logo
Carrie Coon, Leslie Bibb and Michelle Monaghan on ‘The White Lotus' Cut Scenes: ‘There Are Things You Won't See That Are a Part of Our History'

Carrie Coon, Leslie Bibb and Michelle Monaghan on ‘The White Lotus' Cut Scenes: ‘There Are Things You Won't See That Are a Part of Our History'

Yahoo05-06-2025
There's nothing quite like working on 'The White Lotus,' where cast members live on the same hotel set where they're filming for as long as six months. And for Season 3 stars Carrie Coon, Leslie Bibb and Michelle Monaghan — who played three lifelong friends on a girls' trip to Thailand — it's something they're forever bonded by.
'We'd spent half a year together making this thing far from our homes and our families and our routines,' Coon tells Variety's Awards Circuit Podcast. 'And it's so fraught when we watch it in a way that it will never be for anybody else. We'll never be able to explain it. There's no way to express the fulsomeness of that experience. I've said, It's like being an astronaut. The only person who knows what it's like is another astronaut.'
More from Variety
'There Is No Feud': Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood Tell All on Their 'White Lotus' Connection, a Cut Love Scene and Yes, Why He Unfollowed Her on Instagram
Bridget Everett on How 'Somebody Somewhere' Was the Best Experience of Her Life: 'It's Like, Now What Am I Gonna Do?'
How 'The Studio,' 'Yellowjackets,' 'Monsters' and 'White Lotus' Make Bad Behavior Appealing
That's true of 'White Lotus' cast from other seasons too. 'We're in this very specific club, this amazing experience that is so singular that Mike [White creates], and you get to say his words and live your life in this alternate reality,' Bibb says. 'It's so immersive, and it makes, I think it makes the work better in a strange way. You're so far from anything that is your reality or your touchstones, which can be so hard.'
On this edition of the Variety Awards Circuit Podcast, we talk to Coon, Bibb and Monaghan about what it was like to be immersed for so long in 'The White Lotus' universe, and how it bonded them much like their characters. They talk about the scene they're bummed ended up being cut, as well as whether they like to do more episodes, and where they think 'The White Lotus' might go next. Also on this episode, the Roundtable discusses the death of 'King of the Hill' voice actor Jonathan Joss, just days after he crashed an ATX TV Festival panel hosted by Mike. And we look at the nomination possibilities for the massive 'White Lotus' cast. Listen below!
When it comes to iconic 'The White Lotus' moments, Carrie Coon's speech to her character's friends in the Season 3 finale ranks up at the top.
'I mean, that's a classic Mike White moment, right?' she tells the podcast.
For much of Season 3, things are becoming more passive aggressive between longtime pals Kate (Bibb), Jaclyn (Monaghan) and Laurie (Coon) as their girls trip exposes some tension in the group. But in the finale, over dinner, Laurie gets honest about how really the trip had just exposed she much she had struggled with the mistakes she made in her own life. In the emotional speech, Laurie realizes that despite her regrets, both time and this friendship, has still made her life meaningful.
'What was lovely about the language of that speech is that it was in in many ways, speaking into the experience we had,' Coon says of their shared journey moving to Thailand and shooting 'The White Lotus' over the course of six months. 'We got to have that experience together near the end of shooting, and so I think we were all processing the ending of this thing while that was unfolding at the table.'
Bibb says in shooting that scene, she remembers how the three of them 'felt very dialed in, all day, like I couldn't stop crying every time [Coon] said it. I kept improvising these 'I love yous,' and then Michelle would say 'I love you,' and I think Mike was getting annoyed! But it was so genuine, and I'm so glad they kept it in there… these three people are seen by each other.'
Adds Monaghan: 'We all knew what the dialog was, but it was the way in which Carrie performed it. It really spoke to our hearts at that point, personally and professionally. It was a really special ending for us.'
As for moments that didn't make the final cut, Coon describes the puppet show that wound up not on the show. 'It was really sweet,' she said. 'So there are things you won't see that are a part of our history.'
The different 'White Lotus' groupings were mostly siloed from each other, but Monaghan singles out Patrick Schwarzenegger for being 'a fantastic gentleman and not this douche you see. And I lived with Parker [Posey], and I didn't even know Parker was utilizing a Southern accent!'
Would they do 'The White Lotus' again? Bibb was bowled over by the fact that she was able to work so closely to two more actresses her age — 'I never get to work with these two! Mike really knows how to write great women, and we're so lucky to have that.'
Where might 'White Lotus' end up next? Bibb agrees that White will never pick any place that's cold. 'I sent him a picture of this location I was in, it was at the Shining hotel up in Oregon, and the snow was up past the window,' she says. 'He was like, 'I'm fearful. I don't trust where you are right now. I hate the cold..' They'll never do a cold one. No way.'
Variety's 'Awards Circuit' podcast, hosted by Clayton Davis, Jazz Tangcay, Emily Longeretta, Jenelle Riley and Michael Schneider, who also produces, is your one-stop source for lively conversations about the best in film and television. Each episode, 'Awards Circuit' features interviews with top film and TV talent and creatives, discussions and debates about awards races and industry headlines, and much more. Subscribe via Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Spotify or anywhere you download podcasts.
Best of Variety
2025 Tony Winners Predictions: A Starry, Stacked Broadway Season Sets the Stage for an Unpredictable Ceremony
What's Coming to Netflix in June 2025
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

'90s country star says what she had to ‘let go of' after coming out as gay
'90s country star says what she had to ‘let go of' after coming out as gay

Yahoo

time22 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'90s country star says what she had to ‘let go of' after coming out as gay

Chely Wright recently told Variety that coming out as country music's first openly gay singer is 'the thing of which I'm most proud.' However the country singer, who first rose to fame with hits such as 'Single White Female' and 'Shut Up and Drive,' knew her decision to come out would come with some sacrifices. 'The outcome that I was going for was telling the world who I was, all the pieces of me — this person of faith who toured in support of the troops and was from the Midwest who loves the Grand Ole Opry and loves country music and loves Connie Smith and Loretta Lynn and also happened to be gay," Wright, who publicly came out in 2010, told Variety. 'Beyond that, I had to let go of people liking me. The goal, as a country music, is to make sure that as many fans like you and like what you're doing as possible. And wanting everyone at the end of this to be so delighted with me was a hard thing to throw out of the basket,' Wright continued. 'But once I did, everything got easy.' Wright decided to come out after contemplating suicide in 2006. The singer told PEOPLE that she felt like she 'did not have a choice' and 'had to come out or I wasn't going to make it.' Wright also grappled with the thought of losing her career entirely if people knew she was gay. 'I knew that at any moment that my career could be gone like that if I were found out. So I did spend a good deal of my time holding on really tightly to that identity and hiding,' she told Variety. 'You spend a lot of your energy when you're in the closet staying in the closet. I did think about what would I do if this career were taken from me.' With no major country star having ever come out, Wright had to look to other queer icons in the entertainment industry for help. She credits Rosie O'Donnell, Ellen DeGeneres and Melissa Etheridge for inspiring her to share her truth. Wright then spent four years preparing for her coming-out moment. At 39 years old, she came out in her 2010 memoir, 'Like Me: Confessions of a Heartland Country Singer.' 'I was very measured and very strategic in how I came out. I took a lot of flack for that, by the way, but I wouldn't change a single thing about the strategy and thinking 'How do I do this and how do I do it well and how do I control it?' That was business thinking,' Wright told Variety. Despite initially getting death threats, hateful messages and a New York visit from someone who said 'they were gonna do whatever they were gonna do to me,' Wright soon started getting 'opportunities to do culture work, belonging, DEIB work with corporations and higher-ed and faith communities,' she told Variety. 'I actually had more of that work than I wanted to do. I kind of kept it at 30% of my work, and the rest was music,' she said. 'There's no reason I couldn't have gone 70/30 (in favor of the culture work), but I was still holding on so tightly to who I thought I was and who I thought I should be. I was having an identity crisis, because if I'm not 70% a touring musician, who am I? You know, I didn't want to feel like anything was taken from me. So that opportunity became more and more real to me, and viable, and fun and gratifying, and certainly lucrative. And then when I was on tour, when COVID hit, all of that (music performance) went away — and the next week my clients were calling for virtual events. I took on new clients, so that went from 30% to 100%. It was there all along, but I didn't wanna hear it. I didn't know what that said about me as an artist." The 54-year-old has since left the music industry. She now serves as Senior VP of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and New Market Growth for North America at ISS, a facility management company that has 320,000 employees around the world. When asked if she was completely done with music, Wright replied with, 'I'd be surprised if that were the case.' 'I am still every day jotting down lines and humming into my voice memo melodies,' she added. Wright is actually working on a musical inspired by her memoir, to which actress Jean Smart acquired the life rights. 'It's just cool to even know Jean Smart, frankly. So that project is really fun to be working on,' Wright told Variety. 'I also believe in my bones I'm gonna make another album, if not several. I don't think that could ever not be part of who I am.' Wright has released eight albums since 1994. Her last album, 'I Am the Rain,' came out in 2016. Support surges for country music legend who suffered stroke on stage Country star skewered by fans after calling out revered album: 'It just ain't country' Move over 'Brat summer': Old Dominion hopes to make 2025 a 'Barbara summer' Country singer who rejected usual treatment says he's 'whipping cancer's ass' Country music star 'doing much better' after having stroke on stage Read the original article on MassLive.

Squid Game's unnecessary final season is another example of algorithms trumping art
Squid Game's unnecessary final season is another example of algorithms trumping art

Yahoo

time32 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Squid Game's unnecessary final season is another example of algorithms trumping art

If you purchase an independently reviewed product or service through a link on our website, BGR may receive an affiliate commission. There's a familiar TV discourse taking shape online right now, the kind that I suspect will look awfully familiar to you if you remember the way Game of Thrones crashed and burned in its eighth and final season. Basically, it's now Squid Game's turn. Netflix's Korean juggernaut, once a global phenomenon and creative lightning bolt, just dropped its third and final season over the weekend — a season, just to clear, that nobody really asked for, and one that many viewers seem to actively regret watching. Today's Top Deals Best deals: Tech, laptops, TVs, and more sales Best Ring Video Doorbell deals Memorial Day security camera deals: Reolink's unbeatable sale has prices from $29.98 Squid Game Season 3 is, to be sure, currently the #1 show in the US on the streaming giant. But that top ranking, impressive as it sounds, doesn't tell the show's full story, either. According to data from Samba TV, for example, 1.6 million US households watched the premiere over its first three days. That's a big number — and yet it still marks a 17% drop from the Season 2 debut. Some of that may be a function of timing: Season 2 dropped the day after Christmas, when lots of people are sitting around at home thanks to holiday time off from work. That said, it's a little more revealing how sharply Squid Game has slipped in audience sentiment. The Rotten Tomatoes data certainly tells a story of diminishing returns: Season 1: 95% critics' score / 84% audience score Season 2: 83% critics' score / 63% audience score Season 3: 80% critics' score / 50% audience score In terms of the audience reaction, that's a free fall. Accordingly, the online commentary from fans has been pretty brutal. 'This ending sucked and felt like a cash grab for an American Squid Game,' one viewer wrote on X. Added another: 'There was no need to split this into a third series … actually, no need to make another series after the first.' Many echoed the same complaint — that Season 3 felt bloated, poorly written, and driven more by corporate math than creative vision. Here's the truth: Squid Game never needed a second season, let alone a third. It is the height of irony to me that a show about the evils of dog-eat-dog capitalism has kind of … well, strike that. Not kind of. Has very much become a victim of that same capitalism the show skewered in Season 1. Squid Game's final season was filled with contrivances and baffling character choices that, if you ask me, made the show's entire emotional logic collapse ('456 went through all that just to never talk to his daughter again?' one Rotten Tomatoes audience reviewer asked. 'Seriously?'). For Netflix, the numbers may justify the decision. For the rest of us, this is another reminder that the world of TV was not built by people who know how to leave well enough alone. Likewise, streaming TV is not a game where subtlety or quitting while you're ahead ever seem to rule the day. If you do decide to take the plunge and watch Season 3, don't be surprised if, when it's over, you find yourself wishing the games had ended a long time ago. Don't Miss: Today's deals: Nintendo Switch games, $5 smart plugs, $150 Vizio soundbar, $100 Beats Pill speaker, more More Top Deals Amazon gift card deals, offers & coupons 2025: Get $2,000+ free See the

LeBron James, John Legend & More Invest $7 Million Into Fantasy Life Sports & Gaming Platform
LeBron James, John Legend & More Invest $7 Million Into Fantasy Life Sports & Gaming Platform

Black America Web

time4 hours ago

  • Black America Web

LeBron James, John Legend & More Invest $7 Million Into Fantasy Life Sports & Gaming Platform

Source: David Berding / Getty As fans wonder how many more seasons LeBron James will play in the NBA, the future Hall of Famer is already making sure he'll be busy once he hangs up his jersey. James has expanded his business portfolio by investing in the fantasy sports and gaming platform Fantasy Life, which was founded by OG fantasy football personality Matthew Berry. The four-time NBA champ is joined by childhood friend and business partner Maverick Carter and others, including businessman Gerry Cardinale, singer John Legend, and Fortnite co-creator Donald Mustard. According to Variety . Hey, all pooled together $7 million in the latest round of funding, which will help create a 'more customizable app and mobile experiences for players.' Beyond creating their own dream teams in basketball, football, baseball, and beyond, the app features sophisticated scoring via AI tools that enable users to compete against others for cash prizes. The money also offers Berry a sign of relief, as it helps the company complete the purchase of its rival platform, Guillotine League. Berry is glad that others in the sports world see potential in Fantasy Life and are on board to see it flourish. 'My entire adult life has been about helping fantasy players and sports gamers win, have more fun, and make this industry better,' said Berry in a statement to Variety . 'Fantasy Life is the culmination of my decades of experience — a destination for every kind of player, from beginner to sharp. With smart, personalized tools, entertaining content, and the best damn fantasy game ever in Guillotine Leagues, we're building a platform as obsessed with fantasy as we are. I'm incredibly honored that so many people I've long admired believe in what we're doing and want to be part of the journey. I can't wait for everyone to check out the new features and win more titles.' Other investors who signal that Berry has a hit on his hands include YouTube co-founder Chad Hurley and billionaire Jacksonville Jaguars owner Tony Khan. Investors who hopped on even earlier include NFL players like Josh Allen, Joe Burrow, and Ja'Marr Chase. SEE ALSO LeBron James, John Legend & More Invest $7 Million Into Fantasy Life Sports & Gaming Platform was originally published on

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store