Entertainment
New Horror Movie Breaks All-Time Oscar Nomination Record, Poised To Dethrone Lord Of The Rings
By Jennifer Asencio
| Published

The nominations for the 98th Academy Awards have been announced, and Ryan Coogler’s historical vampire drama Sinners has been nominated for 16 Oscars. This breaks the record for most nominations in a single year. The previous record, shared by the 1950 film All About Eve, 1997’s Titanic, and La-LaLand in 2016, was 14.
What is specifically historic about these nominations isn’t just that Sinners earned so many, but that the movie is black-led and black-made. Coogler, who is known for writing and directing Creed and both of MCU’s Black Panther movies, was honored with nominations for writing, directing, and producing Sinners. Michael B. Jordan earned a Best Actor nomination for his portrayal of brothers Smoke and Stack. Delroy Lindo and Wunmi Mosaku were nominated for best supporting performer in their respective categories.

Sinners also received all the technical nods, like Best Editing, Best Visual Effects, and Best Sound. The hair, makeup, and costumes also garnered nominations, with the costume designer, Ruth E. Carter, earning her fifth nomination for the work. She is black, as is production designer Hannah Beachler; Beachler is the only black woman recognized for her work, earning a second nomination for Sinners.
The soundtrack also received nominations for both its entirety and for Best Song, “Lie to Me.” The movie is about two Depression-era brothers who return to their Mississippi home to open a blues joint, only to find themselves the targets of vampires. Within its subtext are themes about racism in the Jim Crow South, using vampires to stand in for forces operating against black people during the era. Jazz music is an integral part of the atmosphere, thrusting music and the soundtrack into the center of attention.
With so many nominations, Sinners is poised to challenge Ben Hur, Titanic, and Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King for Oscar superiority. These three films are tied for most wins with 11 apiece.

However, La La Land and All About Eve failed to convert their record-breaking nominations into wins, taking home only six each. Nominations aren’t the same as wins. However, they do draw their own prestige because they are recognized by the industry’s assessment of a movie’s excellence, even when the movie doesn’t get the award.
Sinners is up against a roster of competitive films this year, including Bugonia, One Battle After Another, F1, Frankenstein, Marty Supreme, The Secret Agent, Train Dreams, and Sentimental Value. The Academy has been busy this year, and Sinners isn’t the only record that they’ve set.
Bugonia also broke a record this year by making Emma Stone the youngest actress, at 37, to receive nominations in the same year for acting and producing more than once; Stone also received nominations in both categories for Poor Things.

Marty Supreme made lead actor Timothee Chalamet the youngest actor to receive three nominations for Best Actor. His other nominations were for Call Me By Your Name and A Complete Unknown.
Voting on the Oscars will take place between February 26 and March 5. Industry insiders will sift through all the nominees and announce their decisions at the 98th Academy Awards on March 15, 2026, on ABC, hosted by Conan O’Brien.
Entertainment
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Credit: BJ’s Wholesale Club
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Mashable Deals
Let’s start with the obvious, though. Gas prices. Members already get everyday savings at BJ’s Gas, but during this promo window, you’ll get an extra 15¢ off per gallon stacked on top of the usual 5¢ discount — bringing your total to 20¢ off per gallon through April 30.
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StackSocial prices subject to change.
Entertainment
This $43 bundle quietly upgrades your entire PC experience
TL;DR: This rare Microsoft bundle deal gives you a lifetime license to Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows and Windows 11 Pro for only $42.97 (reg. $418.99) through May 17.
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Looking for an affordable way to make your old PC feel new again? If you don’t have the funds to buy a brand new computer, don’t worry. The Ultimate Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows lifetime license and Windows 11 Pro Bundle is the next best thing, offering your computer a total upgrade for only $42.97 through May 17.
Don’t count out your dusty old PC. This Microsoft bundle is here to give it a total facelift for less than $50. It kicks off with a lifetime license to some of the brand’s most popular tools — Microsoft Office, which you’ll pay for once and enjoy without any subscription fees.
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You’ll get permanent access to a suite of eight helpful apps with Microsoft Office Professional 2021 for Windows. It includes staples that have been around for decades, like Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and Outlook. You’ll also get newer favorites like Teams, OneNote, Access, and Publisher.
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Entertainment
Star Trek’s First Broadcast Episode Was Very Carefully Chosen, Because It Was Boring
By Chris Snellgrove
| Published

These days, Star Trek is a bona fide pop culture phenomenon. But during the development of The Original Series, there was anxiety that the general public wouldn’t really understand Gene Roddenberry’s mashing up Western tropes with a sci-fi setting. Making matters worse was that the original pilot, “The Cage,” had been rejected by NBC for being too brainy. Fortunately, Roddenberry got a chance to shoot another pilot, one which impressed the network enough to order an entire season worth of episodes.
Several episodes of Star Trek: The Original Series had already been shot when the time came for this new show to make its broadcast premiere. The first episode that the general public saw was “The Man Trap,” which featured a shapeshifting monster that was revealed to be an alien salt vampire. This good-but-not-great episode was an odd choice, and it was one that the cast and crew hated. As it turns out, though, this episode was very carefully selected by executives because it served as an inoffensive, relatively straightforward encapsulation of everything Star Trek had to offer.
It’s A Trap!

Most of the information we have about why “The Man Trap” was selected as Star Trek’s first episode comes from the book Inside Star Trek: The Real Story. Within this impressive reference tome, Robert H. Justman and Herbert F. Solow revealed something surprising: NBC had several other episodes to choose from for the premiere, including “The Corbomite Maneuver,” “Charlie X,” “Mudd’s Women,” “Where No Man Has Gone Before,” and “The Naked Time.” All of them had already been shot and were mostly finished, so it was just a matter of figuring out which episode would serve as the best introduction to Star Trek, a heretofore unknown sci-fi series.
“The Man Trap” won out, mostly because the powers that be worried that other episodes would be off-putting to general audiences in some very specific ways. For example, they worried that audiences would find “Charlie X” a story that was “too gentle” because it focused on an adolescent with special powers. This was probably the right call, in retrospect: when Variety gave a negative review of “The Man Trap” (an episode chosen, in part, because of its relative maturity), they declared that Star Trek: The Original Series was “better suited to the Saturday morning kidvid bloc” (ouch!).
A Monster Hit Of An Episode

“The Corbomite Maneuver” was a great potential choice, but this episode’s impressive special effects were still in post-production, and almost all of its action took place on the ship. “Where No Man Has Gone Before” really outlined the premise of the new show, but it was deemed “expository” for general audiences expecting more action and danger. Justman thought “The Naked Time” was a killer introduction to the crew’s personalities, but the network passed, presumably because of how over-the-top (half-naked, swashbuckling Sulu? Oh, my!) that episode gets. “Mudd’s Women,” meanwhile, was deemed too offensive because the plot involved literally selling women to miners.
Through this process of elimination, executives decided that “The Man Trap” was the best intro to Star Trek. It had cool scenes on both the Enterprise and a distant outpost (a strange new world) and featured a straightforward action plot you didn’t have to be a sci-fi aficionado to understand. Finally, it was all about finding and defeating a creepy monster, which offered thrills to audiences of all ages. The network’s choice paid off, and Star Trek: The Original Series became the most popular sci-fi show in television history, even though the cast (including William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy) thought “The Man Trap” was the worst possible episode they could have chosen.

All of this is a keen reminder of how much thought and work went into putting Star Trek’s best foot forward. It might be a reminder that Paramount’s current upper leadership needs, as Starfleet Academy hit the ground running with the worst episodes of Season 1. The show got better after that, but it didn’t matter because the prospective audience had already been driven away. As it turns out, today’s execs need to learn something that the network execs of the ‘60s had learned very well: series succeed when you give the audience what they want to see and not what you want to show!
