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How to watch 'The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special' online – stream MomTok reality TV hit from anywhere

How to watch 'The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special' online – stream MomTok reality TV hit from anywhere

Tom's Guide4 days ago
"The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" is tagged on to the end of season 2 as 'Episode 11' but is really a stand alone one-off to fill the gap before season 3 lands. Buckle up for "secrets and scandals, never-before-seen footage, and a surprise announcement" in the 100-minute special...
Here is how to watch "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" online from anywhere with a VPN.
"The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" arrives on Hulu in the U.S. on Tuesday, July 1.• U.S. — Hulu (30-day FREE trial) / Disney Plus Bundle• Rest of the World — Disney Plus• Watch anywhere — Try NordVPN risk-free
Demi Engemann, who recently addressed rumors that she met Brett when she was nine, can be glimpsed in the Reunion trailer but is not featured in the line-up. The MomTok star took to her Instagram to reveal that that filming was on 'short notice' and conflicted with a trip to Disneyland.
Hmmm. Could it also be that her on-going beef with multiple TSLOMW castmembers played a part in the decision? And what is MomTok going to make of it all?
Fans are also hoping the "Mormon Wives" reunion covers the rumored confession from Jessi Ngatikaura that she was unfaithful to her husband. Could that explain Whitney Leavitt's teasing Instagram post: "We probably should've taken these pics before brawl."
There's only one way to find out. Here's everything to know about how to watch "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" 2025 online – and even for free.
"The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" (Ep. 11) will be available to stream on Hulu from Tuesday, July 1 in the U.S..
Plans start from $9.99/month, and new users can get their first 30 days of Hulu absolutely free.
You can subscribe to Hulu on its own or, for even better value, you can opt for the Disney Plus bundle. The package gets you access to the entire Hulu and Disney Plus catalogs from only $9.99/month. You can also add live sport with ESPN Plus for only five bucks more.
And for anybody in the market for a full on cable replacement, all Hulu shows are included in the provider's Hulu + Live TV package. Prices start from $76.99/month, giving you access to more than 70 premium channels, together with content from Hulu, Disney+ and ESPN+.
If "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" isn't streaming where you're currently located, that doesn't mean you have to miss the show while you're away from home. With the right VPN (virtual private network), you can stream the show from wherever you are.
We've evaluated many options, and the best VPN you can get right now is NordVPN. It meets the VPN needs of the vast majority of users, offering outstanding compatibility with most devices and impressive connection speeds. You can try it risk-free for 30 days if you take advantage of NordVPN's no-quibble money-back guarantee.
NordVPN: Get 76% Off + 4 Months Extra Free
There's a good reason you've heard of NordVPN. We specialize in testing and reviewing VPN services and NordVPN is the one we rate best. It's outstanding at unblocking streaming services, it's fast and it has top-level security features too. With over 7,000 servers across 110+ countries, and at a great price too, it's easy to recommend.
Try NordVPN 30-days risk free now...
Using a VPN is incredibly simple.
1. Install the VPN of your choice. As we've said, NordVPN is our favorite.
2. Choose the location you wish to connect to in the VPN app. For instance, if you're visiting the U.K. and want to view a U.S. service, you'd select a U.S. server from the location list.
3. Sit back and enjoy the show. Head to your streaming service app — Hulu, for example — and watch "The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" online from wherever you are in the world.
"The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Reunion Special" will stream on Disney Plus in territories outside the U.S. with the same release date: Tuesday, July 1.
The Disney Plus price starts from CA$7.99/£7.99/AU$13.99/month.
Nick Viall, the actor/ model who had a starring role in "The Bachelor" season 21 and finished runner up in two seasons of "The Bachelorette".
We test and review VPN services in the context of legal recreational uses. For example: 1. Accessing a service from another country (subject to the terms and conditions of that service). 2. Protecting your online security and strengthening your online privacy when abroad. We do not support or condone the illegal or malicious use of VPN services. Consuming pirated content that is paid-for is neither endorsed nor approved by Future Publishing.
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Oasis returns after 16-year hiatus to a UK crowd ecstatic for the band's 1990s hits
Oasis returns after 16-year hiatus to a UK crowd ecstatic for the band's 1990s hits

CNN

time20 minutes ago

  • CNN

Oasis returns after 16-year hiatus to a UK crowd ecstatic for the band's 1990s hits

Oasis ended a 16-year hiatus on Friday with a punchy, powerful trip through one of Britpop's greatest songbooks, kicking off a reunion tour in Cardiff, Wales to a crowd ecstatic for the band's 1990s hits. And was there brotherly love between the famously feuding Gallagher siblings? Definitely maybe. Fans traveled to the Welsh capital from around the world for a show that many thought would never happen. Noel and Liam Gallagher, the heart of Oasis, had not performed together since the band's acrimonious split in 2009. One fan banner summed it up: 'The great wait is over.' After a montage of headlines about the sparring siblings was capped with the words 'the guns have fallen silent,' Oasis appeared on stage to a deafening roar, opening with the apt 'Hello' and its refrain of 'it's good to be back.' The brothers had a brief hand-in-hand moment but largely kept their distance onstage. Noel, 58, focused on his guitar while a parka-clad Liam, 52, snarled into the microphone with a swagger that has not dimmed in the three decades since the band released its first album, 'Definitely Maybe.' A crowd of more than 60,000 in the Principality Stadium was treated to a well-paced two-hour set that drew heavily on the first album and its 1995 followup, '(What's the Story) Morning Glory,' alongside a smattering of later tracks and fan-favorite B-sides. Song like 'Supersonic,' 'Roll With It' and 'Rock 'n' Roll Star' sounded as thunderous as ever and sparked mass sing-alongs. 'Turn around,' a tambourine-clutching Liam exhorted the crowd before launching into 'Cigarettes and Alcohol,' another classic. 'Put your arms over each other like you love each other.' There was poignancy on 'Live Forever' when an image of Liverpool Football Club player Diogo Jota, who was killed in a car crash on Thursday, was projected above the band. Noel took his turn on lead vocals for several songs, including the touching 'Half the World Away,' and the show ended with encores featuring some of Oasis' most enduring tracks: 'Don't Look Back in Anger,' 'Wonderwall' and 'Champagne Supernova.' Multicolored, sometimes faintly psychedelic projections formed the main technological accoutrement to a show where the focus was squarely on the songs. There was little banter, though Liam paused between songs to check the audience was having a good time. 'Was it worth the 40,000 pounds you paid for the ticket?' he asked at one point, referring to the scramble for seats that saw some fans pay hundreds to see a show. From the roar of the crowd, it was. The show in Cardiff kicked off a 19-date Live '25 tour in the U.K. and Ireland. Then come stops in North America, South America, Asia and Australia, ending in Sao Paulo on Nov. 23. Before the show, the streets around the stadium filled with fans who gathered in groups to sing along to the band's hits and snapped up Oasis-branded bucket hats at 35 pounds ($48) each. 'It's very, very special — emotional,' said 44-year old Rob Maule from Edinburgh, Scotland. 'I'm here with three of my friends, childhood friends, and we used to see Oasis across the country. 'For us, it's a generational thing. It's a chapter of our lives,' he said. 'And then the second generation, as people are taking their kids. It's really special.' Vicki Moynehan came from Dorchester, in southwest England. She said her life has changed since she bought her ticket almost a year ago. 'Seven months pregnant — ain't gonna stop me,' she said. Founded in the working-class streets of Manchester, England, in 1991, Oasis was one of the dominant British acts of the 1990s, releasing eight U.K. No. 1 albums. The band's sound was fueled by sing-along rock choruses and the combustible chemistry between guitarist-songwriter Noel Gallagher — a Beatles and glam rock-loving musician with a knack for memorable tunes — and younger brother Liam. Then and since, the brothers have often traded barbs — onstage, in the studio and in interviews. Liam once called Noel 'tofu boy,' while Noel branded his brother 'the angriest man you'll ever meet. He's like a man with a fork in a world of soup.' They long resisted pressure to reunite, even with the promise of a multimillion-dollar payday. Now they have agreed on a tour that sees hem joined by former Oasis members Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs and Gem Archer on guitar, bassist Andy Bell and drummer Joey Waronker. The announcement of the U.K. tour in August sparked a ticket-buying frenzy, complete with error messages, hourslong online queues, dashed hopes and anger at prices that surged at the last minute. Some fans who waited online for hours at the Ticketmaster site complained that they ended up paying 355 pounds ($485) for regular standing tickets instead of the expected 148 pounds ($202). The ticketing troubles sparked questions in U.K. Parliament, where Arts Minister Chris Bryant criticized 'practices that see fans of live events blindsided by price hikes.' Britain's competition regulator has since threatened Ticketmaster — which sold around 900,000 Oasis tickets — with legal action. No plans have been announced for Oasis to record any new music, and the tour is being presented as a one-off. Music writer John Aizlewood said that it's an opportunity for Oasis to 'tend the legacy' of the band, and remind people of the power of the Oasis brand. 'There should be a sense of huge joy and life affirmation about these shows. And I think if they can just play it right, then that can be a massive burnishing of their legacy,' he said. '(There is) this enduring love for Oasis — and love means money.' Fans were determined to enjoy the moment. 'I'm the oldest sibling of four brothers, so I know they'll fall out,' said Stephen Truscott, from Middlesbrough in northeast England. '(But) the first night, they're going to have an absolute unbelievable blast. It's going to be the best.'

Wonderwall to Supersonic: Five Oasis classics that defined an era
Wonderwall to Supersonic: Five Oasis classics that defined an era

News24

timean hour ago

  • News24

Wonderwall to Supersonic: Five Oasis classics that defined an era

Oasis made their long-awaited comeback with a reunion tour, which kicked off in Cardiff on Friday. The first Oasis single released was from their inaugural album Definitely Maybe and penned, as with most of their songs, by Noel Gallagher. Here are five best-loved classics from the bad boys of 1990s Britpop. Here are five best-loved classics from the bad boys of 1990s Britpop Oasis, who make their long-awaited comeback with a reunion tour kicking off in Cardiff on Friday: Supersonic (1994) The first Oasis single released was from their inaugural album Definitely Maybe and penned, as with most of their songs, by Noel Gallagher. It features brother Liam's distinctive singing style: holding and drawing out a syllable, with a touch of his Manchester accent coming through. In a Vogue interview in 2019, Liam named Supersonic the song he liked best from the band's repertoire, and it contained his all-time favourite lyrics: 'I need to be myself/I can't be no one else/I'm feeling supersonic, give me gin and tonic.' Live Forever (1994) The Manchester band's breakthrough hit came with their third single, which was their first to reach the top 10 in the UK charts. The single cover was a photo of Beatles legend John Lennon's childhood home - the band Oasis often compared themselves to and to whom they would be compared. 'It was the tune that changed everything,' Noel recalled in an interview in 2009. The upbeat track, with lyrics such as 'I just wanna fly' and 'I don't wanna die,' were written partly in reaction to the negative message of grunge. In particular, Nirvana's song I Hate Myself and Want to Die irked the young songwriter Noel. 'Kids don't need to hear that nonsense,' he later said. Cigarettes & Alcohol (1994) But life-affirming optimism was not exactly a running Oasis theme, already clear from their next single and now one of their all-time classics. In their concerts, it is the most performed of all their songs, featuring 645 times, according to the programmes of 837 concerts published by analysed by AFP. The track captured the band's image as bad boys, a reputation that would solidify over the next decade till their break-up in 2009. It included lines such as: 'You could wait for a lifetime/To spend your days in the sunshine/You might as well do the white line.' Questioned about the example the song might be setting for young fans, the brothers said it was not about glorifying bad behaviour. 'It's a feeling you get when you are on the dole, and you've got no money, maybe to escape from your surroundings, that all you have is cigarettes and alcohol,' Noel said on The O Zone in 1994. Wonderwall (1995) 'And after all/You're my wonderwall' - the refrain is so familiar even non-fans are likely able to belt it out. The song was taken from their second of seven studio albums, and by far the band's most successful: (What's the Story) Morning Glory? shifted over 20 million copies globally. A 1960s film with the same title and featuring music by Beatle George Harrison had been an inspiration for the contemplative song, which includes a prominent mellotron that sounds like a cello. Looking back, the Gallaghers struggled to understand the huge success of the track. 'Every time I have to sing it, I want to gag,' Liam told MTV in 2008, according to The Guardian. But in 2012 he did reprise it for the Olympics closing ceremony in London, performing without Noel. Don't Look Back in Anger (1996) One of the rare tracks with Noel on lead vocals, this pensive song is the second most featured in 837 concerts. It came out towards the end of Oasis's heady mid-1990s when they were at the peak of their fame. As a mark of their status in British culture extending well beyond the music scene when recently elected Prime Minister Tony Blair entered Downing Street in 1997, the fresh-faced leader invited the band for celebratory drinks, and Noel was captured in a now-famous image with Blair, both sipping a glass of wine. 'I was 30, off me head on drugs, and everyone telling me we were the greatest band since who knows,' Noel said to Spin magazine in 2008 about that time. The place of Don't Look Back in Anger in the public imagination was clear decades after its release in 2017, following a bombing at a Manchester pop concert that killed 22 people. A grieving crowd spontaneously sang the song's now-poignant lyrics after a minute's silence in the city centre for the victims days after the attack.

Fan flies from half the world away to see Oasis gig
Fan flies from half the world away to see Oasis gig

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Fan flies from half the world away to see Oasis gig

An Oasis superfan has flown more than 9,000 miles (14,484km) from Australia to the UK to watch one of the band's reunion gigs. Robyn Hixon has travelled from Perth to her home town of Belper, in Derbyshire, ahead of the band playing on Friday. The 39-year-old self-confessed Oasis obsessive said her journey had taken 37 hours with a stop-off in Hong Kong. "Totally worth it," she told BBC Radio Derby. "I'd probably fly twice as far to see Oasis. I've been a fan forever." Mrs Hixon, who has seen Oasis perform three times before, said she was "super excited" ahead of the concert at Heaton Park in Manchester on Friday. She said: "I've been in Australia for about ten years, and I try to get home to Belper to see friends and family as often as possible. "I wasn't actually going to come back over this year because it's really expensive, but then the chance to see Oasis came up, and some might say it was destiny that I come from half the world away." Mrs Hixon said she also had tickets to see Oasis's gig in Melbourne in Australia in November, which she will go to with her husband Tommy. "He's not come over with me this time - I'm going with brothers, sisters and family." The couple memorably celebrated their wedding day by recreating the cover of Oasis's breakthrough album Some Might Say at Cromford Railway Station. Noel and Liam Gallagher used the picturesque station in the Derwent Valley to create a cover instantly recognisable to millions of the band's fans. Mrs Hixon, in her wedding dress and pushing a barrow, restaged the platform scene with her bridesmaids in July 2024. "I think that probably shows how mad I am about Oasis," she added. "I just love them and I'm really excited." Follow BBC Derby on Facebook, on X, or on Instagram. Send your story ideas to eastmidsnews@ or via WhatsApp on 0808 100 2210. Oasis to play first show in 16 years as reunion tour kicks off in Cardiff Noel Gallagher arrives for Oasis gig by train (What's the story) behind the Oasis railway station? What you need to know about the Oasis reunion in Cardiff

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