“How would you like to spend three months with Diego Luna’s Cassian Andor? Later this year, you’ll get that chance. A new interview confirms that his upcoming Star Wars show, Andor, is 12 episodes long. That’s double the length of this week’s Obi-Wan Kenobi show, five episodes longer than The Book of Boba Fett, and four episodes longer than each season of The Mandalorian. (Animated series The Bad Batch was 16 episodes, so that’s why we’re specifying ‘live-action.’)” Read more at Gizmodo Natalie Portman is returning as Jane Foster in Thor: Love and Thunder after she was famously absent from Thor: Ragnarok. Here’s what happened between her and Marvel and why she eventually chose to come back. Read more at The Mary Sue Harry Styles continues to exude confidence and swagger as the singer is establishing himself as a pop star akin to the biggest of decades past. “Three years have done Harry Styles a great service. With Harry’s House, the former-One Directioner sings odes about what it feels like to build a home and a life with someone. He’s never been so self-assured, giving Harry’s House a stable foundation to fortify his name in the pop world.” Read more at The A.V. Club A new trailer for Baz Luhrmann’s Elvis sees Austin Butler transform into the King, set to the backdrop of some anachronistic music. Read more at HypeBeast The former vice president of Xbox voiced their concern about what GamePass could do to the gaming industry. “Ed Fries, the former Microsoft vice president of game publishing who launched the original Xbox, recently appeared on a podcast where he discussed some concerns he has regarding Xbox Game Pass. Fries said that he’s ‘scared’ that the service could lead to a future in which folks stop buying games, opting instead to just pay for a single monthly subscription fee to access everything. In his view, this is a similar scenario to what happened with Spotify and the move toward music streaming, an outcome he believes hasn’t been great for musicians or record labels. And he fears a similar future is coming to the games industry.” Read more at Kotaku The new series The Offer on Paramount+ tells the story of how The Godfather was made, and apparently, the actual mob had their hands involved with the script as well, or so they say. Read more at Mental Floss