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Aaron Sorkin is making a second 'Social Network' movie
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Aaron Sorkin is making a second ‘Social Network’ movie

by admin June 25, 2025


We’re getting yet another Hollywood sequel. Deadline reports that Aaron Sorkin will be directing The Social Network II, a follow-up to the film that chronicled the development of Facebook and the ensuing lawsuit against Mark Zuckerberg. The next movie will take its inspiration from a 2021 investigation by The Wall Street Journal into the harms caused by Facebook and the company’s failure to address those problems.

Sorkin has a long career as a writer, including the screenplay for The Social Network, but only three credits as a director on his resume. There’s no production date for the movie at this time, and it’s unknown whether actors from the original will return to their roles, most notably Jesse Eisenberg as Zuck.

Facebook certainly provides no shortage of potential inspiration for a biopic. Just in the past six months, the platform dug a deeper hole for itself when it tried to quash a tell-all memoir with some pretty wild behind-the-scenes stories from a former employee. Facebook also eliminated its third-party fact checkers and gutted its own hate speech policy, which was unsurprisingly followed by an increase in violent content and harassment. But given all the negative hits for Facebook’s reputation, viewers may not be too excited about spending two hours or more stewing in all the crappy stuff the network has done.



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June 25, 2025 0 comments
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Why Aaron Rodgers retiring after 2025 helps the Steelers
Esports

Why Aaron Rodgers retiring after 2025 helps the Steelers

by admin June 24, 2025


  • Brooke PryorJun 24, 2025, 04:20 PM ET

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      Brooke Pryor is a reporter for NFL Nation at ESPN who has covered the Pittsburgh Steelers since 2019. She previously covered the Kansas City Chiefs for the Kansas City Star and the University of Oklahoma for The Oklahoman.

By disclosing that he would likely retire following the 2025 season during a Tuesday appearance on “The Pat McAfee Show,” Aaron Rodgers gave the Pittsburgh Steelers two gifts: clarity and time.

Each are luxuries the Steelers lacked the last two times they were led by an aging, Super Bowl-winning quarterback.

“I played 20 fricking years. It’s been a long run. I’ve enjoyed it, and no better place to finish than in one of the cornerstone franchises of the NFL with Mike Tomlin and a great group of leadership and great guys in the city that expects you to win,” Rodgers said.

With Rodgers’ intentions stated before the season even starts, the Steelers have every opportunity to make a strategic plan to secure the next franchise quarterback, one that’s eluded them since Ben Roethlisberger retired in 2021.

Not only do the Steelers have more than a year to continue their homework on a 2026 quarterback class that could include Clemson’s Cade Klubnik, LSU’s Garrett Nussmeier, Penn State’s Drew Allar and South Carolina’s LaNorris Sellers, but they’re also well-positioned to move up the draft board with a handful of compensatory picks from free agent departures. Those factors could lead to the Steelers selecting their next franchise quarterback in front of a hometown crowd when Pittsburgh hosts the 2026 NFL draft in April.

They could also go another route. Top-tier quarterbacks don’t often hit free agency, and 2026 isn’t an exception. Former first-round pick Daniel Jones, who signed a one-year deal in Indianapolis, is the best available free agent of the 2026 class so far. Other quarterbacks, though, could come available in releases or trades. Anthony Richardson Sr., Indianapolis’ other quarterback and their former first-round pick, is competing with Jones for the starting job. Whoever comes in second could be available.

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Trading for a starting quarterback is rarer these days and expensive, but not impossible. Earlier this offseason, Seattle pulled off a surprise trade that sent starter Geno Smith to Las Vegas. The Steelers could first look at former first-round picks who haven’t played up to their expected potential. Arizona’s Kyler Murray will have two years and a club option on his current contract after the 2025 season. His cap hits are significant — $53.2 million and $43.5 million — but they could be massaged and restructured. Jacksonville’s Trevor Lawrence, who has one Pro Bowl berth since being drafted first overall in 2021, signed a five-year, $275 million contract prior to the 2024 season, but he could be worth an inquiry.

That’s the perk of signing Rodgers — and of him announcing his intentions prior to the season — the Steelers don’t have to scramble and can take the time to think strategically.

Pittsburgh didn’t have the same kind of luxury in their transition from Roethlisberger.

Two years removed from his season-ending elbow injury and resulting surgery, Roethlisberger agreed to a new, one-year contract prior to the 2021 season that reduced his salary and lowered his cap hit by more than $15 million. In opting to restructure the final year of his deal rather than extend him beyond 2021, the Steelers seemingly signaled that the 2021 season would be Roethlisberger’s last. But the quarterback didn’t state that clearly until January 2022.

Before that, though, he flirted with retirement a handful of times, including after a 2016 AFC Championship loss to the New England Patriots.

“I’m going to take this offseason to evaluate, to consider all options,” Roethlisberger, then 34, said in January 2017.

Coach Mike Tomlin said he took the retirement consideration “seriously” at the time and that the team would “plan accordingly.”

Roethlisberger, instead, continued to play and signed an extension in 2019. In the two years after first contemplating retirement, he threw for 4,251 yards with 28 touchdowns to 14 interceptions with a 12-3 record in 2017 and led the league in passing (5,129 yards), pass attempts (452) and completions (675) and yards per game (320.6).

In an interview with “The Pat McAfee Show” on June 24, quarterback Aaron Rodgers said he’s likely concluding a career that spanned more than two decades with a final year in Pittsburgh. Photo by Justin Berl/Getty Images

He never won another playoff game after the 2016 divisional win against Kansas City, and the Steelers haven’t won a playoff game since his retirement.

As an aging Roethlisberger waffled and then resolved to return, the Steelers drafted two quarterbacks in his final five seasons: Josh Dobbs with a 2017 fourth-round pick and Mason Rudolph in the third round a year later. Roethlisberger, who told the team he intended to return for the 2018 season prior to the draft, was quick to voice his frustration over the Rudolph selection.

“I was surprised when they took a quarterback because I thought that maybe in the third round, you know you can get some really good football players that can help this team now,” Roethlisberger said in a radio interview in 2018. “Nothing against Mason. … I just don’t know how backing up or being a third [string] — well, who knows where he’s going to fall on the depth chart — helps us win now.”

The Steelers didn’t draft a quarterback with any of their 24 picks over the next three drafts until selecting Kenny Pickett with the No. 21 overall pick in 2022, months after Roethlisberger officially retired. Pickett, the first quarterback taken off the board in a weak class, struggled in two seasons and was eventually traded to the Philadelphia Eagles prior to the 2024 season.

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More recently, their 2024 experiment with Russell Wilson and Justin Fields created uncertainty at the position and made charting a long-term plan difficult. Wilson’s two-year tenure in Denver ended with a release, and he signed a one-year, vet-minimum deal in Pittsburgh in an effort to jumpstart his career. Shortly after that, the Steelers acquired Fields in a trade with Chicago on an expiring rookie deal. The Steelers thought they had their quarterback of the future in the building. Either Wilson, who said he felt like he found the fountain of youth upon signing in Pittsburgh, would play closer to his Super Bowl-winning form, or Fields would emerge as the future.

Neither happened.

Wilson, sidelined early on by a calf injury, started off hot, but he and the team fell apart with an 0-5 losing streak to end the season. Fields went 4-2 in six starts but was replaced once Wilson was healthy. The team’s top priority, general manager Omar Khan said prior to free agency, was signing either Wilson or Fields. But according to league sources, the team didn’t actively pursue signing Wilson, making their top priority Fields.

Fields, though, opted to sign a two-year, $40 million deal with the Jets. Beyond top overall pick Cam Ward, the 2025 quarterback draft class was unheralded, and the market of free agent and tradeable quarterbacks was relatively desolate.

Once again, the Steelers were in the lurch as a byproduct of a situation they created. Rodgers, willing to play at a bargain price and available without spending critical draft capital, was the team’s best option. And by expressing his intent to retire before he even steps on the field for training camp, he became even more valuable — even if the season ends without a playoff win or snaps Tomlin’s streak of non-losing seasons — because he allows them to thoughtfully prepare for the future.



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June 24, 2025 0 comments
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Yankees' Aaron Judge continues tear, launches 469-foot HR
Esports

Yankees’ Aaron Judge continues tear, launches 469-foot HR

by admin June 11, 2025


KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Aaron Judge crushed a 469-foot home run that nearly left Kauffman Stadium in the first inning of the New York Yankees’ game against the Kansas City Royals on Tuesday night, continuing his season-long ravaging of pitchers across baseball.

The home run, Judge’s 24th, was the third longest in the majors this season behind Mike Trout’s (484 feet) and Logan O’Hoppe (470 feet).

The homer raised Judge’s batting average to .398 and his OPS to 1.279 — 264 points higher than the second best in baseball, Shohei Ohtani.

117.9 MPH
469 FEET

AARON JUDGE OBLITERATES THIS BASEBALL! pic.twitter.com/XOYcLnExqg

— MLB (@MLB) June 10, 2025

Judge took a 2-0 fastball from rookie left-hander Noah Cameron, who had not given up more than one run in any of his previous five major league starts, and yanked it down the line, toward the Royals Hall of Fame that abuts the left-field foul pole.

The ball landed just shy of the Hall of Fame’s roof and registered as the sixth-farthest homer at the stadium in the decade since MLB’s ball-tracking system began. It was the seventh-longest regular-season homer in Judge’s career, with his best a 496-foot shot to left-center field at Yankee Stadium off Marcus Stroman as a rookie in 2017.

Judge’s season-long heater continued after he hit two home runs Sunday in a loss to the Boston Red Sox. His batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage all lead major league hitters, while he ranks second in home runs behind Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh and is tied with Boston’s Rafael Devers for the American League lead in RBIs.





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June 11, 2025 0 comments
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Shohei Ohtani hits 2 HRs as Dodgers top Aaron Judge, Yankees
Esports

Shohei Ohtani hits 2 HRs as Dodgers top Aaron Judge, Yankees

by admin May 31, 2025


  • Alden GonzalezMay 31, 2025, 05:53 AM ET

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      ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the L.A. Rams for ESPN from 2016 to 2018 and the L.A. Angels for MLB.com from 2012 to 2016.

LOS ANGELES — The New York Yankees’ return to Dodger Stadium, the site of a star-studded World Series and an improbable Game 1, was billed as one of this season’s most anticipated matchups. It began in unprecedented fashion — with Aaron Judge homering in the top of the first and Shohei Ohtani answering in the bottom half, marking the first time two reigning MVPs have homered in the same inning of the same game.

In the end, Ohtani prevailed.

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ two-way phenomenon added another homer in the sixth, igniting a four-run rally against a previously dominant Max Fried and sparking an 8-5, come-from-behind victory on Friday night. Ohtani has now gone deep 15 times in May, tying a franchise record for the most home runs in a single month.

“He’s impressive,” Judge said. “He’s one of the best players in the game for a reason. What he can do in the box, on the basepath, once he gets back on the mound — it’s special.”

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Ohtani is expected to face hitters in a live-batting-practice session at Dodger Stadium on Saturday, his second in a span of six days. His pitching progression has been steady in recent weeks, but he is not expected to join the Dodgers’ needy rotation until some time after the All-Star break. In the meantime, Ohtani continues to be a force offensively, slashing .294/.394/.670 with 11 stolen bases and a major league-leading 22 home runs — three more than the second-place Judge, whose batting average sits at .392.

“I heard the chants for MVP tonight,” Dodgers first baseman Freddie Freeman said of Ohtani, “and he’s really well on his way to doing that again.”

The Dodgers defeated the Yankees in five World Series games last fall, claiming their first full-season championship in 36 years. It was a matchup of arguably the two most storied franchises, both with bloated payrolls and star-laden rosters. Seven months later, the rematch was just as decorated. Had Mookie Betts not sustained the toe fracture that is expected to keep him out for the entire weekend series, Friday’s game would have marked the first time in major league history that three former MVPs resided in each lineup for the same game.

Judge and Ohtani, though, are the clear headliners — and both played as advertised. Ohtani homered twice; Judge homered, added a double and made a sensational diving catch deep in the right-center-field gap, robbing Teoscar Hernandez of extra bases.

Said Yankees manager Aaron Boone: “Some of the stars really shone tonight.”

Fried was certainly one of them. The star left-hander fashioned a 7-0 record and a 1.29 ERA through his first 11 starts with the Yankees and held a 5-2 lead when he took the mound for the sixth inning.

Then the Dodgers came all the way back, drawing memories of their infamous five-run rally in Game 5 of the World Series. Ohtani started it with a towering home run to right field. Hernandez and Will Smith added back-to-back singles. Freeman, who ranks just behind Judge with a .368 batting average, added an opposite-field RBI double. Andy Pages drove in another run with a single, and Michael Conforto plated the Dodgers’ sixth with a bases-loaded walk.

The Dodgers added two more with Pages’ two-run single in the seventh, and a severely shorthanded bullpen — one that lost Evan Phillips to Tommy John surgery and has four other high-leverage relievers on the injured list — held the Yankees in check the rest of the way.

Asked if it reminded him of the Dodgers’ World Series comeback of Game 5, Freeman, who delivered the walk-off grand slam in Game 1, said he “actually never thought about it.”

“That was just pretty good ball game right there to beat Max Fried, who is probably one of the top five pitchers in the game right now. To score that many runs off him, it’s very hard to do. And a testament to Shohei, who is hitting home runs all over the place, and then just getting guys on, keeping the line moving, getting huge hits, and just tacking on a couple more runs. That was awesome.”



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May 31, 2025 0 comments
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Brothers Aaron, Bret renew Battle of Boones in Yankees-Rangers
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Brothers Aaron, Bret renew Battle of Boones in Yankees-Rangers

by admin May 21, 2025


  • Jorge CastilloMay 20, 2025, 07:45 PM ET

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      ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.

NEW YORK — For the first time in two decades, the Boone brothers will be in opposite dugouts when the New York Yankees and Texas Rangers meet for a three-game series at Yankee Stadium this week.

Back in 2005, Bret Boone and little brother Aaron — whose father and grandfather were major leaguers — were in their 30s and nearing the end of their careers as third-generation players. This time, Aaron is in his eighth season as Yankees manager and Bret is in his third week as Rangers hitting coach.

To celebrate the unlikely occasion, they had dinner together Monday after not seeing each other since spending Christmas together in San Diego.

“Well, it’s new for me,” Bret said. “He actually paid the bill last night.”

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Bret, 56, had never been on a major league coaching staff before the Rangers unexpectedly called him to gauge his interest in helping their anemic offense. He quickly accepted the job and took over as hitting coach on May 5, days after the club fired offensive coordinator Donnie Ecker.

At the time, the Rangers, less than two years removed from winning the World Series with Ecker, ranked last in the American League in runs scored. The sample is tiny, but the Rangers entered Tuesday ranked seventh in the league since May 6, Boone’s first day on the job.

“He’s fit in really nicely,” said Rangers manager Bruce Bochy, who managed Bret on the 2000 San Diego Padres. “Bret’s brought some new ideals, another set of eyes and ears. And I think he’s done a really nice job of getting to know the guys, building relationships already, and he’s a pleasure to have around.”

Yankees manager Aaron Boone, left, and older brother Bret Boone, the Rangers’ hitting coach, faced off for the first time since their playing days Tuesday night at Yankee Stadium. Frank Franklin II/AP

Growing up, the brothers, because they were four years apart, didn’t play together or against each other in any official capacity. But there were battles of all kinds at home.

“We used to box when we were kids, and I used to wear the headgear and he wouldn’t,” Aaron said. “So, picture, I’m probably 6, he’s probably 10. And I popped him good one time. And kind of got him upset, and he took it to me pretty good.

“And I’m starting to cry a little bit. And he’s like, ‘No, you can’t cry. We’re gonna get in trouble.’ Years later, I was thinking, ‘We’re gonna get in trouble? You’re gonna get in trouble for beating up your little brother.'”

The last time the Boone brothers went against each other at the major league level was on April 24, 2005. Bret, who was in his 14th and final season, started at second base for the Mariners and went 0-for-3 with two strikeouts and a sacrifice fly. Aaron started at third base for Cleveland. He went 1-for-3 with a solo home run against Jamie Moyer for Cleveland’s only run.

Aaron, 52, played until the 2009 season. Eight years later, he was hired as Yankees manager, and he has gone on to lead the team to the postseason six times, including a World Series appearance last October. Aaron began Tuesday tied for 15th with a .584 career winning percentage.

“It was weird for me,” Bret said. “He was always Bret’s little brother. And then all of a sudden he got the Yankees job and people were saying, ‘You’re Aaron’s brother.’ I’m very proud of what he’s done.”

Before Tuesday’s game, the two brothers exchanged their respective teams’ lineup cards at home plate. They shared laughs with the umpire crew and came together for photos. Then it was all business.

“I’m sure I’ll peek over there at some point during the game,” Aaron said, “and see what his act looks like.”



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May 21, 2025 0 comments
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