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Patrick Stewart's Extremely R-Rated Thriller Is A Punk Rock Battle Against Nazis

By Robert Scucci
| Updated

Having spent the entirety of my late teens and 20s playing music at dive bars with local bands, I went into 2015’s Green Room totally blind, not even knowing what it was about. In my experience, green rooms are simply a place for the talent to hang out and eat stale chips, have a drink, and keep their gear safe while mingling after their set. Green Room shows its namesake in a much more brutal fashion, as the titular hangout happens to be the site of a murder that a band walks in on, resulting in the club owner holding them hostage while he figures out what to do with them.

An incredibly violent horror thriller in all the best ways, Green Room is fast-paced and brutal, drenched in feedback and shotgun blasts, and best of all, features a cold, calculating, and menacing Patrick Stewart as the resident bad guy who wants total control of the situation. Add a killer punk rock soundtrack and some good old-fashioned Wolfenstein-level Nazi beatdowns into the mix, and that’s really all you need to be sold on Green Room.

Picard Goes Hard in Green Room

Green Room 2015

Green Room centers on Pat (Anton Yelchin), Sam (Alia Shawkat), Reece (Joe Cole), and Tiger (Callum Turner), who are on tour with their band, The Ain’t Rights. After a last-minute cancellation on their self-funded Pacific Northwest tour, they book a replacement show at a skinhead-owned Portland bar run by Darcy Banker (Patrick Stewart). The club itself is a front for a drug operation, posing as a punk venue to keep the authorities at bay.

After playing their set, The Ain’t Rights head back to the green room, not knowing they’re about to walk in on a dead body. During the show, Emily (Taylor Tunes) was stabbed to death by Werm (Brent Werzner), a member of the venue’s house band, Cowcatcher. Pat makes the fatal mistake of calling the police, which sets off a chain reaction of events that results in The Ain’t Rights being held hostage by Gabe (Macon Blair) and Big Justin (Eric Edelstein), the bartenders who are clearly the muscle of the operation.

Green Room 2015

The skinheads tip off Darcy, their leader, who decides it’s in everybody’s best interest to kill Pat, Sam, Reece, and Tiger so there are no material witnesses to the murder that happened on his property. What Darcy isn’t prepared for is the band fighting back.

An Intense Escape Operation

Armed with whatever objects they can use as weapons, a fire extinguisher being the most obvious example, the band decides to make a break for it. Unfortunately, they don’t have the same kind of firepower as the members of Cowcatcher or the rest of the bar’s employees. They’re locked down inside a Nazi compound and severely outnumbered. Amber (Imogen Poots), Emily’s friend who is also trying to leave the skinhead group without being killed, helps them orchestrate an escape, knowing full well that there will be casualties along the way.

Green Room 2015

Darcy knows that everything he’s built will be compromised if The Ain’t Rights get out alive. His plan to stage a breaking and entering gone wrong is the most reasonable solution he can come up with. Patrick Stewart shines here as a menacing antagonist who never raises his voice, but clearly has more bite than bark. While Darcy has succeeded with schemes like this in the past in the name of self-preservation, he’s finally met his match after underestimating the people he’s trying to silence.

Green Room 2015

Green Room is an intense watch, but it’s absolutely worth your time if you want to see a band that thrives on chaos bite off more than it can chew. Whether they’ll need to make lineup changes by the end is something I’ll let you discover on your own, but go into this knowing that everybody involved is taking a beating at some point. If you’re ready to rock while taking out a Nazi or two, then Green Room, currently streaming on Netflix, should be next on your watchlist.


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This $10 upgrade transforms your PC — but it’s only on sale until midnight

TL;DR: Upgrade a PC affordably with this Microsoft Windows 11 Pro license, on sale for just $9.97 (reg. $199) through tonight at midnight.


Want to get the feeling of a new computer without having to shell out all the money for one? A new operating system gives your device a whole new feel, and if you’ve got a PC lying around, it could probably use this Microsoft Windows 11 Pro upgrade. If you act fast, you can get it for only $9.97 through tonight at 11:59 p.m. PT.

Windows 11 Pro breathes new life into an old computer, extending its lifespan for less than the cost of your lunch. Unlike older operating systems, this one was made with the modern professional in mind.

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Rest easy knowing Windows 11 Pro is filled with features that can improve your workflow — from an easy-to-use interface that enhances usability to snap layouts, seamless redocking, a more powerful search experience, and improved voice typing.

Take advantage of unique professional tools like Azure AD, Hyper-V, Windows Sandbox, and BitLocker device encryption. Then take a break and check out the impressive gaming experience offered by DirectX 12 Ultimate graphics.

Windows 11 Pro includes Copilot, Microsoft’s very own AI-powered assistant, which can assist you with a wide range of tasks. Get some help kickstarting your writing process, summarizing web pages, changing your settings, or even opening your apps.

You can also enjoy improved cybersecurity with Windows 11 Pro, as it adds biometric logins, encrypted authentication, and enhanced antivirus protection.

Get your PC a Microsoft Windows 11 Pro license for only $9.97 tonight through midnight.

StackSocial prices subject to change.

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3 AdultFriendFinder red flags — how to avoid scams on AFF

Depending on who you ask, AdultFriendFinder is either the Wild West of hookup sites, an “anything goes” paradise for adult fun, or a total scam replete with bots, fake profiles, and inactive accounts. 

After months of personal testing, I can confidently say which AFF you experience ultimately boils down to how you use the site. If you approach it naively, without a strategy, you’re probably going to have some frustrating experiences. On the other hand, if you exercise a modicum of caution and common sense, you’ll discover a huge, fun, and kink-friendly community.

Here are three red flags to look out for as you use AFF, to help you spot potential scammers and separate the authentic users from the fake profiles.

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Unverified accounts

AdultFriendFinder already offers a fantastic first step in combatting fake profiles that they call ConfirmID. Once you’ve created an account, you can, at any time, upload a clear scan of a government-issued ID card and then, using a webcam, undergo a quick face verification scan to confirm that you are indeed the person identified in the government document. 

This step strikes the perfect balance between not being onerous enough to annoy the average user but still requiring enough effort to deter scammers, who notoriously go after the low-hanging fruit. 

Once you’ve completed the ConfirmID sequence, you’ll be rewarded with a verification badge on your profile, and we strongly recommend that you limit your one-on-one interactions on the site to other verified users. 

Perfect profile photos

Alright, admittedly this one requires some personal judgment, as everyone should strive to upload good, high-quality photos of themselves to dating websites. But if every photo looks like it belongs in a magazine, or if the person in the photo looks a little too good to be true, you should exercise caution.

In the age of generative AI and filters, it’s trivially easy to create a fake photo or series of photos, so you should also be on the lookout for what isn’t in the photos. Are there recognizable local landmarks (clubs, restaurants, well-known parks, or street corners) in the photos, or are they all equally generic?

Over-eager chatters

Ever since chat bots became a thing, dating sites have become plagued with them, and as AI improves more and more, it’s not always easy to know, right away, if the “person” you’re talking to is really human. One dead giveaway, though, is how much they chat and how quickly they reply. 

Real people go off on tangents, employ non sequiturs, and sometimes stumble with awkward questions or comments. Chat bots, on the other hand, are typically always chipper and extremely fast-talking, so much so that a paragraph-long answer can come back to you in seconds. 

They also almost always have an agenda, too, whether that’s directing you to click on a link (“Follow my Instagram profile”) or getting you to divulge some potentially compromising bit of personal information about yourself.

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SNL opens with another Pete Hegseth press conference

Saturday Night Live returned from a brief hiatus Saturday with a cold open depicting a joint press conference between Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth and FBI Director Kash Patel, with “Master of None” creator Aziz Ansari playing the latter.

Colin Jost’s Hegseth hit the familiar beats at the podium — performative machismo, military bravado, and repeated jabs at the secretary’s well-documented drinking habits. This time, Hegseth arrived at the mic hauling an oversized pitcher of scotch, which he assured the room was his one for the day. He then fielded questions from the press about the administration’s handling of U.S. strikes on Iran, dismissing each reporter with the particular brand of smug confidence that has become central to Jost’s portrayal of the character.

Ansari’s Patel proved to be the sketch’s standout, arriving to defend his tenure at the FBI and proceeding to do so poorly. The bit’s centerpiece involved Patel simultaneously denying and admitting that he had locked himself out of his work email for 36 hours after forgetting he had changed his password to “kashmeoutside69.”

Funnily enough, Patel was reportedly locked out of his FBI email in real life and believed, at least momentarily, that he was being fired. As the sketch demonstrated, the distance between SNL’s Cold Open and the actual news cycle has rarely felt smaller.

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