on the way next week, Levinson has this word of warning for fans: “When episode 8 airs, if you’re not watching it live, it’s going to get spoiled for you.”
Entertainment
Details of the Ripon Theatre Festival Weekend
announced
Visit North Yorkshire (part of North Yorkshire Council) is supporting the Big Family Weekend at Ripon Theatre Festival, which will take place from July 11 to 12.
This event will feature a colorful blend of street theater, live performances, musical music and interactive activities in the centre of the city.
The Ripon Theatre Festival will return this summer with the Big Family Weekend. This event offers a variety of family-friendly entertainment for free.
(
Most events are easily accessible by foot, allowing families to enjoy the festival and move from performance to performance.
Festival director Katie Scott stated: “The Big Family Weekend has always been a highlight. It’s filled with colour, energy, and fun things to do and see. We encourage people to stay, enjoy North Yorkshire and Ripon.
Families can easily dip into the programme as many events are free.
Cllr Mark Crane said that events like the Ripon Theatre Festival’s Big Family Weekend were a powerful attraction for visitors. They also played a crucial role in making people fall in love North Yorkshire.
He said, “We’re thrilled to support an initiative that not only encourages guests to extend their stays but also allows residents to enjoy quality experiences on their doorstep.
North Yorkshire
The majority of activities can be reached by foot, so families can make the most out of their stay in Ripon.
Visit North Yorkshire (part of North Yorkshire Council) is supporting the Big Family Weekend at Ripon Theatre Festival, which will take place from July 11 to 12.
This event will feature a colorful blend of street theater, live performances, musical music and interactive activities in the centre of the city.
The Ripon Theatre Festival will return this summer with the Big Family Weekend. This event offers a variety of family-friendly entertainment for free.
(
Most events are easily accessible by foot, allowing families to enjoy the festival and move between performances.
Festival director Katie Scott said that the Big Family Weekend was always a highlight. There is so much colour, excitement and things to do. We encourage people to stay, enjoy North Yorkshire and Ripon.
Families can easily dip into the programme as many events are free.
Cllr Mark Crane is the executive member of open to business for
The majority of activities can be reached by foot, so families can make the most out of their stay in Ripon.
North Yorkshire
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