"Description:
Earth, air, fire, water—
A child must bring them all together.
Calm the shaking, quell the slaughter,
Tonight's the night—it's now or never.
Despite wacky weather threatening the San Francisco area, life for the Charmed Ones is as normal as ever. Normal, that is until eleven-year-old Tyler Michaels shows up at their door. Tyler, a Firestarter, is on the run from demons. Though the Halliwell sisters have dealt with Tyler before, a glance at the Book of Shadows turns up new, unexpected information about the boy ... and the forces for which his magic can be harnessed.
Once a century the planets align in such a way that the tides shift and the climates changes, causing unpredictable weather and earthquakes. With the world out of balance, the Firestarter is charged with gathering the other Elementals on the Night of Aeolus to perform a sacred ritual. Without this ritual, the weather will eventually tear the world apart. But the demons chasing Tyler want to divert the Elemental power and channel it to a dark evil.
The Charmed Ones must prevent this from happening at all costs—but the Night of Aeolus is already upon them...."
"I don’t like her,” McGowan said of Milano. “Cause I think she’s a lie.”
“Do you think I don’t know these people? Do the math,” she continued, referring to David Bugliari, Milano’s husband who is a Hollywood talent agent. “Who’s behind Time’s Up? CAA [Creative Artists Agency]. Where do they meet? CAA? Who needs good PR? CAA. Who is part of the pimp problem? CAA.”
When asked about McGowan’s comments, Milano told Us Weekly her former co-star was “hurting so badly” at the time when she made those comments.
“I see that as a beautiful soul that was hurting so badly that she was talking from that hurt. And I understand,” she said.
“I try not to let it affect me because I believe so much in what I fight for that I feel like the hate, and maybe this is just me spinning it in my own mind, the hate means that I’m actually doing something right,” she continued.
“So for me, I try not to pay too much attention to it,” she continued. “It gets hard some days, obviously,” the “Who’s the Boss?” star concluded.
Milano is an outspoken supporter of the Time’s Up and #MeToo movements following exposés about Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein. McGowan alleged she was sexually assaulted by Weinstein in 1997.
McGowan has been critical of Milano before. In December, the “Citizen Rose” star blasted Milano on Twitter for being friends with Georgina Chapman, Weinstein’s estranged wife. Milano and Champman judged “Project Runway: All Stars” together."
"When his pageant career ended in 2006, Williams turned to another creative outlet: Project Runway season 7. Despite finishing fifth, a challenge win landed his blue one-shouldered dress on Heidi Klum for a cover of Marie Claire. The fan favorite returned for the first season of Project Runway All Stars in 2012 (he placed ninth), then came back this year for season 6; his evolution as a designer was evident. “Anthony had great energy on set and his designs were showstoppers,” says Marie Claire editor-in-chief and All Stars mentor, Anne Fulenwider. “It was a true delight to watch his aesthetic evolve over time.”
For his latest shot at stardom, Williams sought to capture the essence of timeless elegance. “Growing up, there was nothing more sophisticated than a black woman dressed up for the church,” he says. “There was a certain pride and confidence. I watched my mother go through a lot of situations with men and finances, but she never stopped being a lady. I learned at an early age that being a lady never goes out of style.”
His muses, Rihanna and Audrey Hepburn, inspired the seven vintage-meets-eclectic looks in his finale collection, filled with hand-painted details, fitted silhouettes, and bare shoulders. Standout looks included a dress with a halter neckline and asymmetrical pleated-leather detailing and a sculptural strapless top paired with tailored cigarette pants.
Williams is the first male black winner in the show’s history (it was also the first time all three finalists were men of color). “It’s a right and a privilege to be an African-American designer in the United States of America,” Williams says. “No matter how hard life is, you have a responsibility to show up. I have a responsibility to be a credit to the human race, my race as African-American, my gender, and my sexuality. I want my community to be proud of me."
“Out of everyone left in the competition, I was the person who never made it that far,” Williams tells TVLine. “To hear them call my name was, like, ‘Wait, is this really happening?’ Winning is something you hope will happen, but the three of us up there were conditioned to not winning. I think any of us would have been shocked.”
Williams was so stunned by the sound of his own name, in fact, that he can barely remember the big moment even happening.
“I remember Alyssa [Milano] in the green dress, and I remember her saying my name, but that’s about it,” he admits. “I have no idea how I got from the runway to the backstage area. I may never know how the hell I made it there. Not ever.”
Despite his admitted shock, Williams knew that his final collection (“If Audrey Hepburn lived long enough to become Rihanna”) was strong.
“People are always telling me that I’m not young enough, not modern enough,” he says. “Rihanna was my muse in the competition, and I wanted to find a way to connect her to the vintage appeal that I like to put in my clothing. She and Audrey Hepburn are two relevant icons that I knew people would recognize. I knew that people would connect with one or the other, or both.”
Truth be told, Williams had a master plan throughout the entire competition, one he gleaned from his previous life as a drag queen.”
"Although old fans still enjoy rewatching the original episodes on Netflix, there's about to be a whole new generation of Charmed lovers joining the fandom. The new series, which will air on The CW, will have a brand new cast of characters different from the original, but the premise —three college-aged sisters discover that they're witches — is essentially the same. But the OG cast isn't all that happy about the show coming back.
"Here’s the thing. Until you ask us to rewrite it like producer] Brad Kern did weekly don’t even think of capitalizing on our hard work," Holly Marie Combs, who played Piper, tweeted. "Charmed belongs to the 4 of us, our vast amount of writers, crews and predominantly the fans. FYI you will not fool them by owning a title/stamp. So bye."
As for Alyssa Milano, who played Phoebe, back in 2013, she expressed thoughts that were against bringing the show back for a reboot. "The thing about them doing a #charmed reboot is... it just... it feels like yesterday," she tweeted. "It feels too close."
Surprisingly, Shannen Doherty, who played Prue, is totally on board. "I'm intrigued by the idea that a new generation might be comforted, inspired like all you were," she tweeted. "Charmed helped us all in some way."
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