Jeff Ross Says Jon Stewart Feels Pain of Veterans, He Should Run for President

Days of Our Lives Spoilers for the Week of 8-01-22: What is Rolf Up To?

Salem’s favorite mad scientist is back!

The newly-pardoned Dr. Rolf again teams up with Kristen on Days of Our Lives during the week of 8-01-22, and even she’s shocked by his latest experiment.

Presumably, he intends to resurrect Jake, but there has to be more to it. Could the persistent rumors that Stefan will wake up in Jake’s place be true?

The spoiler video doesn’t provide many clues; it’s the most cryptic one that Days of Our Lives has had for ages.

Kristen does look shocked as Rolf pulls back the curtain on his latest experiment, so it’s safe to assume that he does something other than resurrecting Jake.

That’s too bad. Rolf’s anti-death drug is a silly plot device, but this is one time it would have come in handy. Jake and Ava had potential as a couple, and it would be nice for her to get a happy ending for once.

If Jake were to come back to life, it would negate the fake-widow plot that Ava and Gabi are cooking up as they prepare to go to war with EJ, rendering that whole thing pointless. If anyone can go toe-to-toe with EJ and come out on top, it’s Ava, so let’s go!

Anyway, if Jake is still dead, what is Rolf up to?

There are several potential scenarios here, all of which put Days of Our Lives squarely in the silly category with this story.

Most likely, Rolf somehow saved Stefan’s essence and will somehow implant it into Jake’s body. Even Rolf couldn’t resurrect Stefan because Stefan’s heart is in Julie’s body!

He tried this before when he implanted a Stefano microchip into Steve’s brain and a Gina microchip into Hope’s. Eventually, it was reversed when Kayla removed the chips.

If Rolf uses a microchip or similar technology, could Jake eventually be restored to his Jake identity? Or will Rolf have perfected the tech so that it’s now irreversible?

The jury’s still out on that. In the meantime, if you don’t like the supernatural/wacky science stuff, don’t panic! We have eight spoilers below for Days of Our Lives during the week of 8-01-22; please scroll down to check them out.

Orpheus has a surprising request for Marlena.

Theoretically, nobody should be giving Orpheus the time of day, especially not Marlena, who he kidnapped and tormented decades ago.

However, Marlena may have a soft spot for Orpheus’ kids — after all, he forced her to be their new mother back in the day.

So if Orpheus’ favor has to do with helping Evan, Marlena may agree. Similarly, if he asks her to be his therapist so he can be a better dad to his wayward son, that may be the perfect way to manipulate her into a ‘Yes.’

Shawn and Evan wait for the results of the paternity test.

It’s a no-brainer: Evan will be shown to be the father. Where would the drama be if Shawn could easily get rid of Evan and his paternity claim, after all?

But since DNA tests get switched regularly, can anyone trust that this is the true result?

Shawn won’t give custody up without a fight, and Evan isn’t above kidnapping the baby because he’s too impatient to wait for this to work through the courts. Anything could happen once the test is done.

Gabi is thrown by Ava’s unexpected demands.

Gabi still hasn’t figured out that she cannot outscheme Ava.

It was never smart for her to make an enemy out of her, and now she’s put herself in a position where Ava can get the better of her.

Gabi will probably have to do some groveling, and that’s just for openers. She shouldn’t have approached Ava about Jake’s shares at Dimera before his body was cold.

Kristen watches anxiously as Rolf tries to work his magic.

As discussed above, even Kristen appears shocked by Rolf’s plan.

He must be cooking up something truly bizarre for it to throw her off.

Even resurrecting Stefan seems too easy — what’s the twist in this?

Shawn turns to Belle for help.

Shawn probably wants to file for custody.

That might be a hard sell, especially after the Jan rift and Belle’s mixed feelings about raising Jan’s baby.

But let’s hope they’re on the same side this time! It’s more enjoyable than having them be at each other’s throats.

EJ calls Ava’s bluff.

EJ didn’t believe this convenient “we were just married” story, nor should he.

EJ is more Ava’s speed as an opponent than Gabi. She’ll most likely take his refusal to buy into this story as a challenge.

This could be fun!

Jada asks Eric out on a date.

Jada/Eric is probably a distraction on the way to an Eric/Nicole reunion.

That’s unfortunate since Eric and Nicole have already crashed and burned too many times to count. It’s time to move on.

However, these two may be a cute couple for as long as it lasts. Eric’s support after Jada shot the mugger was a nice change of pace from his judgmentalism when it comes to Nicole.

Xander and Sarah search for clues in order to prove who murdered Abigail.

The Salem PD likes to throw darts at a list of names and hope they find the right person. It usually takes them four or five tries.

Sarah’s freedom, sanity, and relationship with Xander hang in the balance here,

She and Xander are going to take matters into their own hands instead. Good for them.

Johnny coerces Paulina into helping him.

Seriously? Paulina was kind enough to buy Johnny a drink to commiserate.

She liked him better for Chanel than she did Allie, but if he starts trying to manipulate her, that could change in a heartbeat.

I wish we would move on past this awful triangle already. It’s not doing anyone any favors.

Your turn, Days of Our Lives fanatics. Hit that big, blue SHOW COMMENTS button and let us know your thoughts about these spoilers!

Eager to chat about already-aired episodes of Days of Our Lives? Check out the latest Days of Our Lives reviews and Days of Our Lives Round Table discussions.

Days of Our Lives airs on NBC on weekday afternoons. Check your local listings for airtimes or watch on Peacock TV on weeknights after 8 PM EST / 5 PM PST.

Jack Ori is a senior staff writer for TV Fanatic. His debut young adult novel, Reinventing Hannah, is available on Amazon. Follow him on Twitter.

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Jeffrey Epstein-Ghislaine Maxwell Exposé Kicks Off Slate Of ‘HLN Investigates’ Specials – Watch The Promo

EXCLUSIVE: HLN has lined up a trio of topical true-crime specials that will examine the cases of Jeffrey Epstein & Ghislaine Maxwell, Sherri Papini and Gabby Petito.

“She weaponized sexuality,” we hear of Maxwell in a promo for the first one, Sex Ring Secrets: Exposing Jeffrey Epstein (watch it below). Set to air August 15, the two-hour show exposes her as the mastermind behind the recruiting and grooming of young girls for Epstein, who died in jail while awaiting trial in 2019. It features interviews with Epstein accusers Alicia Arden and Jennifer Araoz, reports from people who were inside the courtroom during Maxwell’s trial and shocking details following the trial uncovering death threats on Maxwell. She was convicted on five sex-related felony counts late last year and sentenced to 20 years in prison.

Set to air in September is Runaway Mom: The Sherri Papini Story, which recounts to the disappearance of the young wife and mom who out for a jog who reappeared weeks later — dazed, battered, and bruised. Police were baffled at first, but investigators later uncovered a twisted hoax involving an ex-lover. 

Coming to HLN this winter is Toxic Love: The Gabby Petito Tragedy (working title), a story about the 22-year-old who vanishes after taking a cross-country road trip with her fiancé that resulted in her violent death.

“These cases rock the conscience of America,” said EP and showrunner Elizabeth Yuskaitis. “Disturbing wrongdoing, downright bad behavior and unanswered questions continually fuel an insatiable appetite for viewers to know more. HLN Investigates brings you shocking new details through explosive interviews from those deeply involved in these cases.”

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Pat Carroll, Voice of Ursula in ‘Little Mermaid,’ Dead at 95

Nichelle Nichols, Star Trek’s Uhura, Dead at 89

Sad news out of Hollywood as it has been announced that legendary actress, Nichelle Nichols, has died.

She was 89.

Nichols was best known for her role as Uhura on the original Star Trek series, a role she held for the entire series.

The actress starred alongside William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy on that series.

She and Shatner shared the first kiss between a white person and a Black person on television.

Nichols considered leaving the series after its first season, prompting Martin Luther King Jr. to ask her to stay. 

He told her she was a role model for Black children.

“He told me that Star Trek was one of the only shows that his wife Coretta and he would allow their little children to stay up and watch,” Nichelle recalled.

“I thanked him and I told him I was leaving the show. All the smile came off his face and he said, ‘You can’t do that. Don’t you understand, for the first time, we’re seen as we should be seen? You don’t have a Black role. You have an equal role.’”

“I went back to work on Monday morning and went to Gene’s office and told him what had happened over the weekend. And he said, ‘Welcome home. We have a lot of work to do.’ ”

Whoopi Goldberg, who played Guinan on Star Trek: The Next Generation, remembered telling her family upon first watching Star Trek: “I just saw a Black woman on television, and she ain’t no maid!”

Nichols did not return for the Star Trek reboot, with Zoe Saldana taking over the iconic role.

The character currently appears on Paramount+ drama Star Trek: Strange New Worlds, with Celia Rose Gooding taking over the role.

That show is set well before the original series, and has already been renewed for a second season.

Nichelle’s son, Kyle Johnson, shared news of his mother’s passing on Facebook.

“Her light however, like the ancient galaxies now being seen for the first time, will remain for us and future generations to enjoy, learn from, and draw inspiration,” he wrote Sunday.

“Hers was a life well lived and as such a model for us all.”

According to The Hollywood Reporter, Nichols died in Silver City, New Mexico. She had been living with her son and was recently hospitalized.

May Nichelle Nichols rest in peace.

Paul Dailly is the Associate Editor for TV Fanatic. Follow him on Twitter.

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Warner Bros. Discovery Faces First Post-Honeymoon Earnings As Layoffs, Streaming Decisions Loom

Warner Bros. Discovery is heading into a very important week. The company, whose regime just crossed the 100-days-in-office mark, reports its Q2 earnings Thursday, when CEO David Zaslav and his team are expected to lay out more concrete plans for the combined entity than they did on the Q1 earnings call, held just a couple of weeks after the $43 billion Discovery-WarnerMedia merger had been completed. That could include more details about how the two companies’ streaming services, HBO Max and Discovery+, would be combined and under what name; about the company’s theatrical-streaming film strategy; and how a promised $3 billion in savings (a number many expect to go higher) would be achieved.

August had long been rumored to be the month of mass layoffs, with the first wave now expected as early as next week as the honeymoon period for the new regime is coming to an end. This coming Monday also marks the start of WBD’s three-days-a-week return-to-office mandate, which became one of the first major tests for the new leadership; the return plan was met with strong resistance by WarnerMedia employees when it was announced soon after the merger was completed.

HBO Max, which has positioned itself as a top-tier streamer after two years of operation, has found itself at the center of all sorts of wild speculation for the past couple of months — from a supposed shutdown and folding into Discovery+ to a buying freeze and dramatic cull of its development slate.

While the streamer has paused new live-action kids and family programming as well as unscripted content, most of the rumors could not be substantiated as HBO Max is preparing for one of its biggest launches ever with the Game of Thrones prequel House of the Dragon. Further consolidation of HBO and HBO Max’s scripted operations under Casey Bloys is expected, and the future of HBO Max’s unscripted division is in question given the pending merger with the nonfiction-focused Discovery+.

WBD’s film strategy for HBO Max also is believed to be under scrutiny, with movies expected to get theatrical distribution before going on the streamer going forward. Also under discussion is a potential unifying moniker for the consolidated WBD streaming platform that would combine the coastal/metropolitan appeal of HBO Max and the Middle America pull of Discovery+. Zaslav was thought to have been keen to changing the name of the streamer when he first discussed the deal but now is believed to have more of an open mind.

There have been a handful of layoffs so far — along with high-profile executive departures like Warner Bros. CEO Ann Sarnoff and Warner Bros. President of Global Kids, Young Adults and Classic Tom Ascheim — in the first three months since the Discovery-WarnerMedia merger was completed, but the majority of cuts are expected to start in August and wrap by Thanksgiving. Thousands of workers are expected to be affected as the company deals with a “bigger mess” than initially expected.

With the last division reports on layoff targets reportedly due this past Friday, the trigger could be pulled at any moment. Mid-August had been recently rumored, but now there is chatter that the first batch could come next week. After that first wave, a second one is anticipated in September. Overall, the hope is that the majority of layoffs are made over the summer, and the goal is for the cuts to be over before the start of the holiday season.

Since the deal was first proposed in May 2021, $3 billion has been repeatedly mentioned as the target for the amount of expense that can be squeezed out of the new operation. John Malone, the media billionaire who is an influential member of the new company’s board of directors, has indicated that $4B is a feasible target. High-level insiders tell Deadline that the figure could come closer to $5B. In a research note to her clients in April, Bank of America analyst Jessica Reif Ehrlich called the $3 billion target “highly achievable, if not conservative, given several areas of duplicative expenses (e.g., tech, ad/distribution sales force, real estate, etc.).”

WBD has already made cuts in its sales division, led by Jon Steinlauf, with around 1,000 roles, or 30% of that workforce, axed. Sales remains a primary target for cuts, with marketing, distribution and engineering also rumored to be among the areas impacted the most as the company looks to eliminate redundancies. While most post-merger departures so far have been WarnerMedia employees, rumor is that layoffs on the Discovery side may come first this time.

Word is that division leaders have not been given a headcount to hit, but rather told to present a strategic outlook of how their operations can work more efficiently. Unlike the WarnerMedia cuts following the acquisition by AT&T, WBD has not implemented voluntary buyouts as a way of reducing workforce, and layoffs are expected to be largely performance-based.

“People are looking back a little wistfully at the AT&T era,” one recently senior exec who exited the company this year told Deadline. “They were a phone company, but they understood that and they tended to mostly stay out of our business.”

A major restructuring at WarnerMedia was a defining moment of AT&T’s troubled stewardship of the company. Longtime silos between divisions were removed and a large roster of seasoned execs walked out the door. The joining together of two media companies in WarnerMedia and Discovery, each with cable TV portfolios, production operations and a streaming platform, has created different challenges.

“I don’t think I’ve ever seen someone come in and look to just outright gut a company like this,” one longtime senior Warner vet tells Deadline.

The pattern is familiar to those who worked with Zaslav during his 15-year run overseeing Discovery. “The cuts were constant,” one veteran of those years said. “And they were so stealthy – 20 here, 30 here, never a huge number that would attract attention or require a write-down. It became a running joke to come in on Monday and everyone would say, ‘Well, hey, my security badge still works!’”

The pending cuts may appease long-skeptical investors as WBD, like many media companies, is facing economic headwinds and a challenging financial environment, which likely will be reflected in the earnings. The stocks of Discovery and former WarnerMedia parent AT&T both lost significant ground during the 10 months when the deal was pending. WBD stock has fallen 38% since it began trading on April 11 and closed Friday at a mere $15 a share. Times have been tough for most stocks lately, but the decline is steeper than that of shares in Disney, Comcast and Paramount in that same time span.

When they come, cuts in the content teams will likely be among the most high-profile.

The linear Turner Networks were the first major target and have already seen a slew of changes including the departure of Brett Weitz, general manager of TNT, TBS & truTV; SVP Original Programming Adrienne O’Riain; and unscripted chief Corie Henson. The combined networks group, now led by Nancy Daniels under Kathleen Finch, has cut a number of unscripted series such as The Big D, weeks ahead of its premiere, and let go a number of big-ticket development as well as axed/ended most scripted series such as Chad, Snowpiercer and Kill the Orange Bear.

It’s believed that over time, a new programming strategy will be put in place that will include cheaper reality fare and potentially new scripted series.

On the unscripted front, there have been constant rumors that the company will make sizable cuts to HBO Max’s alternative team led by Jennifer O’Connell, who also runs live-action kinds/family programming, an area from which the streamer has already pulled back.

Unscripted is a major source of synergy given it is the area where there’s the most crossover between the WarnerMedia units and Discovery teams. However, from a buying point of view, HBO Max and Turner Networks spend a lot more on programming, on average, than Discovery. For instance, a show like HBO Max reality series FBoy Island costs between $1.5M-$2M an hour, compared to a traditional hour of Discovery programming that is pegged around $400,000-$500,000.

There’s been little noise around Mike Darnell’s unscripted production group, which suggests that the studios divisions — which include Warner Bros. Unscripted Television. Telepictures Productions and Warner Horizon Unscripted Television — may continue as is, helped by the fact that Discovery didn’t produce many of its own shows.

The high-profile scrapping of J.J. Abrams’ HBO series Demimonde last month raised the question how the merged business will deal with A-list talent.

The Lost co-creator and his Bad Robot signed a mega five-year overall deal for film and television with the studio in 2019 in a competitive situation. The WBD top executives have been scrutinizing Bad Robot’s output so far, and there’s a feeling the relationship may have been “mismanaged,” with the new company leadership keen to get some projects moving through the pact. That includes shows in the works at HBO Max, which are believed to be moving along despite rumors over the past week to the contrary.

Overall, outside of possible further consolidation with HBO Max, HBO will likely remain business as usual. Zaslav is a noted admirer of what HBO and HBO Max Chief Content Officer Bloys and his team have achieved, as evidenced by him signing the exec to a new five-year contract. Zaslav also was front and center at this week’s glitzy premiere of HBO’s House of the Dragon, which is expected to get one of the biggest ever — and possibly the biggest — marketing campaign for an HBO/HBO Max series.

Sports is expected to be a continued focus for the Turner Networks, which see the NBA and NHL, Major League Baseball and March Madness college basketball as linchpins for the networks. WBD currently pays $1.2 billion a year for NBA games. That deal is up at the end of the 2024-25 season, adding another big decision to the new company’s growing list.

Elsewhere, IP will be a huge differentiator going forward. Warner Bros. Discovery has the libraries of DC Comics, Harry Potter, Hanna Barbera and Looney Tunes, a collection matched only by Disney with Marvel, Lucasfilm’s Star Wars and Pixar.

Proper management of the big franchises is a top priority, with finding a DC chief who can revitalize the comic book universe the way Kevin Feige has done with Marvel of upmost importance. There’s been much chatter about new Harry Potter extensions, including a TV series, and Zaslav is understood to have recently met creator J.K. Rowling.

Film strategy will likely remain focused on theatrical. Zaslav is not thought to be a big fan of direct-to-streaming movies, believing that the return on investment is low and it doesn’t help churn across HBO Max. He recently brought in former Disney exec Alan Horn, a heavyweight, who will help consult on feature strategy, working with former MGM chiefs Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy, who recently took over larger portion of the portfolio previously overseen by Toby Emmerich.

As he immerses himself into areas in which he has no hands-on experience, like movies and scripted TV, Zaslav has relied on the counsel of industry veterans. In addition to bringing Horn on board, he also reportedly has sought advice from a number of other former top executives including Peter Roth, who led the Warner Bros. Television Group for many years.

As WBD closes the book on its first 100 days, the next 100 might give us an idea about what the future of the company actually looks like. We may get the first glimpse at that on the WBD earnings call Thursday.

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