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MOVIE REVIEW: The Floaters

Images courtesy of Eammon Films and K180 Studios.

THE FLOATERS— 3 STARS

LESSON #1: ‘TIS THE SEASON FOR SUMMER CAMPS—With school out and the warmest season in full swing, ‘tis the season of summer camps and their matching movies. The sleepaway setting has long been a comedy and horror staple, from Meatballs, Friday the 13th, and The Parent Trap to Heavyweights and full-on satires like Wet Hot American Summer, and the delightful and crass new comedy The Floaters follows that in the same vein. It doesn’t matter the specialty or type of camp, assembling a hodgepodge group of characters is a foolproof and fast way of multiplying the classic coming-of-age arc we know and love.

The camp at the center of The Floaters happens to be a summer-long program in upstate New York, espousing Jewish leadership to families of that faith willing to pay to grant such a formative experience for their son or daughter. Reservation Dogs star Sarah Podemski plays Mara, the lead administrator of the fictional Camp Daveed, doing her best to hold her fledgling operation together with spit, glue, huztapah, and dedicated donors. Assisted by Rabbi Rachel (Aya Cash of The Boys) and veteran instructor Manny (Police Academy legend Steve Guttenberg), she finds herself down a counselor at the last minute and enlists her long-time best friend, Nomi (Glow ensemble member Jackie Tohn), to cover in a pinch.

Despite being great friends with Mara, Nomi isn’t exactly Jewish leadership material. The Floaters opens with her getting voted out of her own rock band (which includes current AEW world champion wrestler Maxwell Jacob Friedman, in a nice extended cameo), right on the cusp of a European tour and potentially singing with a record label. With her lifelong creative dreams snatched away from her, Nomi is spiraling in self-pity and takes the job out of desperation. Knowing full well Nomi is a rule-breaker, Mara assigns her an octet of special cases who are nicknamed the title of the movie.

The eight campers in question arrive for their first meeting like the cornucopia of carefully assembled stereotypes, ribboned with Hebrew roots, they are meant to be. There’s “The Dahlias” (Bekah Zornosa of Human Theories and newcomer Jillian Jordyn), two image-centered echo chambers, and the chummy knucklehead jock One-Nut (Jacob Moskovitz, now appearing prominently on the Legally Blonde spinoff series Elle). Opposite them are a trio of introverts, including Tal (Thani Brant, another debuting newcomer), an Asian Jew who clings to her “emotional support” iPhone, while the others are device-less, and the pair of card-playing Magic: The Gathering nerds named Tums and Wetspot (Jim Kaplan from Marry Me and Wes Anderson troupe regular Jake Ryan of Asteroid City). The final two, Jonah and Lindsey (Judah Lewis of The Christmas Chronicles and The Idea of You’s Nina Bloomgarden), a pair of ostracized contrarians, land somewhere in the middle of the two ‘verts.

LESSON #2: THE TYPE OF KIDS WHO GET SENT TO CAMP— What puts these eight together is the fact that none of them signed up for any other activities at Camp Daveed, forcing them into Nomi’s group and her task of putting on the culminating summer play. In classic ragtag fashion, this group of “The Floaters” occupies the first type of split found with every kid, regardless of demographic, who gets sent to summer camps: the ones that want to be there and those that don’t. Even with disinterest in other disciplines and the herd of cliques elsewhere, some in this group love the place, while others were forced here by their parents. Each kid wears that competing pluck or disdain on their sleeves. 

The key one on that negative scale is insensitive and self-righteous Jonah, who is simmering with rebellion against his newly divorced father (grown-up Weekend at Bernie’s lead Jonathan Silverman) that he takes out on everyone else. His lackadaisical commitment and adamant refusal of seemingly everything turn into an expensive punishment and earn the bullying crosshairs of the “Kitchen Mafia,” embodied by the vaping Yoni (Max Samuels, in his feature debut) and the protected board member’s son, Evan (Ben Krieger of Song Sung Blue). Pushing the envelope as much as he can out of spite, Jonah becomes the catalyst of The Floaters, earning the playwright spot from Nomi to adapt the biblical story of Sodom and Gomorrah into a crude farce lampooning the power structures of elite academia, sex, and religion. Their group project is also elevated to become the crucial final scoring event of the Maccabiah Games competition against Camp Daveed’s nearby rival, Camp Barak, run by the golf-carting riding silver-spoon jerk Daniel (Seth Green, the big-name casting get of the movie). 

LESSON #3: WHAT YOU GET OUT OF SUMMER CAMP— Leaning on the tried-and-true tropes of teenagers finding formative experiences with good guidance and the confidence-instilling act of opening themselves to others, this theater project transforms “The Floaters” and Nomi. There’s a great line of “Find your voice. It’s all you got,” that speaks to each member coming out of their shell, putting away their petty differences, and working together on a common—and, thanks to the twisted content of the play, extremely warped—inspiration. Hey, the roundabout and rambunctious route captained by Nomi counts as these previously resigned and discarded kids, and their equally miserable leader, getting something important out of their summer camp experience, which is always the grand goal. 

Even so, like some motivational notes Rabbi Rachel gives Nomi to put in her pockets as simple reminders, sometimes “camp is the most important experience in life” and sometimes, “it’s just camp.” Each actor gets their victorious moment (no spoilers), and it’s a complete treat to behold in this sophomore feature-length effort from award-winning festival darling Rachel Israel (Keep the Change). Thanks to this mindful, liberating, and thorn-removing bonding happening alongside the rehearsal buildup, the ultimate payoff of The Floaters is seeing the performance of Jonah’s wacky play during the climax. 

The unbridled and uncensored creativity of it drops jaws, elicits laughs, rattles beliefs, and even wets a few tear ducts because, like many of the assembled principal adults and shareholders of the camp competition, you cannot help but be proud of the maximum effort from the campers no one expected to reach. The misfits showed themselves to be real artists, now comfortable in their own skin, who say something real behind the bullshit and come to care about the place they first regretted. Watching The Floaters all fall into place, the same uplifting and impressed feelings extend to the film itself.

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The Floaters - Jackie Tohn (Nomi) - Still for Release.jpg

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Why The Same Gaming Session Rarely Ends the Same Way

Photo by Fancy Crave on Unsplash

It is easy to think people know exactly what they want before they log in. Most of the time, they do not.

A football match starts in half an hour, so someone opens the platform to look at the latest odds. While waiting, a familiar slot game appears on the screen. Five minutes later, the match begins. Two hours later, the football is over, but the session is not.

That happens more often than people admit. The evening quietly changes direction without anyone deciding that it should.

That changing routine helps explain why MPOSPORT has become a familiar search for players who prefer having several gaming options available instead of stopping after one activity.

Waiting Time Has A Habit Of Becoming Playing Time

Waiting used to mean doing nothing. Now it usually means opening something. A few minutes before kickoff feels long enough to try one slot game. The break between two matches becomes enough time for another. By the end of the evening, those short moments have quietly become part of the whole session. They simply fill the gap with whatever catches their attention.

The Biggest Collection Is Not Always The Biggest Advantage

Large numbers are everywhere. Thousands of games. Hundreds of providers. Endless categories. Those numbers matter on the first visit. After that, people settle into familiar habits.

Most players do not scroll through hundreds of titles every evening. They recognise a provider they already know, open a favourite game, or notice something new sitting beside it. The choice feels natural because they are not starting from the beginning every time.

The Platform Slowly Becomes Invisible

There is an interesting moment that happens after using the same platform for a while. People stop looking for things.

They already know where football is.

They already know where slots are.

Nothing feels unfamiliar anymore.

Oddly enough, that is usually when a platform is working at its best. The menus disappear from people's thoughts, leaving only the games in front of them.

Nobody recommends a website because the navigation was beautiful. They recommend it because nothing became frustrating.

Different Evenings Create Different Habits

A Friday night rarely looks like a Tuesday afternoon.

Sometimes there is enough time to settle into poker.

Sometimes there are only ten spare minutes before heading out.

Sometimes the football schedule is busy enough that nothing else gets opened.

On quieter days, players often wander into other categories simply because they have time. There is no fixed pattern. That is exactly why platforms have changed over the years.

One Login Changes More Than It Seems

Years ago, moving between different gaming websites felt completely normal. Sports on one. Slots somewhere else. Poker on another. Now many players expect something simpler.

Platforms such as MPOSPORT bring sportsbook, slots, live casino, poker, lottery, arcade games, and stream-and-play content together under one account. The result is not that people play every category. Most do not.

They simply have the freedom to change direction without opening another website.

Small Moments That Shape A Session

Those moments sound ordinary because they are. That is probably why they matter. The platforms people remember are not always the ones with the biggest promises or the longest list of games. More often, they are the ones that quietly become part of a routine. Players arrive with one idea, stay because something else catches their attention, and leave without ever thinking much about the platform itself. 

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MOVIE REVIEW: The Outer Threat

Image courtesy of Quiver Distribution

THE OUTER THREAT— 3 STARS

There’s more than enough room in the genre of science fiction to appreciate a movie like The Outer Threat that is science-forward more than fiction-forward. Take the public-rattling potential discovery of the existence of extraterrestrial life, something hot on the minds of moviegoers right now with Steven Spielberg’s Disclosure Day and going back as far as the 19th century with H.G. Wells’s beloved novel The War of the Worlds. Those two stories, and many others, thrust the aliens and their assumed superior capabilities right into our presence, triggering huge confrontations.

LESSON #1: SCIENCE OVER SPECTACLE— While those stories lean heavily on the entertaining spectacle of direct human/alien interaction, most scientists in the SETI (search for extraterrestrial intelligence) or METI (messaging to extraterrestrial intelligence) fields bank on theories that any real evidence we, as a planet, will get will come from signals more than flying saucers and little green men arriving on Earth. Similar to Contact, Clara, and Ad Astra that came before it, The Outer Threat follows that more plausible and intelligent path and still develops solid suspense.

Set around the present day, government-backed astronomer Daniel Ashford (Mark O’Brien, recently seen in Nuremberg) manages an old telescope set up in a forested rural area from a Cold War-era bunker underneath a shed on his farmhouse’s property. His longtime professional and romantic partner, Michelle Guthrie (Constance Wu of Hustlers and Crazy Rich Asians), is a retired astrophysicist now doing most of the country-centered raising of their two children, Francois (Castlemont’s Isaac Smelcer-Zhang) and Maddy (first-timer Callista Crowe). She stresses the quiet, isolated life they’ve created while he’s still obsessively striving with the SETI/METI mission even on the weekends.

When Daniel receives an ominous signal report from an exoplanet in the Goldilocks zone of an observable star, he thinks it’s more than an anomaly. Daniel is convinced this is it—real contact from an intelligent world—and guards this information with classified secrecy. When he assembles the data paperwork and gets a face-to-face meeting with his soon-to-be-retiring NORAD supervisor, Teddy (Murray Furrow of the 12 Monkeys TV series), he’s summarily dismissed.

LESSON #2: THE DANGER OF FALSE HOPES— Much of Teddy’s rebuttal to Daniel speaks to false hopes and how mathematically unlikely the SETI quest is against the size and distances within the known and unknown universe. This highlighted viewpoint of false hope in The Outer Threat is also something echoed to him by Michelle, who has given up on this same cosmic chase. She warns about how what was once passion—something they shared academically—can veer to become an obsession that distracts him and noticeably takes him away from his family. The wise woman is not wrong, and it weighs on their relationship.

LESSON #3: WHAT IF A FALSE HOPE COMES TRUE?— That said, what if a false hope comes true? After getting a second opinion from Michelle’s estranged father, Ming (Oscar Hsu of TV’s The Copenhagen Test), and eventually a third from Michelle herself, Daniel’s data is legitimate. Flexing the hypothetical science once again into The Outer Threat, this planet appears to be utilizing Dyson sphere structures to capture the radiant energy of its nearby sun. Uncovering such sophistication, he’s sitting on the greatest scientific discovery in history, and his feelings of fulfillment from that false hope are overwhelming. Now, he and Michelle weigh the possible ramifications of such a monumental discovery. Who do they contact? Who is safe to contact? Should it remain a secret?

LESSON #4: WHAT WOULD THE WORLD DO WITH THIS NEWS?— Hashed out by these two experts in their field, The Outer Threat broaches the hypothetical and ethical conversation of the possible panic and paranoia from the knowledge of intelligent beings beyond our planet. There is a split between Michelle and Daniel, where she thinks the world wouldn’t be able to handle it while Daniel tries to cite a lack of faith in humanity. Breaking an agreement with Michelle, Daniel sends the information via email to Teddy and the government higher-ups, setting off instantaneous consequences.

At this stage of The Outer Threat, swarming drones arrive on their property, and an increase in observation balloons appears in the skies. The surrounding area is struck with power grid failures, gas shortages, and flooded mobile and radio networks, right on queue with Ben Fox’s (Middle Life) a-touch-too-ominous musical score stings. However, all of these events and occurrences in the infrastructure are not concurrent with a government response, meaning something else must be pushing this. Nevertheless, this situation forces the family to head upstate to seek refuge with Ming. 

A bigger and louder movie than The Outer Threat would be showing TV news coverage in the background to dump exposition and show off cataclysmic events elsewhere for dramatic effect. The most writer-director William Woods (The Kid Detective) veers is with a traveling encounter with character actor extraordinaire William Fichtner playing a guarded, but benevolent diner owner. Through a momentary collaboration bonding with Constance Wu’s matriarch, extra details about the seeming beginnings of societal collapse come across as more personal and cautious. Yet, tangible danger is still possible when those suspicions and asides come from a professional movie villain like Fichtner, cropping up in the middle of a movie teetering on a desperate edge.

To see The Outer Threat contain its plotted adventure in this domestic setting grounds its focus on this family unit with that aforementioned spine of science. While it might not be as flashy as the works of Spielberg or Zemeckis, William Woods’s entire approach of knowledge over exhibition feels shrewd and astute. Even if that was done for budget limitations, the filmmaker found a smart, principled core and made the most of it. An indie effort that still makes room for the surreal science fiction ideas deserves to be intellectually appreciated.

Image courtesy of Quiver Distribution

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Nirvanna The Band The Show The Movie ★★★★★

Released: 3 July 2026 Director: Matt Johnson Starring: Matt Johnson, Jay McCarrol “The truth is, if you’ve got a best friend, you won’t even notice getting older”, somewhat hesitantly muses Matt Johnson playing Matt Johnson trying not to wake up Matt Johnson. If this sentence is confusing, well, it is by design: in the world […]

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Balancing Digital Recreation and Wellness During Medical Cannabis Treatment

Photo by Emma Simpson on Unsplash

Maintaining overall well-being involves more than following a treatment plan. Healthy routines often include regular physical activity, nutritious meals, quality sleep, meaningful social interactions, and enjoyable recreational activities. For patients using physician-guided medical cannabis, finding a balanced approach to leisure can contribute to a healthier lifestyle while supporting treatment goals.

As telehealth and digital healthcare continue to expand, patients have greater access to educational resources that encourage informed decisions. At the same time, digital entertainment—including video games—has become a common way for people to relax, connect with others, and reduce everyday stress. Understanding how recreational habits fit into a broader wellness plan helps individuals make choices that complement their medical care.

Digital Entertainment as Part of a Balanced Lifestyle

Video games have evolved into a global form of entertainment that reaches people of all ages. From story-driven adventures to competitive eSports, gaming offers opportunities for recreation, problem-solving, teamwork, and social interaction. Like any leisure activity, however, moderation is an important factor in maintaining overall health.

Many people also explore online communities and gaming-related resources such as spacehills eu to stay informed about digital entertainment options. Choosing reputable platforms and managing screen time responsibly helps ensure that gaming remains an enjoyable part of a balanced routine rather than interfering with personal responsibilities or healthcare goals.

Why Lifestyle Balance Matters During Treatment

Medical cannabis treatment is highly individualized. Physicians consider factors such as symptoms, medical history, current medications, and lifestyle when developing personalized care plans. Recreational activities should fit comfortably within those recommendations rather than competing with them.

Patients can support their overall well-being by:

  • Following their prescribed treatment plan.

  • Maintaining consistent sleep habits.

  • Staying physically active whenever appropriate.

  • Scheduling regular breaks from screens.

  • Keeping healthcare providers informed about lifestyle changes.

  • Monitoring how different daily activities affect their overall wellness.

These habits encourage better self-awareness while helping patients achieve a healthier balance between treatment and recreation.

Building Healthy Digital Habits

Technology plays an important role in both healthcare and entertainment. While digital tools improve access to medical services, extended periods of screen time may contribute to fatigue, disrupted sleep, or reduced physical activity if left unmanaged.

Simple daily habits often have a meaningful impact on long-term health and quality of life.

Understanding Individual Responses to Medical Cannabis

Every patient's experience with medical cannabis is unique. The effects of treatment may vary depending on dosage, product formulation, metabolism, and the condition being treated. Because of these differences, patients should pay attention to how they feel before participating in activities that require concentration.

Healthcare providers commonly recommend that patients observe changes in:

  • Focus and attention.

  • Energy levels.

  • Sleep quality.

  • Pain management.

  • Mood and emotional well-being.

  • Daily productivity.

Keeping a symptom journal can help identify patterns and provide useful information during follow-up appointments.

Responsible Recreation Supports Wellness

Enjoying video games and other digital hobbies is compatible with a healthy lifestyle when approached thoughtfully. Setting personal limits, scheduling regular breaks, and balancing screen time with offline activities contribute to better physical and mental well-being.

Patients may find it helpful to:

  • Alternate gaming sessions with light exercise.

  • Avoid late-night screen use if sleep is affected.

  • Stay mindful of posture during longer sessions.

  • Prioritize important responsibilities before recreational activities.

  • Discuss any treatment-related concerns with their healthcare provider.

These practices encourage healthier routines while allowing recreational activities to remain enjoyable.

The Value of Ongoing Communication

Successful medical cannabis care depends on open communication between patients and healthcare professionals. Telehealth has made these conversations more convenient by allowing patients to receive guidance from home while maintaining regular follow-up appointments.

Topics worth discussing include:

  • Symptom improvements.

  • Changes in daily routines.

  • Sleep quality.

  • Side effects.

  • Questions about dosage timing.

  • Lifestyle habits that may influence treatment outcomes.

Sharing accurate information allows clinicians to make evidence-based adjustments that better reflect each patient's individual needs.

Supporting Long-Term Well-Being

Medical cannabis is most effective when it is part of a comprehensive wellness strategy rather than the sole focus of healthcare. Balanced nutrition, regular movement, restorative sleep, stress management, and responsible recreational choices all contribute to improved quality of life.

As healthcare and technology continue to evolve together, patients who combine evidence-based medical guidance with healthy daily habits are better equipped to make informed decisions. Maintaining balance between treatment, recreation, and everyday responsibilities helps support long-term wellness while encouraging a thoughtful and sustainable approach to medical cannabis care.

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Gail Daughtry And The Celebrity Sex Pass ★★★

Released: 10 July 2026 (US)/TBC (UK) Director: David Wain Starring: Zoey Deutch, Michael Cassidy, Jon Hamm, Tony Slattery, Caleb Wang, Miles Gutierrez-Riley Fresh from its festival run at the 2026 edition of Tribeca Film Festival, after premiering earlier this year at Sundance, Gail Daughtry and the Celebrity Sex Pass is a riotous riff on The […]

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Minions And Monsters ★★★

Released: 1st July 2026 Director: Pierre Coffin Starring: Pierre Coffin, Trey Parker, Allison Janney, Christoph Waltz, Jeff Bridges, Jesse Eisenberg, Zoey Deutch, Phil LaMarr, Bobby Moynihan It’s incredible to think that the Minions – Illuminations’ adorable and iconic flagship creation – first made their cinematic debut over 15 years ago. The dungaree adorned yellow creatures […]

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