Entertainment
One Piece Season 2 Is Perfect, Proves Netflix Already Has A Replacement For Stranger Things
By Jonathan Klotz
| Published

Stranger Things may be over, but Netflix doesn’t have to worry about finding a replacement. One Piece Season 2 is proof that the streaming giant has the next big thing already ready to go. The first two episodes of the new season, subtitled Into the Grand Line, prove it’s not only the best live-action anime adaptation of all time, but one of the best shows of this decade. The new season is bigger, better, and by compressing the anime and manga arcs into one or two episodes, the pacing finally matches Monkey D. Luffy’s boundless enthusiasm.
One Piece: Into The Grand Line Picks Up Right Where Season 1 Left Off

“The Beginning and The End” starts off the season by bringing the Straw Hat Pirates, their captain Luffy (Inaki Godoy), the navigator Nami (Emily Rudd), the greatest swordsman alive, Zorro (Mackenyu), the sharpshooter Usop (Jacob Romero Gibson), and master chef Sanji (Taz Skylar) to Loguetown, the last vestige of civilization before entering the Grand Line. Immediately, Netflix’s budget is on full display within the wildly colorful city where everyone, from a fishmonger to a swordsmith, looks like they stepped off the set of a completely different series. Even in live-action, One Piece looks like an anime, and the over-the-top shonen plot has been mostly left intact.
Returning villains from Season 1, Buggy (Jeff Ward) and a slimmed-down Alvida (Ilia Isorel Paulino) ambush Luffy while he’s visiting Gold Roger’s execution site. Luffy finds himself bound and on top of the execution site with his life on the line, and in the face of death, he laughs. He can’t help but proudly announce that he will become the King of the Pirates. Nothing, not even a blade to his throat, can dull Luffy’s enthusiasm for and love of life. It inspires some, and, in the case of the newly introduced Marine Captain Smoker (Callum Kerr), it terrifies him. Smoker recognizes that Luffy is the heir to Gold Roger.

In the anime, he’s an exaggerated character in an exaggerated world, which is why, when fans knew Season 2 would adapt the “Reverse Mountain” arc, there was some concern about how they’d show a river flowing up a mountain and the giant whale lurking at the bottom. Episode 2, “Good Whale Hunting,” is all the evidence anyone needs that One Piece succeeds where most adaptations falter. It steers into the ridiculousness with all the joy and reckless abandon of the Going Merry’s crew heading straight down Reverse Mountain.
The New Gold Standard For Adaptations

The beauty of One Piece is that it’s the type of series that defies Netflix’s unofficial “second screen” viewing policy. It’s why Stranger Things Season 5 rehashed the plot over and over again, and characters delivered blatant exposition to one another. There are brief asides, such as Zoro’s comment about how Laboon must be a girl whale after Nami points out the uvula, or Usop’s excited retelling of his adventures to Kaya through a messenger snail, that, well, seems to be a bit exaggerated. Eichiiro Oda, creator of One Piece, worked on the series to the extent that every single change, character outfit, casting choice, and even lines of dialogue, had to receive his approval, and it shows.
One Piece looks like the anime, it sounds like the anime, and it possesses the spirit of the anime. Fans of The Witcher will look at this series and think about what could have been if that series had received a fraction of the love and care devoted to One Piece. As with the first season, you don’t even have to have seen the anime or read a single page of the manga to appreciate the show on its own merits. It’s an entry point to the world of anime without the burden of going through over a thousand episodes.

Netflix released every episode of One Piece: Into the Grand Line on March 10, so if you want, you could binge the entire adventure in one go. You could also take your time and savor another trip to the world of pirates in search of legendary treasure. However you choose to watch it, make sure you do, because One Piece may be the most popular anime in the world, but with the success of Season 2, it’s going to become the next big thing.

Entertainment
Maddies Secret trailer reveals John Early as youve never seen him before
Comedian John Early makes his feature directorial debut with Maddie’s Secret, an offbeat homage to melodrama that he wrote and headlines as its eponymous heroine.
As an aspiring food influencer, Maddie Ralph (Early) is passionate about her cuisine. And at first glance, she’s got a picture-perfect life: a loving husband (Eric Rahill), a devoted best friend (Kate Berlant), and a job at a culinary content studio called Gourmaybe. But as the title suggests, there’s a side to Maddie she can’t stomach sharing with her loved ones. And this secret could kill her.
Out of the movie’s premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival last fall, I cheered Maddie’s Secret, writing in my review for Mashable, “The film is silly and strange, but even amid campy bits, sincere. So, you’ll laugh at its parody elements, but may well be genuinely moved by Early’s commitment to this strange and splendid film.”
I also said “John Early is a better ingénue than Sydney Sweeney,” comparing Maddie’s Secret to another earnest (but less entertaining) TIFF offering, Christy. And I stand by it.
Maddie’s Secret opens in theaters in New York on June 19, and in Los Angeles on June 26.
Entertainment
Pride is almost here! Check out the best dating apps for LGBTQ women.
We know Pride is all year round, but there is something special about the month of June. We’re not there quite yet, but if you want a main squeeze for all the parades and parties, you gotta start looking now. How about on a dating app?
As a lesbian, you probably know all about them. Lesbian Americans (along with bisexual and gay Americans) are far more likely to have ever used dating apps than straight Americans: 51 percent to 28 percent, according to the Pew Research Center.
There are a few reasons why LGBTQ people might turn to online dating more quickly than straight folks. For one, you might live in an area without a thriving LGBTQ community, and in-person dating may be hard. If you don’t know other lesbians to begin with, how can you meet more IRL to date? (Sometimes, lesbian spaces can also be co-opted by The Straights.) Unfortunately, in-person dating may also be less safe, depending on where you live.
Hookup apps for everyone
AdultFriendFinder
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readers’ pick for casual connections
Tinder
—
top pick for finding hookups
Hinge
—
popular choice for regular meetups
Thankfully, we live in a time where we can find people like us with a few swipes. Lesbians are welcome on major dating apps, and there are also niche ones specifically for lesbians and other queer women and people. But which one to choose?
How to find the best dating apps for lesbians

Niche lesbian dating apps aren’t your only option for finding love.
Credit: Stacey Zhu / Mashable
In Mashable’s recommendations below, you’ll find both general dating apps and apps specifically for queer people. As the former appeals to the general population, you’ll find more users in these spaces. The caveat, however, is that when you swipe on other women, you might find those coupled with men who are looking for another woman to have a threesome with (aka unicorn hunters). No judgment here, but that’s probably not what you’re looking for. Then again, people of all types are on dating apps like Tinder and Hinge. You never know who you may come across.
Then there are apps specifically for the community, like HER and Lex. If you yearn for a smaller dating scene, head for these apps. While there’s no “Grindr for lesbians” — we go into why in the FAQ section — these apps are more so like stepping into your neighborhood lesbian bar than an app like Bumble.
You can also try multiple dating apps, as each one below has a free version. You can filter by the gender you identify with and are looking for, and sometimes, as with OkCupid, there are many options to choose from.
Diving into the dating pool isn’t easy, but the water’s fine. Check out our guide below for the full rundown of our recommendations and dating app reviews.
Entertainment
OpenAI rolls out ChatGPT 5.5 Instant as the new default model for everyone
Last week, OpenAI managed to stop ChatGPT from talking about goblins all the time. This week, there’s a whole new model for users to play with.
The company announced in a blog post on Tuesday that ChatGPT 5.5 Instant has begun rolling out to all users as the new default model for the popular AI chatbot. The new model is a follow-up to GPT 5.5, which was released in April.
GPT-5.5 Instant replaces 5.3 Instant, which will remain available for the next three months for paid users but will otherwise be sunsetted.
Unlike Claude Opus 4.7 from Anthropic and GPT-5.5, which are only available to paid customers, GPT-5.5 Instant is “available to everyone.” OpenAI says it should produce fewer hallucinations and better overall results for everyday ChatGPT usage.
“This update makes everyday interactions more useful and more enjoyable: stronger and tighter answers across subject areas, a more natural conversational tone, and better use of the context you’ve already shared when personalization can help,” OpenAI’s blog post said.
Mashable Light Speed
According to OpenAI, GPT-5.5 Instant produced 52.5 percent fewer hallucinated claims in internal testing than GPT-5.3 in “high stakes” topics like law, finance, and medicine. In addition, the new model “reduced inaccurate claims by 37.3% on especially challenging conversations users had flagged for factual errors.”
The company also says the new model is better at deciding when to use web search for a prompt and analyzing image uploads than before. The new model is also allegedly more concise in its answers, while also maintaining something of a personality in how it talks to the user. GPT-5.5 Instant should also be better at understanding and referencing context from a connected Gmail account and other integrations to provide quality answers.
And, again, most importantly, it should avoid mentioning goblins unless absolutely necessary.
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Disclosure: Ziff Davis, Mashable’s parent company, in April 2025 filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.
