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‘The Hunting Wives' Is A Perfectly Twisted, Sex-Fueled Netflix Binge

‘The Hunting Wives' Is A Perfectly Twisted, Sex-Fueled Netflix Binge

Forbes20-07-2025
Malin Akerman and Brittany Snow discuss the sex-fueled series 'The Hunting Wives' on Netflix. Hunting Wives, The © 2024 Starz, LLC
The Hunting Wives is one of the sexiest shows of the year, and it's premiering on Netflix! It's a twisted, seductive, and hedonistic romp on the dark side that supports the old saying about good girls going to heaven and bad girls going everywhere.
The story centers around a group of gun-toting socialites in a small Texas town, and one thing is certain: These wives aren't at home baking pies. They're out preying on anyone who gets in their way, even if it's someone in their frenemy group known as The Hunting Wives . These ladies who lunch have a lot of sex, get into a lot of trouble, and even get entangled in murder.
The highly anticipated, seductive drama from Lionsgate Television and 3 Arts Entertainment was originally set to air on Starz. Luckily, for Netflix subscribers in the U.S., all eight episodes will premiere exclusively on Monday, July 21.
The story, based on May Cobb's bestselling novel of the same name, is set in the small town of Maple Brook in East Texas. Showrunner, writer, and executive producer Rebecca Cutter ( Hightown ) took Cobb's book and adapted it for television.
'When I first read the novel, I was in awe of its flagrant horniness and glorification of bad behavior,' said Cutter in a letter to the press of her initial reaction to the world Cobb created. 'There was something so free about it!'
The result is a very fun binge-watch, but this is not one of those shows the whole family can watch together. This is a binge best enjoyed solo or with a significant other.
Malin Akerman ( Billions ) and Brittany Snow (she's in the upcoming Netflix series The Beast in Me ) are phenomenal as two affluent wives who live life on the edge in a world where the rules don't seem to apply to the rich and powerful.
In a Zoom interview, Akerman and Snow both told me that they read Cobb's sex-fueled novel after reading a few of Cutter's gripping scripts. They also disclosed that the televised version is even more salacious than the book.
'We took some liberties that will surprise the fans. No one who has read the book will feel like they already know the ending,' teased Akerman, who also described the importance of working with an intimacy coordinator for the raunchy sex scenes and what it took to get into her character's skin.
'She's fabulous, and I think some of the fun that we get to have as actresses is living vicariously through our characters. As much as audience members get to live vicariously through them while watching, we get that added element of reading the scripts and going, 'Oh, my God, this is such a page-turner!' This is such a binge-worthy show, and I get to play one of these characters who are so dynamic.'
Akerman's Margo Banks escaped an unsavory past and will do anything to avoid going back where she came from. She has a real penchant for getting into trouble, which might be her downfall alone, but she seems to take those around her down too. Snow's Sophie O'Neil, an East Coast liberal who recently moved to the red state of Texas with her husband and son, also has some dark secrets of her own.
With a wide grin, Akerman spoke with admiration about Margo's zest for life and cunning ways. 'I love the fact that she's a free bird; she does what she wants. I'm more of a people pleaser in real life. I wish I could be a little bit more like Margot, not totally,' she added, laughing.
At first, Sophie is equal parts shocked and horrified by the wealthy MAGA MILFs she's suddenly surrounded by, but she cannot resist the group's Queen Bee, Margo, with whom she's quickly enamored and seduced. Margo's hedonistic lifestyle and carefree attitude appeal to her because, in many ways, she's a prisoner of her own making, living a routine, morally acceptable, and dull existence.
Snow discussed portraying the repressed Sophie and how much fun it was to play this woman who cannot resist the temptations of Margo's provocative ways. Their friendship sparks something within her that she cannot escape, and soon her safe, structured life devolves into chaos as the two become obsessed with each other, sparking jealousy within the group.
'To feel like a good wife and mother, she feels that she needs to live within this box. Meeting Margo, who devours life, challenges those beliefs. I think she's enticed not only by that feeling of freedom, but also by a calling back to who she once was. That was the thing that enticed me the most about the character. I definitely relate to that exploration of getting into your thirties and becoming this woman, owning your power, and taking up space in a room,' said Snow, adding, 'I loved the transition that Sophie goes through to get there.'
'The Hunting Wives' is the perfect sex-fueled summer binge on Netflix. Photo by Sophy Holland/Starz/Netflix/Lionsgate TV.
Akerman and Snow are dynamic in their roles, as is the entire cast, including Chrissy Metz, Katie Lowes, and Dermot Mulroney. These deliciously written characters are drawn like moths to a flame to anything and everything naughty and dangerous. I don't think there's been a book-to-screen adaptation this salacious since E.L. James' 'Fifty Shades of Grey.'
Akerman's bodacious performance includes several salacious sex scenes, which she explained required a lot of trust on set. 'It was a real team effort from the top down, from the show creator to the intimacy coordinator, to the cast and crew,' she explained, referencing the comfort, respect, and trust she felt while shooting these scenes.
'When there's that base, then I'm ready to play and make this character authentic, but if you don't feel comfortable with the people around you, then that becomes a bit trickier. Luckily, that was not the case for this. It was just magnificent. Brittany and I could really trust one another and play.'
Akerman described Margo as fun and wild. She also says that she's dangerous and manipulative. 'I think she's a survivor. It's hard to say if she's good or bad. It all exists within.'
'Sophie is also a survivor,' added Snow. 'She's gone through hardships as well, which molded her into a much different person. Like Margo, she's making decisions to survive. I think that's what attracts Sophie to Margo. She's living in a much different way, and taking it inward, whereas Margo is living very outward.'
As for Sophie's undoing, Snow attributes it to Margo's influence while acknowledging that these characteristics were already inside of her. 'I feel like this happens to a lot of women when they start shedding the confines they're in and come into their own.'
Cutter's message detailed her intentions in adapting Cobb's novel; she wanted to keep the show juicy, but grounded in a recognizable portrayal of Texas today, without shying away from the topic of divisive politics in this country.
' The Hunting Wives is a show that is not afraid to get its hands dirty…unflinching in its exploration of sexuality, social dynamics, marriage, and political realities. But while it portrays characters on opposite sides of the culture war, there is no good guy or bad guy because I love each of these flawed characters equally.'
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As the animals try to get hold of food or other items, the suction cups create "hickeys" or "octopus kisses" that are normal for strong, curious animals, the employee said. "Blood comes up to the surface of your skin,' the employee said. 'She's not trying to be harmful in any manner." How the bruises show depends on an octopus' complexion, age and the thickness of its skin. They disappear within one to two weeks, the worker said. In another video featuring the employee working with the octopus, she laughed as she tried to get the octopus off her arm. Viewers tagged Taryn in the clip. "Now imagine that that is a 6-year-old," Taryn said. Outside of the initial video that went viral, Taryn is continuing to post about the experience on TikTok to bring awareness to others. Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. 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'Mom, it's not letting me go': Mom says octopus latched on to her son
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'Mom, it's not letting me go': Mom says octopus latched on to her son

A Texas mom is concerned after she says an octopus at the San Antonio Aquarium left bruises on her 6-year-old son's arm. According to the mother, Britney Taryn, the aquarium has always allowed guests to touch the octopus, dating back to November of 2024. Her son has visited the octopus, a Giant Pacific Octopus named Cthulhu, many times. 'They're allowed to touch them, and it's welcomed,' she said in a video she posted to TikTok about the incident, which has since gone viral. 'He would sit there and touch and talk to the octopus until we cut him off.' During the visit in question, Taryn and her son noticed the octopus had grown quite a bit since they last saw it, and its behavior had changed. While the octopus usually put its tentacles on her son and then released him, that's not what happened on July 14. 'Mom, it's not letting me go,' her son said that day. As Taryn tried to help her son step away from the tank, the octopus still wouldn't relent and even began coming out of the tank, she said. 'We start freaking out because that octopus is now bigger than my 6-year-old,' she said. 'So if we have this octopus outside of the water, is it going to engulf him and swallow him whole? I don't know.' It took three employees with ice packs to get the octopus off her son, she said in the video. The ordeal left her son's heart racing, and his arm was covered in purple tentacle marks. Taryn said her son is OK. 'This was honestly the coolest experience to him,' she said. 'He is so excited, but I don't know. Should I be more concerned? Should I be worried?' USA TODAY has reached out to the aquarium for comment. Employee initially thought octopus was being 'playful' According to Taryn, there were no employees around initially. Then one walked up and witnessed what was happening. 'He's like, 'Oh, isn't she playful today?'' Taryn recalled. 'This octopus is halfway out the tank trying to eat my son, but yeah, playful, sure.' The employee tried unsuccessfully to get the animal off the boy, then used his radio to call for ice packs. Two people came running in with ice packs, placing them on the animal, Taryn said. 'The octopus is suctioning and releasing the other employees, but it's not letting go of my kid,' she said. 'More and more tentacles start to envelop his arm.' The three employees were then able to free her son from the octopus' grip. 'She recognized him': Octupus can recognize humans they interact with Taryn and her son left the aquarium and eventually went back because he wanted to check on the animal, she said. They had to wait for a crowd of people to clear the area, then once her son got closer to the octopus, she noticed a reaction that took her aback. The octopus, which normally appeared reddish-brown, began to take on a color she'd never seen before. '(The octopus) made eye contact with my son and immediately … started to change colors and come close to him,' she said, adding that the animal turned white. She later went home and researched octopus behavior, and what read saw was alarming. 'Since this octopus is getting up there in years, I read that it can start becoming super erratic or clingy,' she said. 'She recognized him … it seems like she has a heightened emotional response to him.' She said she was worried about the animal's emotional regulation, and also that another child may have a similar issue with the octopus. Although her son handled the situation calmly, other kids may not and they may hurt the animal, she said. But researchers say the animals are curious and can remember things. "They can also recognize people and actually like some more than others," wrote team members at the Max Delbrück Center, a research center in Germany. "Researchers now believe that they even dream, since they change their color and skin structures while sleeping." Aquarium explains behavior of octupus Nearly two weeks after the incident, the San Antonio Aquarium did not directly address the situation but did share an educational video of an employee working with Cthulhu the octopus. According to the employee, Cthulhu's suction is a strong, "amazing" tool she uses to crawl and pry things open. Calling the suction cups "bundles of nerves," she said the suction cups can move independently and allow the animals to taste food and move heavy objects. Some octopuses have about 200 suction cups per arm. The employee added that the octopus is intelligent and gets excited during mealtime, noting how she tried to pry a shrimp out of the employee's hand. Throughout the video, viewers can see the octopus inching up the employee's arm with her tentacles. As the animals try to get hold of food or other items, the suction cups create "hickeys" or "octopus kisses" that are normal for strong, curious animals, the employee said. "Blood comes up to the surface of your skin,' the employee said. 'She's not trying to be harmful in any manner." How the bruises show depends on an octopus' complexion, age and the thickness of its skin. They disappear within one to two weeks, the worker said. In another video featuring the employee working with the octopus, she laughed as she tried to get the octopus off her arm. Viewers tagged Taryn in the clip. "Now imagine that that is a 6-year-old," Taryn said. Outside of the initial video that went viral, Taryn is continuing to post about the experience on TikTok to bring awareness to others. Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY's NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Email her at sdmartin@ This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Octopus grabs boy's arm at aquarium at San Antonio Aquarium, mom says Solve the daily Crossword

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