Tom Cruise Playfully Roasts a Moviegoer for Eating All Their Popcorn Before the Movie Starts: 'Go Get Some More'New Foto - Tom Cruise Playfully Roasts a Moviegoer for Eating All Their Popcorn Before the Movie Starts: 'Go Get Some More'

Jeff Spicer/Getty The internet's fascination with Tom Cruise and his favorite movie theater snack is increasing asMission: Impossible - The Final Reckoningreleases in theaters Cruise was seen pointing out that a fan at one of the movie's recent screenings had finished their bucket of popcorn before the movie began in a video shared to X on Tuesday, May 20 The actor also went viral for eating the popular movie snack in a unique way during a screening of the movie in London on May 11 Tom Cruiseis establishing himself as something of a popcorn aficionado asMission: Impossible - The Final Reckoninghits theaters. Cruise, who went viral recently forfrantically throwing popcorn into his mouthduring a screening ofMission: Impossibleat the BFI IMAX in London on May 11, was seen playfully calling out a fan at another screening for the franchise's eighth movie when he noticed the fan had finished his popcorn before the movie even started. The video, which was posted toXon Tuesday, May 20, shows Cruise entering a movie theater full of fans excited to see the newMission: Impossiblefrom a side stage. As Cruise entered the room and stepped on stage, he turned to a fan in the front row and said, "You ate all your popcorn already!" Tom Cruise calling out fan for finishing their popcorn before the movie starts lolpic.twitter.com/D4a52IEc5v — Todd Spence (@Todd_Spence)May 20, 2025 The fan in question, as well as the people sitting nearby, all seemed to get a kick out of Cruise's comment and were left smiling after the surprise interaction; Cruise even appeared to tell the fan to "go get some more" as he arrived on stage. Cruise's apparent love for popcorn has received significant attention online in recent days. Journalist Mike Ryanshared photos on X of Cruise eating popcornas he chatted with employees at AMC Lincoln Square in New York City on Sunday, May 18, as he attended the N.Y.C. premiere of the newMission: Impossiblefilm. On top of that, another journalist who attended that premiere, Rachel Leishman,wrote on Xthat Cruise told moviegoers that night, "I normally eat two big buckets myself during a movie." Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Cindy Ord/Getty Cruise himself reacted to the viral video of him chowing down on popcorn in London during an appearance on ESPN'sThe Pat McAfee Showwith Darius Butler on Wednesday, May 21. "Man, I'm eating popcorn! They know when I'm going to these movies that I'm watching, I'm eating popcorn," he said with a laugh, when host Butler asked him: "Are you actually eating popcorn or are you full of s--- right here, TC? I've got to know." Cruise has shared his love for popcorn before: at the end of a 2023 promotional video that he shared onXleading up to the premiere of that year'sDead Reckoning, the actor was seen eating popcorn from a large bucket. "I love my popcorn. Movies. Popcorn," he said. Mission: Impossible - The Final Reckoningreleases in theaters May 23. Read the original article onPeople

Tom Cruise Playfully Roasts a Moviegoer for Eating All Their Popcorn Before the Movie Starts: 'Go Get Some More'

Tom Cruise Playfully Roasts a Moviegoer for Eating All Their Popcorn Before the Movie Starts: 'Go Get Some More' Jeff Spicer/Getty T...
Book Review: Veteran journalist explores impact of private equity industry on US societyNew Foto - Book Review: Veteran journalist explores impact of private equity industry on US society

Megan Greenwell was the editor in chief ofDeadspinwhen it was acquired in 2019 by a Boston-based private equity firm. After three months of watching her new bosses make what seemed to her to be boneheaded decisions, she quit. Two months later, the staff followed her out the door. Within five years, the once popular online sports magazine known for its irreverent reporting had been sold to an obscure Maltese website. Stunned by what she witnessed, the veteran journalist was determined to get to the bottom of a little understood, lightly regulated industry that owns hospitals, day care centers, supermarket chains, newspapers, commercial and residential real estate, and much more. The big names areBlackstone,the Carlyle Group, Apollo Global Management, KKR andCerberus Capital Management.But what, she wondered, do they actually do? The result of her inquiry is "Bad Company: Private Equity and the Death of the American Dream," a deeply reported, briskly paced and highly disturbing account of how the private equity industry has "reshaped the American economy to serve its own interests, creating a new class of billionaires while stripping ordinary people of their livelihoods, their health care, their homes, and their sense of security." Instead of focusing on the macroeconomic level, she tells the story through four remarkable people whose lives were upended after private equity acquisitions. Liz was aToys R Usfloor supervisor when the storied retailer was acquired by Mitt Romney's company, Bain Capital, and other investors and eventually went under, laying off 33,000 employees without severance pay. Roger practiced medicine in rural Wyoming when private equity acquired his hospital and gutted services. Natalia was working for local Gannett newspapers at a time when the chain eliminated more than half its staff after years of private equity ownership. And Loren, an affordable housing organizer, escaped public housing only to end up in a mold- and rodent-infested apartment complex in northern Virginia owned by a private equity firm on the other side of the continent. Greenwell has written an essential guide to an industry that operates largely in the shadows, donates generously to Democrats and Republicans in Congress to keep it that way, and has contributed substantially to the hollowing out of the American dream. Despite her immersion in this predatory world, she remains surprisingly optimistic. "Every year," she writes, "a few more people like Liz, Roger, Natalia and Loren start fighting back." ___ AP book reviews:https://apnews.com/hub/book-reviews

Book Review: Veteran journalist explores impact of private equity industry on US society

Book Review: Veteran journalist explores impact of private equity industry on US society Megan Greenwell was the editor in chief ofDeadspinw...
Jensen Ackles' "Countdown" Role: Why Fans of His "Supernatural" Character Will Love It

ELIZABETH MORRIS/AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC Jensen Ackles plays LAPD detective Mark Meachum in the Prime Video seriesCountdown The actor thinksSupernaturalfans will like his new character for the same reasons they loved Dean Winchester "There's probably going to be some familiarity from [theSupernatural] fandom with this guy," he says Jensen Acklesis bringingSupernaturalfans some of what they loved about Dean Winchester to his new role. The actorplays LAPD detective Mark Meachum in the new Prime seriesCountdown,which marks his first lead role sinceSupernatural's conclusion in 2020. As Meachum, Ackles joins forces with a secret task force of undercover agents from across law enforcement to investigate a high-profile murder. In a recent interview, he teased that the character will feel "familiar" forSupernaturalfans. "There's probably going to be some familiarity from that fandom with this guy," Ackles, 47, toldEntertainment Weekly. "It's not like I'm going so opposite spectrum with this character. He's going to be a familiar taste, which is good. I like doing that." Warner Bros Tv/Kobal/Shutterstock He described hisCountdowncharacter as a "rogue L.A. detective" and a "wrong-side-of-the-tracks kind of guy" who "takes risks that most people wouldn't take." "I mean, I played Dean for 15 years. I loved playing that kind of a character. And I think this guy is in the vein of that, just with a completely different set of circumstances," he told the outlet. Ackles also said that he gets his "Tom Cruiseon" in the series, which is executive produced and written byChicago Firecreator Derek Haas. "This is some full-on action stuff," he explained. Ackles stars inCountdown, which premieres June 25, alongsideEric Dane, Jessica Camacho,Violett Beane, Elliot Knight andUli Latukefu. The series picks up following the murder of a Department of Homeland Security officer in broad daylight, which brings Ackles' Meachum into the folds of the task force. Per the official logline, "the hunt for the killer soon uncovers a plot far more sinister than anyone could have imagined, kicking off a race against time to save a city of millions." ELIZABETH MORRIS/AMAZON CONTENT SERVICES LLC Along with Ackles' new role that he promised will evoke what fans loved about Dean Winchester, fans also have aSupernaturalreunion to look forward to:Jared Padaleckiand Misha Collins will bothappear as guest stars in the upcoming fifth and final season ofThe Boysfrom creator Eric Kripke. Ackles, Padalecki, 42, and Collins, 50, all starred on Kripke's CW series, with Padalecki playing Ackles' brother, Sam Winchester, and Collins joining in season 4 as Castiel. While the upcoming reunion was announced in February, there have been no further details revealed about how Padalecki and Collins will fit into the superhero series, which Ackles joined in season 3 as Soldier Boy. Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. Countdownpremieres June 25 on Prime Video andSupernaturalcan be streamed on Netflix. Read the original article onPeople

Jensen Ackles' “Countdown” Role: Why Fans of His “Supernatural” Character Will Love It

Jensen Ackles' "Countdown" Role: Why Fans of His "Supernatural" Character Will Love It ELIZABETH MORRIS/AMAZON CONTE...
Taylor Swift No Longer Subpoenaed by Justin Baldoni in Surprise Reversal for Blake Lively Legal DisputeNew Foto - Taylor Swift No Longer Subpoenaed by Justin Baldoni in Surprise Reversal for Blake Lively Legal Dispute

Gotham/GC Images; Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty; John Nacion/Variety via Getty Blake Lively's rep confirmed May 22 that the subpoena sent to Taylor Swift was withdrawn by Justin Baldoni's legal team Swift's rep previously slammed the subpoena, claiming it was a ploy for "tabloid clickbait instead of focusing on the facts of the case" Lively and Baldoni's trial is currently scheduled for March 2026 Justin Baldonihas dropped the document subpoena that was issued toTaylor Swiftin his ongoing legal battle with the singer's friendBlake Lively. A spokesperson for Lively confirmed the news on Thursday, May 22, saying in a statement obtained by PEOPLE that they are "pleased" Baldoni's legal team has "withdrawn their harassing subpoenas to Taylor Swift and her law firm." "We supported the efforts of Taylor's team to quash these inappropriate subpoenas directed to her counsel, and we will continue to stand up for any third party who is unjustly harassed or threatened in the process," adds the spokesperson. "The Baldoni and Wayfarer team have tried to put Taylor Swift, a woman who has been an inspiration for tens of millions across the globe, at the center of this case since day one," Lively's rep claimed. "Exploiting Taylor Swift's celebrity was the original plan in Melissa Nathan's scenario planning document, and it continues to this day. Faced with having to justify themselves in federal court, they folded. At some point they will run out of distractions from the actual claims of sexual harassment and retaliation they are facing." Reps for Baldoni did not immediately respond to PEOPLE's requests for comment. A rep for Swift said "no comment" when reached byDeadline. Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty; Jeff Spicer/Getty; Gotham/WireImage The PEOPLE Appis now available in the Apple App Store! Download it now for the most binge-worthy celeb content, exclusive video clips, astrology updates and more! After the subpoena was issued earlier this month, aspokesperson for Swift released a statementemphasizing that Swift, 35, had no close connection to thefilming ofIt Ends With Us. "Taylor Swift never set foot on the set of this movie, she was not involved in any casting or creative decisions, she did not score the film, she never saw an edit or made any notes on the film, she did not even seeIt Ends With Usuntil weeks after its public release, and was traveling around the globe during 2023 and 2024 headlining the biggest tour in history," Swift's rep said. "The connection Taylor had to this film was permitting the use of one song, 'My Tears Ricochet.' Given that her involvement was licensing a song for the film, which 19 other artists also did, this document subpoena is designed to use Taylor Swift's name to draw public interest by creating tabloid clickbait instead of focusing on the facts of the case," the spokesperson continued. On May 14, Baldoni's attorneys also brought forth abombshell claim in a letterto the judge, alleging they had learned through an anonymous "source" that Lively had threatened to release private texts between her and Swift if the singer did not publicly support her. Lively's attorney, Mike Gottlieb, slammed the allegation as "categorically false." Judge Lewis J. Limangranted a motion on May 15 to strike the letter from the record, calling it "improper" and "irrelevant to any issue before this court." Lively, 37,first sued Baldoni, 41, who was her director and costar in the film, back in December, accusing him of sexual harassment, "disturbing" and "unprofessional" behavior on set, and a retaliatory smear campaign. Baldoni denied the allegations and filed a countersuit in January alleging defamation and extortion against Lively, her husband Ryan Reynolds and their publicity team. In his countersuit, Baldoni claimed Swift and Reynolds pressured him into accepting a rewrite by Lively and described an alleged meeting at Lively and Reynolds' penthouse during which the singer "began praising Lively's script. Baldoni understood the subtext: he needed to comply with Lively's direction." Baldoni's lawyers also included an alleged text exchange in which Lively compared herself to Khaleesi fromGame of Thronesand referred to her husband and Swift as her "dragons." The trial forLively v. Wayfarer Studios et al.,which will cover both lawsuits, isscheduledfor March 2026. Read the original article onPeople

Taylor Swift No Longer Subpoenaed by Justin Baldoni in Surprise Reversal for Blake Lively Legal Dispute

Taylor Swift No Longer Subpoenaed by Justin Baldoni in Surprise Reversal for Blake Lively Legal Dispute Gotham/GC Images; Matt Winkelmeyer/G...
Zachary Levi Strikes Back: The Trump-Voting 'Shazam!' Star on Feeling Hollywood's Wrath Over Vaccine Skepticism and the $100 Million Studio He's Building in AustinNew Foto - Zachary Levi Strikes Back: The Trump-Voting 'Shazam!' Star on Feeling Hollywood's Wrath Over Vaccine Skepticism and the $100 Million Studio He's Building in Austin

At the dawn of 2023,Zachary Leviwas riding high. Following a five-year run as the titular star of the NBC spy caper "Chuck," the actor positioned himself as a legit leading man in film thanks to the breakout success of "Shazam!" The DC tentpole was a low-risk proposition for Warner Bros. that delivered strong reviews and a $368 million global box office haul against a $90 million budget. But in the run-up to the sequel that year, Levi ignited a furor when he weighed in vaguely on the COVID vaccine debate. In response to a Twitter user who asked, "Do you agree or not that Pfizer is a real danger to the world?" Levi wrote, "Hardcore agree." More from Variety Paramount Could Violate Anti-Bribery Law if it Pays to Settle Trump's '60 Minutes' Lawsuit, Senators Claim Trump Heads to the Middle East, Falls in Love With Saudi Crown Prince in 'SNL' Cold Open: 'I Love the Arabs! Get Me to Allah's Country!' Trump Calls Bruce Springsteen 'Not a Talented Guy,' 'Dried Out Prune' and 'Dumb as a Rock,' as American Federation of Musicians Denounces Presidential Attacks on Springsteen, Taylor Swift It was the kind of vaccine skepticism that had already dinged the career prospects of fellow superhero starsLetitia WrightandEvangeline Lilly, but Levi doubled down. The following year, he endorsed presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. — a reviled figure in Hollywood for stoking fears about vaccine schedules and COVID boosters. When Kennedy ended his bid to be the Democratic Party nominee and urged his supporters to pivot toDonald Trump, Levi was dubious. After a heart-to-heart with Kennedy,he decided to throw his weight behind the manmost loathed by his showbiz brethren. For the TV actor who began to stumble as a movie star with such duds as last year's "Harold and the Purple Crayon," his timing for going rogue wasn't optimal. But the wildly ambitious Levi has even bigger plans than securing a spot on the A-list. He's about to embark on a risky plan to launch a Hollywood studio in Austin, Texas — incidentally, a mecca for entertainment industry foes of the jab likeJoe RoganandWoody Harrelson. While Rogan is untouchable as Spotify's golden goose podcaster and Harrelson gets a pass because he only strays from Hollywood orthodoxy on the vaccine issue, Levi is particularly vulnerable; his career was already cooling before he spoke out. And soon, he will have another mouth to feed. As we meet at a Brentwood café in March, Levi is days away from becoming a father for the first time. He has just finished prepping for a home birth at the Ventura, California, abode he shares with his partner, photographer Maggie Keating. "I know that there are people that would prefer not to work with me now because of my opinions. My team has let me know," he says as he nods in the direction of Beverly Hills, where his agents at UTA are headquartered. "They haven't given me any specific names, but there are people who prefer not to work with me at this time. And it's unfortunate. I knew that was probably going to happen. I didn't make this decision blindly or casually." Still, his MAHA-friendly turn could be well timed after all. Post-2024 election, the world is newly aware of the rising tide of oddly heterodox people. And if all breaks Levi's way, his plans for the future could resonate far beyond Texas. Either way, his status as persona non grata in Hollywood hardly matters to him. The town is bleeding amid runaway production, audience apathy and a widening gap between the 1% and the industry's rank and file. Given that bleak outlook, Levi says, in characteristically impolitic terms, that he'd rather opt out. "AI is about to be the nail in the coffin," he notes. "And we wonder why L.A. has become the Detroit of the entertainment industry." As Levi takes a sip from a glass of pink sludge and digs into a plate of organic eggs, the 44-year-old actor is in the thick of a $40 million capital raise to begin building a $100 million full-service campus in Austin for hisWyldwood Studios, a place that would certainly benefit if Trump follows through onhis promise to levy 100% tariffs on producers who shoot abroad. Likewise, the Texas Senate has proposed injecting half a billion dollars into film production thanks to efforts made by Harrelson,Matthew McConaugheyand Taylor Sheridan. (The bill was introduced by a Republican senator.) Levi envisions a complex with a pair of 20,000-square-foot soundstages, two amphitheaters, a boutique hotel, cabins and a farm-to-table restaurant. He bought the 75 acres along the banks of the Colorado River long before he ran afoul of Hollywood convention. "Charlie Chaplin and Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks and all those O.G.s knew it over 100 years ago. Hollywood was broken then, and we needed a better system," he says of the silent-era legends who founded United Artists to bypass oppressive studio contracts. "This industry is crumbling around us. In order for us to survive, we need to have a space for artists that will foster certified organic human-made content." Speaking with an intensity that belies the hippie-speak, Levi is still more of an Aaron Rodgers than a Roger Stone. In fact, the 6'3" Ventura native who loves to sing (remember his "I See the Light" duet with Mandy Moore in "Tangled"?) and talk about his "plant medicine journeys" isn't exactly a MAGA prototype. In 2020, he cast his ballot for Marianne Williamson in the Democratic presidential primary. In 2016, he voted for Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson and urged his social media followers tonotpull the lever for Trump because he didn't care "about anything but power." "I was not a fan of Trump's Trumpiness," he explains of the man he's never met. "I didn't like a lot of these personal things, the ways that he carries himself a lot of the time. I understand people's aversion. Do I think the whole package is somehow perfect? No. In fact, most people who voted for Donald Trump recognize a lot of the imperfections in all of it. Nobody was saying, 'This is the Orange Messiah.'" Levi has a different Messiah; he describes himself as a nondenominational Christian and devout at that. For those expecting Wyldwood to churn out conservative-minded fare like The Daily Wire is doing from Nashville, think again. Levi says that he is aiming for content closer to "The White Lotus" than "The Chosen." Aspects of his values fit neatly into Hollywood: When asked why he once spoke out against gay bullying at an Anti-Defamation League awards ceremony, he explains: "I have conservative views, and I have more liberal views. And one of my more liberal views is that particularly growing up in the arts, I've had gay friends my entire life, and I've never, even within my spirituality, seen it as this thing that we need to be fearful of or scorn or bully or anything. I love my gay friends, my gay community. Jesus wouldn't bully somebody online or otherwise because they're gay." Although he sees flaws in Trump and has certain left-coded leanings, Levi seems to have alienated a large swath of the industry. But he's open to the idea that he's wrong about all manner of things. "It's great hubris and folly to think that you are incapable of being bamboozled," he says. "We are all capable of being bamboozled. I could be getting bamboozled right now, putting my trust into leaders that I helped to get elected." For a self-described Hollywood pariah, Levi has plenty of backers. "He's just an incredibly passionate person. He's really smart. He has great instincts," says "Chuck" co-creator Josh Schwartz, who has remained friends with Levi since the series wrapped in 2012. "He's really entrepreneurial, in terms of looking towards the future. I'm not even entirely sure what's going on in Texas, but I know he's thinking about the future of the industry, especially in the face of these technological uncertainties." Director Guy Moshe was working with Levi on the upcoming thriller "Hotel Tehran" as his star faced growing criticism for his COVID vaccine views. "To me it was a very brave thing he was doing. And I said that to him when we were filming. And Isaw what he was going through. Obviously, you can imagine there's a lot of voices in your head when you're in Hollywood in his position. And for the record, I've taken the vaccine, as have mykids," Moshe recalls. "He is like a disrupter in a way. He's talking about a lot of things. He's talking about AI, health, politics, Hollywood. And he is challenging us to engage in a meaningful and thoughtful conversation about these subjects as opposed to having an automatic for or against response. We used to applaud this back in the day." Others feel conflicted about their relationship with Levi. Robert Duncan McNeill, who directed some 20 episodes of "Chuck," has maintained a close friendship with Levi even though their politics are seemingly at odds. McNeill, who dubs himself left-wing and sees Trump as a major threat to democracy, sometimes wrestles with the dichotomy. "I love Zach dearly, but I don't want in any way for our friendship and my feelings about him as a human to be an endorsement of his politics because I vehemently disagree with them," McNeill says. "But he's an unusual friend in my life. He sometimes can be more of a bleeding-heart liberal than I am, which shocks me. Zach walks the walk in a lot of ways better than me." Not all of his former colleagues feel warm and fuzzy about Levi — namely Laura Benanti, who starred opposite him in 2016 on Broadway in "She Loves Me." When their fellow cast member Gavin Creel died in September of a rare type of cancer at the age of 48, Levi suggested in an Instagram post that COVID vaccines could have played a role. That prompted Benanti to lash out. "I never liked him," she said of Levi in a podcast interview. And though his "Shazam! Fury of the Gods" co-starRachel Zeglerdidn't name Levi, she posted on Instagram after the election: "May Trump supporters … never know peace." That doesn't change his feelings about her. "I am one of those people, obviously," he says, referring to his own vote for Trump. "But I think that we have got to recognize that a lot of times people's decisions are predicated upon the bad information that they're being fed on a regular basis. So should I hate her because she's downstream of all of these voices that are telling her that he's Hitler and the people who vote for him are Nazis? She's a really talented girl, and I do think that she wants the best for the world deep down." After all, filming both "Shazam!" movies was joyful, and Levi is still talking about his "Shazamily." But achanging of the DC guard from Walter Hamada to James Gunn and Peter Safranmeant that the previous regime's titles were dumped into the marketplace in 2023 with little marketing. That slate included "The Flash," "Blue Beetle," "Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom" and the "Shazam!" sequel. They all underperformed. "Fury of the Gods" pulled in just $134 million off a $110 million budget. Whena reporter asked Gunn about Levi's Pfizer post, the DC chief responded: "Actors and filmmakers that I work with are going to say things that I agree with and things that I don't agree with. And that's going to happen. I don't have a list of things that somebody should say because of what I think. And you know, I can't be changing my plans all the time because an actor says something that I don't agree with." Still, Levi isn't bitter and blames the reporter for trying to use Gunn to publicly shame him. "I've known James for a really long time, and I believe that he was doing what he needed to do in order to answer those questions to the best of his ability," he says. "I didn't feel like he threw me under a bus or anything. I think that James was answering honestly, according to how he feels, as he should." As for whether or not he would come back for a third outing, Levi is emphatic: "Absolutely. I loved playing the role." But are there any plans? "No idea. It's all well above my pay grade," he insists. And though many of his closest industry friends hail from the "Chuck" days, playing the nerdy American Bond took its toll. "It was gnarly. It really broke me in a lot of ways physically and mentally and emotionally," he says. "We were averaging like 16 hours a day the first season. Sitcom is the best schedule in the world for an actor. I mean, you barely have to work. It's fantastic. But single-camera or episodic television is really the most grueling schedule in all of Hollywood as far as I'm concerned." The "Chuck" grind also prevented him from beginning his superhero career even earlier. Back in 2009, Kenneth Branagh cast Levi as the charismatic warrior Fandral in "Thor." Then NBC ordered six additional episodes of "Chuck," and his schedule would no longer permit the "Thor" production. (He wound up playing Fandral in the next two "Thor" outings.) In hindsight, he thinks NBC could have made the scheduling work. "Where there's a will, there's a way," he says. "I think that Hollywood is so capable when they really want to figure things out; when they see the value in someone, then they will." Ultimately, the "Chuck" positives — the ongoing (but sometimes complicated) friendships — outweighed the negatives. There's also the fandom, which Levi says has only grown since the series' initial window on broadcast TV as it finds new devotees on streaming. "There are fans who have followed me through my entire career," he says, "fans who show up for conventions and events and have been pleading for more 'Chuck,' more of a 'Chuck' series or a 'Chuck' movie, which I've been trying to make since before we even finished the series because I think it's worthy." In some ways, the "Chuck" experience helped crystallize his plans for Wyldwood. While promoting the series in the U.K., he caught a glimpse of a more sustainable work culture. "It was like where every couple hours we're stopping for a tea, and the day was manageable and there wasn't as much stress," he remembers. "And I was so conditioned to the American thing. I'm like, 'Tick-tock, guys, what are we doing?'" Things will be different at Wyldwood, he insists, with "8- to 10-hour days. And if we need to shoot two more weeks in order to make up those hours, then we'll shoot two more weeks and figure it out in the budget." Even before he became a father, he began to see the necessity of having a work-life balance. A few weeks after our café meeting, we reconnect over Zoom. Levi is now officially a father to Henson Ezra Levi Pugh. "Ten fingers and 10 toes and just really strong and aware right out of the gate. A dreamy little boy," he says. During our meeting in Brentwood, Levi talks about not wanting to pass his own unhealed trauma on to his son, "which is what happened with my parents and their parents and their parents before them." (His parents divorced when he was 6 years old.) And that is the impetus for a Wyldwood setup that will encourage cast and crew to keep their own family units intact during productions — not exactly the norm in the industry. As early adopters, the Levi family will remain in Ventura until July and then head to Texas to raise Henson. But Levi will keep a foot in Los Angeles and is confident that he will continue to work in the Hollywood system as he pursues his Wyldwood vision. For one thing, he says there are plenty of industry figures who voted for Trump for various reasons. "I know it to be true because I've gotten messages from lots of people who I won't name but who were very grateful to me for taking the stand that I took," he says. "And also they would tell me, 'I want to do that, but I'm so afraid.' And I would tell them, 'Listen, you're on your journey. I'm on my journey. You've got to keep trusting God. And if you feel compelled to step out in that way, then do it boldly and know that you're going to be OK. And if you don't feel that conviction yet, then don't. It's all good.'" For another thing, there are some executives who, whatever their own politics, are willing to work with talent they once believed were reckless about COVID measures. Wright, for instance, is mounting a comeback andrecently made her directorial debut with the short "Highway to the Moon."Levi believes she never should have endured the town's cold shoulder. "I really have a lot of respect for her," he says. "They tried to smear Letitia [after she questioned the COVID vaccine], and then of course they go, 'And she's a Christian — of course she's wacky.'" Although Lilly says she is stepping away from acting, Dennis Quaid, who stumped for Trump, is working steadily. And Ice Cube, who poohed-poohed the vaccine during an interview with Tucker Carlson, just got hired by Warner Bros. to write and star in a new "Friday" movie. "While there are some people who might prefer not to work with me anymore, there's a lot of people on that side of the political spectrum who are even more inclined to hire me and to want to do business with me because 'I need some people who voted another way,'" Levi says and then pauses, thinking of recent conversations with decision-makers. "They see that what I did was at great risk. And they were like, 'You know what? I give you a lot of props for that because that's not an easy thing to do.' And I go, 'I appreciate that.'" Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week Emmy Predictions: Talk/Scripted Variety Series - The Variety Categories Are Still a Mess; Netflix, Dropout, and 'Hot Ones' Stir Up Buzz Oscars Predictions 2026: 'Sinners' Becomes Early Contender Ahead of Cannes Film Festival Sign up forVariety's Newsletter. For the latest news, follow us onFacebook,Twitter, andInstagram.

Zachary Levi Strikes Back: The Trump-Voting ‘Shazam!’ Star on Feeling Hollywood’s Wrath Over Vaccine Skepticism and the $100 Million Studio He’s Building in Austin

Zachary Levi Strikes Back: The Trump-Voting 'Shazam!' Star on Feeling Hollywood's Wrath Over Vaccine Skepticism and the $100 Mil...

 

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