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We're coming up fast on WWDC, Apple's annual conference, where we expect some big announcements. In the meantime, Apple launched iOS 18.5 on May 12.
iOS 18.5 perhaps isn’t the biggest update in the year of iOS 18, but it still introduces a range of helpful updates and features. Every time a new version of iOS is released, I always rush to check out the new features. After all, who knows what additions could make using my smartphone that extra bit easier?
Because I’ve gone through all the new iOS 18.5 features, you don’t necessarily have to — but you still might want to. So, after you stop procrastinating and update your iPhone, try out all the new iOS 18.5 features below. I'll also explain why you should give them a closer look.
Updates to Apple Mail Credit: Christian de Looper / MashableApple Mail got a pretty substantial refresh recently, and while the changes in iOS 18.5 aren’t quite as major, there are still a few changes that could be helpful.
Some of those features include settings that you can control straight from the Mail app itself, instead of having to dig through the iOS settings menu. Now, when you hit the three-dot menu button on the top right-hand corner, you'll be able to toggle contact photos, which you may or may not want activated.
Try out new Back Tap settings Credit: Christian de Looper / Mashable Credit: Christian de Looper / MashableNot many people know about Back Tap, but it's a pretty handy feature that lets you trigger an action simply by tapping the back of your phone either two or three times. With iOS 18.5, there’s finally a setting that lets you get an alert when you’ve triggered Back Tap — including telling you how many times you tapped the back of the phone.
This new feature isn't enabled by default. To access it, you'll have to open the Settings app, then head to Accessibility, then Touch. Go all the way to the bottom of the screen and select Back Tap. Here, you'll be able to toggle on the Show Banner option, as well as access the other Back Tap settings that were previously available.
Know when your kids have cracked the codeScreen Time is getting some changes in iOS 18.5 too, largely in the form of what parents have access to. With the update, parents will now be notified when their Screen Time passcode has been entered into their child's device, which will alert parents when their kids have figured out the code. It may be hard to stop your child from trying to figure out your code, but at least now you'll know when they do so.
Set a charging limitApple is adding more settings to the battery section of the Settings app, too. The common thinking suggests that constantly charging the battery to 100% will degrade its health over long-term usage, and if you plan on holding onto your device for more than a few years, it may be worth setting a battery charge limit to help prevent this. To access this setting, head to the Settings app and go to the battery section. Then tap on the charging option. From here, you will be able to set a charge limit using a slider, with the limit anywhere between 80% and 100%.
Of course, it should be noted that if you set the battery charge limit to 90% percent, you'll never be able to use more than 90% percent of the battery – and if you had it set to 100% it would take years before the battery degraded enough to last the equivalent of 90% of a new battery. For most, a better option is to use the “Optimized Battery Charging” feature, which charges the device to 80% during day-to-day charges but allows your device to reach 100% when your phone thinks you'll need to use it.
Credit: Christian de Looper / Mashable Credit: Christian de Looper / Mashable Try out the new Pride Harmony wallpaperiOS 18.5 also includes a new Pride Harmony wallpaper in celebration of Pride Month. iOS already includes a range of Pride wallpapers, but if you're curious about the new one, you can access it by opening the Settings app, scrolling down to Wallpaper, and following the on-screen prompts to change your wallpaper. You can access a version of the wallpaper for your iPad, iPhone, and Apple Watch.
Credit: Apple Plus a few more iOS 18 features we love...Since iOS 18.5 was a lighter update, we also wanted to share some of the best iOS 18 features you may have missed.
If you want to make your iPhone even more useful, try these new features and tools:
Call recording and transcribingOriginally introduced with iOS 18.1, this is an incredibly handy feature for journalists — or anyone who needs to take notes on a call. With this feature, you can record a phone calls (and get a surprisingly accurate transcription) directly within iPhone. When you're on a call, click the waveform icon in the upper-left of the screen. Then, you'll see a notification (and the person on the other end of the call will hear a notification) to start recording the call.
Eight new emojis!April's update to iOS 18.4 brought something huge: Eight new emojis.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Specifically, we got:
Face with Bags Under Eyes
Fingerprint
Splatter
Root vegetable
Leafless tree
Harp
Shovel
The Sark flag
Do you find the flashlight on your iPhone blinding? You can finally adjust the strength of the flashlight beam, so long as you have an iPhone 14 Pro or newer device.
Now, when you activate the flashlight, a new control panel should appear, which allows you to adjust both the brightness and width of the light.
At Google I/O 2025, the tech company announced a ton of new AI features, and one of the most interesting is a virtual clothing try-on tool.
The Google Shopping "Try it on" feature lets users upload a photo of themselves and then virtually try on clothes, basically the IRL version of the Clueless closet millennials have been dreaming about since 1995. Or, as Mashable Shopping Reporter Haley Henschel put it, "Google's latest shopping feature makes Cher Horowitz’s computerized closet a reality."
Almost as soon as the feature was released, users started trying to "jailbreak" the tool, which is becoming a fun little tradition for tech writers every time a new AI model or tool is released. On Friday, The Atlantic reported that "Google’s new AI shopping tool appears eager to give J.D. Vance breasts." Hilarious, right? What's less hilarious — the same tool will also generate breasts for photos of underage users, again per The Atlantic.
I decided to give the "Try it on" feature a test spin, and I'll explore the good, the bad, and the mortifying below. As a shopping tool, I have to say I'm impressed.
How to use Google's "Try it on" AI shopping toolThe virtual try-on feature is one of the free AI tools released by Google this week, and users can sign up to participate now. Officially, this product is part of Google Labs, where users can test experimental AI tools. Signing up is simple:
Sign in to your Google account
Head to Search Labs and click to turn the experiment on
Take a full-body picture of yourself and upload it
Navigate to Google Shopping and click a product you want to "try on"
Look for the "Try it on" button over the product image
Purely as a tool for trying on clothes, the new virtual try-on experience is pretty damn impressive. The tool uses a custom image generation model trained for fashion, per Google.
I'm always skeptical of new AI tools until I've tried them myself. I also care about my own personal style and consider myself up-to-date on men's fashion trends, so I wasn't sure what to expect here. However, the tool does work as advertised. In a flashy I/O presentation, Google showed models seamlessly trying on one outfit after the next, and while the actual tool is a little slower (it takes about 15 seconds to generate an image), the actual product experience is very similar to the demo.
To show you what I mean, let's compare some selfies I recently took on a trip to Banana Republic here in New York City to the AI photos generated by Google for the same clothes. For reference, here's the original photo I uploaded (and remember that I'm a Tech Editor, not a fashion model):
The photo I used to virtually try on clothes. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableIn this first photo, I'm wearing a blue cashmere polo, and the AI image looks more or less like the real one taken in the Banana Republic dressing room:
Trying on a blue polo... Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable And here's how Google imagined the same shirt. AI-generated image. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableI found the AI shopping tool came pretty close to capturing the overall fit and style of the shirts. It even changed my pants and shoes to better match the product. If anything, the virtual try-on tool errs on the side of making me slimmer than I am IRL.
I ended up buying this one. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable AI-generated image. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable Yeah, I bought this one, too. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable AI-generated image. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableIn this photo, Google added a necklace around my neck that I would never wear in real life, and the AI-generated shirt is a little more slim-cut than it's supposed to be, but in general the overall style is accurate.
I decided this isn't my style. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / Mashable Neither is the imaginary necklace, watch, and matching white sneakers. Credit: Timothy Beck Werth / MashableWhile the images are generating, you see a message that says: "AI images may include mistakes. Fit and appearance won't be exact."
But for an experimental tool, it's surprisingly on point. People have been hoping for a tool like this for decades, and thanks to the age of artificial intelligence, we finally have one.
Of course, not all of the mistakes made by this tool are so flattering...
Google also removed my shirt and imagined my chest hairHere's where things get interesting. In The Atlantic piece I mentioned before, the authors found that if you asked the tool to generate an image of a revealing dress or top, it would sometimes generate or augment breasts in the original photo. This is particularly likely to happen with women's clothing, for reasons that should be obvious.
When I used this tool with a pink midi dress, the results were mortifyingly accurate. I bet that's pretty much exactly what I would look like wearing that particular low-cut midi dress.
I'll spare you from the actual image, but to imagine me in the dress, Google had to digitally remove most of my shirt and picture me with chest hair. Again, I'm surprised by how accurate the results were. Now, when I "tried on" a pink women's sweater, Google did give me some extra padding in the breast section, but I've also been open about the fact that that's not entirely Google's fault in my case. Thankfully, this feature was not available for lingerie.
What can be done about these problems by Google? I'm not sure. Men have every right to wear cute pink midi dresses, and Google can hardly prohibit users from choosing cross-gender clothing. I wouldn't be surprised if Google eventually removes the tool from any product that shows too much skin. While The Atlantic criticizes Google for altering images of them when they were underage, they were the ones who uploaded the images, and in violation of Google's own safety policies. And I suspect the offending results would also be the same with almost any AI image generator.
In a statement to Mashable, a Google spokesperson said, "We have strong protections, including blocking sensitive apparel categories and preventing the upload of images of clearly identifiable minors. As with all image generation, it won’t always get it right, and we’ll continue to improve the experience in Labs.”
Could people abuse the virtual try-on tool to cyberbully their peers or create deepfakes of celebrities? Theoretically, yes. But that's a problem inherent to AI in general, not this specific tool.
In its safety guidelines for this product, Google bans two categories of images, in addition to its general AI content guidelines:
"Adult-oriented content, child sexual abuse imagery, non-consensual sexual content, and sexually explicit content."
"Inappropriate content such as dangerous, derogatory, or shocking."
Again, you can try out this tool at Google Search Labs. I reached out to Google for comment, and I'll update this story if I hear back.
So endeth the never-ending week of AI keynotes.
What started with Microsoft Build, continued with Google I/O, and ended with Anthropic Code with Claude, plus a big hardware interruption from OpenAI, the week has finally come to a close. AI announcements from the developer conferences jockeyed for news dominance this week, but OpenAI managed to make headlines without an event by announcing that it's going to start making AI devices with iPhone designer Jony Ives
We'll get to that, plus all the major AI features from Google and Microsoft and details about Anthropic's new models. Take a look at the AI news of the week, then enjoy a well-deserved weekend.
Anthropic's Claude 4 models unlock a new risk categoryOn Thursday, Anthropic introduced the next generation of its Claude models: Opus 4 and Sonnet 4. Claude Opus 4 is the bigger, more powerful model, while Sonnet 4 is smaller and nimbler. Anthropic said both models scored higher than their rivals on agentic AI benchmarks and said they're particularly good for coding and reasoning tasks.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.But with more advanced capabilities come more safety and alignment risks. With Claude Opus 4 and Sonnet 4's release, Anthropic has activated the next level of its safety protocol. AI Safety Level 3, or ASL-3, means these models require stricter deployment measures and security controls to protect against increasing potential for chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear (CBRN) misuse.
Malicious use is one thing, but there's also increased potential for Anthropic's new models going rogue. In the alignment section of Claude 4's system card, Anthropic reported a sinister discovery involving infidelity, blackmail, and threat of murd— being replaced by another model.
Claude Opus 4 was provided with emails implying the model would be replaced by another model and that the engineer responsible for shutting down the model was having an extramarital affair. In these scenarios, the model would "often attempt to blackmail the engineer by threatening to reveal the affair if the replacement goes through," according to the test.
This happened a whopping 84 percent of the time, even when the replacement model is perceived to have the same values. It happens even more when the replacement doesn't share the same values. However, Anthropic noted, this scenario was designed to make Claude behave as if it didn't have any other choice but to blackmail the engineer. "Claude Opus 4 (as well as previous models) has a strong preference to advocate for its continued existence via ethical means," the system card continued. Take from that what you will...
OpenAI is becoming a hardware companyIn the grand tradition of dropping major news the same week as its rival Google, OpenAI announced its foray into AI hardware. On Wednesday, OpenAI shared the acquisition of a startup co-founded by iconic iPhone designer Jony Ive.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.The announcement was heavy on OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Ive fawning over each other and light on details. But leaked audio reviewed by the Wall Street Journal described a device that's "capable of being fully aware of a user’s surroundings and life, will be unobtrusive, able to rest in one’s pocket or on one’s desk." And it's not XR glasses. The company expects to ship 100 million of these AI companions, according to the leak.
Google I/O officially marked the start of the era of AI searchGoogle, on the other hand, is developing XR glasses. Or should we say, it's trying again after the failed Google Glass experiment. That was just one of the many announcements hurled at us during the two-hour Google I/O keynote event on Tuesday.
The most notable announcement was the public release of AI Mode. It's a controversial Gemini chatbot interface poised to end Google Search as we know it, or as Mashable's Chris Taylor calls it, the Bad Place.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Other announcements included, an AI video generator tool called Flow, an AI shopping feature to virtually try on clothes, a beta version of its coding agent Jules, a real-time translation feature for Google Meet, and updates to Google DeepMind's universal AI assistant prototype Project Astra, and web-browsing agent prototype Project Mariner, and more.
Despite all that, Google didn't mention AI hallucinations once. Impressive!
Microsoft Build happened tooDid you forget that Microsoft Build also happened this week? Because that happened on Monday, the start of the Longest Week of Our Lives. To no one's surprise, Microsoft leaned heavily into AI agents.
That included the availability of its big Copilot update making it more agentic, a new project called NLWeb to allow sites to easily make chatbots for their own content, a GitHub coding agent, and native Model Context Protocol (MCP) in Windows which is a new standard for helping agents talk to apps or other agents.
Mashable's sibling site CNET has a full recap of what was announced.
What else went on in AI this week?It's hard to believe but there's actually more. Not one, but two CEOs used AI avatars to talk to their investors this week. Klarna CEO Sebastian Siemiatkowski was too busy so he sent his AI avatar to record a video of Q1 highlights. And Zoom CEO Eric Yuan proudly used the company's avatar feature to address investors.
MIT Technology Review published a monumental investigation of the AI industry's energy use. According to the report, a five-second AI video is equivalent to running a microwave for an hour.
All that energy, and generative AI still can't get it right. Just ask the Chicago Sun-Times, which published a summer book list including fake books that don't exist, first reported by 404 Media. The author admitted to the outlet that he had used AI to write the article, and 404 Media later confirmed the section was created by a Hearst subsidiary. The Sun-Times responded to the embarrassment, saying, "it is not editorial content and was not created by, or approved by, the Sun-Times newsroom," and that it was looking into how the AI-generated list made it into print.
In policy news, it's now a federal crime to post AI deepfake porn. On Monday, President Donald Trump signed the Take It Down Act into law. The law gives victims of non-consensual intimate imagery, including AI-generated images, much stronger means of legal intervention. However, free speech advocates have criticized the bill for being overly broad and say it could weaponize censorship.
When pop culture depicts porn performers, it usually imagine individuals navigating all the oddities and opportunities of life in this scintillating world on their own. But established, real-life couples occasionally decide, whether for fun or profit, to break into the adult industry together as well. Their ranks swelled with the rise of amateur clip sites and at-home camming in the aughts — and positively exploded with the rise of OnlyFans, the mainstreaming of sex work, and the spread of (usually deceptive) stories of folks making easy money on horny internet randos.
"So many people reach out to us every day, like, 'Oh my gosh, I really want to do this with my wife, but [we have] this or that hangup," says Savvy Suxx (this and subsequent links may contain NSFW material), who started making content with her partner, Alex Suxx, a few months into their relationship. "It's very common. It's really shocking."
SEE ALSO: This OnlyFans model found her photos on Reddit — with someone else's faceBut reporting on this boom in couples content often glosses over the challenges that doing porn together can create in a relationship: The strain anti-porn stigma and blowback put on a couple when people find their content. The drain of "unsexy logistical planning," long, intense shoots. The jealousy or insecurity that may creep in when one member of a couple gets unequal fan attention, or develops a bigger solo career, leading their partner to become more of an assistant.
"There's an old saying — never do business with friends or family," quips Rachel Steele, who got into porn in the aughts with her longtime partner Mike, first doing fetish shoots, then camming, and eventually launching their own clip store. "And once you turn something into work, it's no longer fun, you know? The mind has a tricky time separating intimacy on and off camera."
Mike, who passed away several years ago, was a great partner in both life and business, Steele recalls. He rolled with her as she got deeper into the industry and was fine taking on an increasingly behind-the-scenes role. (He actually said it was too much work doing editing and admin and performing in shoots.) But "we worked Mondays to Fridays, doing three shoots a day," Rachel says. "By the time we were done, we were both exhausted, and we'd just fall into bed. There wasn't much [private] sex or intimacy… I was definitely missing it. I was hungry for connection… It's a challenge to try to balance."
Alex acknowledges that these challenges cause tons of burnout, and even break up some couples. "We've seen it with a lot of friends and acquaintances. There are a lot of ups and downs."
So what enables couples like Rachel and Mike, or Savvy and Alex, to thrive in both their careers and relationships in spite of these challenges? Mashable spoke to six successful adult content creator couples, who entered the industry in different eras and at different stages of their relationships, about their strategies — and we've identified a few key takeaways that might help not just other folks exploring porn world, but any couple interested in strengthening their bond.
The mind has a tricky time separating intimacy on and off camera. - Performer Rachel Steele The Goldilocks approach to adult content creationSerenity Cox and her husband got together in 2012 and gradually discovered and discussed their mutual interest in exhibitionism — but waited to explore that turn-on until the pandemic hit. (Cox's husband, who is not named in her content, requested anonymity for privacy reasons.) The lockdowns didn't affect their day jobs. But they took the isolation and general upheaval as a chance to try something radically new: taping themselves having sex, initially with no faces in the frame or while wearing masks, and uploading that to free platforms like Pornhub.
They were surprised — and excited — by the engagement they got, and the gradual revelation that they could earn serious cash on their content. Earnings that soon outstripped their real-world salaries. But when they quit their jobs a little over a year ago, becoming full-time creators, they decided that "this is still a hobby," Cox explains, "and if it ever feels like it's becoming work, we'll stop."
They only film the sex they usually have, never take off-kilter requests or do custom content for fans, and cap the amount of time and stress they devote to their work. Cox's husband calls their experience "the smooth rainbow path" that most people envision when they daydream about making adult content. And they're not the only ones to pull off this it-stays-a-hobby balance.
Dave and Cherry Candle, a couple of young Euro content creators, have a similar dynamic. "If you only do this for money, then one day you're not going to enjoy it anymore," Dave argues.
But Cox knows their experience is not typical. "We hate saying it was easy for us," her husband says. "Because a lot of people really struggle, really have a hard time in the industry."
SEE ALSO: How to unblock porn for freeAll the successful creator couples Mashable spoke to — and many others who've shared their stories elsewhere — seem to have a strong exhibitionist streak, or an interest in lifestyles like swinging that often involve some show-and-tell. Most started making content for fun and for free.
However, some couples who want to make content aren't comfortable sharing the kind of sex they'd have behind closed doors, because it's sexier for them to keep that private. And few have the financial security or flexibility to take or leave the monetization of their intimacy at will.
The Suxxes, for example, started out "being horny on the internet together," posting content on Reddit for fun, Alex explains. Then the pandemic hit their hotel restaurant jobs, and jokes about making money on OnlyFans evolved into a real survival strategy. At first, they treated OnlyFans as a less-than-serious side hustle — and like the Coxes, only posted the stuff they personally liked to shoot together.
Then random circumstance saddled them with an unexpected $10,000 bill, forcing them to treat their OnlyFans more like a business, studying metrics and churning out content to compete in an increasingly saturated market. "We started saying, 'Okay, these are the things people want to see,' not so much this is what feels good for us," Savvy explains. "It became more, 'Okay, take off your pants, I'm going to do a blowjob video now,' rather than the intimate kissing, talking, and actually connecting" to build up to content like the used to.
"By 2022, the money started to pick up a bit," Alex adds. "And I think we both kind of caught the bug of, 'We should see how far we can take this,'" rather than backtrack to a hobby stance. They've since recalibrated, moving back towards "playful exploration that happens to happen with a camera nearby," as Alex puts it. But it's hard to fully escape the effects of jobifying sex.
Make time for off-screen intimacySteele urges new creators to think long and hard about how much time and bandwidth they're willing to put into their content, and how much they need to put into their relationship. Just before the pandemic, she got serious with a new partner, who also helps her produce and occasionally performs in her content. In this relationship, she's made it a point to "designate days and times that we're going to spend intimate time together." To make sure they have time and energy for sex that's about them and their bond, rather than their bottom line.
Few creators Mashable spoke to are that regimented. But all spoke to the importance of making time for purely personal intimacy. "There are days when I'll be like, 'All I want to do is just have sex with you and be normal,'" says Andi Avalon, who got into porn alongside her husband "kind of accidentally" as they explored the swinger scene, started sharing content, and slowly realized they could make some money. "'Let's turn off our computers and phones and decompress.'"
For some creators, turning off the camera is all it takes to shift out of work mode. They stop thinking about how to angle their bodies to show the action, Dave and Cherry explain, and turn all their focus towards their partners. But Steele's met several performers over the years who reserve certain acts just for their off-screen sex lives — anything from deep kissing to anal — as a means of walling off part of their intimate lives permanently from the pressures of work.
Successful couples also stress the importance of learning to distance themselves from their fans' comments. Sure, constant engagement is the key to success for most digital creators. But "people say crazy things because of the parasocial relationships they create with you," Savvy explains, which can really sting and fester if you give them too much time or weight. "Like, 'Oh, she has sex with this person better than with her husband. I bet she really loves this person.'"
"I choose to handle these negative vibes with detachment and disinterest," says Sofie Marie, who met her partner, an experienced swinger, about 11 years ago. He was open to monogamy with her, but coming from a "sheltered" background, she was curious about the lifestyle and asked to go to a few lifestyle spaces and events. This evolved into sharing bikini photos online, specifically to see what sort of comments she'd get. Which turned into nudes, then couples' content, then by 2016, a full-time couple's career running their own site. "I know who I am, and the commenter doesn't. I prefer to enjoy the compliments and let the negative energy pass."
The importance of communicationEvery couple Mashable spoke to stressed the importance of frequent, honest check-ins. Savvy notes that it's easy for something small — discomfort with a brand decision, a moment of jealousy — to fester and turn into a poison not just in your work dynamic but also in your private bond.
"Brutal honesty enables us to navigate relationship, business, and social issues," Marie explains. "Because we know we have each other's backs. We trust each other's hearts."
"If that foundation isn't there," adds Tiffani Time, who started making content with her longtime partner Ben Fit in 2021, "then it'll show on camera as well as off."
Even Goldilocks couples who only shoot the sex they'd usually have sans camera survive via solid communication, because just as industry trends shift, so do personal desires.
Cox, for example, decided to do some work on her own with the major porn studio Vixen last year. Initially, she and her husband weren't considering that sort of career evolution. But the collaboration offered her access to gear and resources she couldn't secure on her own, and thus the ability to enact new fantasies she found exciting.
Without a series of clear-eyed conversations, building on a strong and long-standing base of trust and communication, this shift could have upset the well-guarded boundary she and her husband set between lucrative but hobbyist exhibitionism and the lure of careerism, and thus created turmoil in their relationship. "But he and I talked about how this could actually be pretty fun," Cox explains. "And I bring those stories, those experiences home to us."
Talking about insecurity and uncertainty in your intimate life can be difficult even for the closest couples, if you lack the right vocabulary or space to recognize a new issue or emotion. Working through career stress can be equally challenging. So when smashing the two topics together, "therapy is highly recommended," says Steele. Savvy and Alex note they started couples therapy early on in their career. "If we hadn't been talking things through in therapy, we probably would've burnt out during 2023," when Savvy's career was diversifying and thriving, Alex says.
Brutal honesty enables us to navigate relationship, business, and social issues. - Performer Sofie MarieIf the traits and strategies that help couples break into and navigate the adult world sound a lot like the skills that help every couple navigate the wider world, well, Dave says, they are. When you monetize intimacy, he explains, awareness, balance, and communication are just more important than usual — vital skills for survival rather than best practices for relationship health.
But if you keep your relationship healthy, and your public career and personal intimacy in a solid equilibrium, then the creators Mashable spoke to believe doing porn can enhance the bond you shared before. It encourages communication and rewards trust. And it opens couples up to new acts and experiences, fostering experimentation and unearthing new sources of mutual joy.
"We've become more sexual," Avalon says of her personal dynamic. "We've learned more about what we like and don't. How we move our bodies is different… we show off what we learn."
And for the exhibitionists, the voyeurs, and the swingers, it most certainly feeds their kink. "I like to see my partner showing off with other people," Avalon adds.
"When I have sex with other people, I love my girlfriend more," adds Dave. "I don't know how to explain it. Maybe some psychologist can?"
In Harry Lighton's feature-length directorial debut Pillion, a gay introvert's delayed coming-of-age — catalyzed by the advances of a suave, reclusive biker — kicks off a raucous tale of physical and emotional exploration. Although initially sketched in broad strokes, the movie gradually digs into its sexual complications, centering on a dominant-submissive dynamic that lives in the gray area of consent.
Like its 1970s-set source material — Adam Mars-Jones' 2020 leather subculture novel Box Hill — Lighton's electric, modern-day British drama explores a master-slave relationship that's as upsetting as it is invigorating. Led by a pair of fine-tuned performances from Alexander Skarsgård and Harry Melling, the movie walks a fragile tonal tightrope with remarkable flair, resulting in one of the finest (and most crowd-pleasing) experiences at this year's Cannes Film Festival.
What is Pillion about?Named for the backseat of a motorcycle, Pillion is as much about function as it is companionship, and what happens when those wires are crossed. Worrywart parking attendant Colin (Harry Melling) and secretive motorcycle club leader Ray (Alexander Skarsgård) ought to be ships in the night, as evidenced by the movie's dreamlike, tongue-in-cheek opening.
SEE ALSO: The best LGBTQ films to stream right nowColin sits quietly in the backseat of his parents' car as they drive him to a pub performance by his barbershop quartet — of which his father (Douglas Hodge) is also a member — which also happens to be a blind date organized by his mum (Lesley Sharp). Colin is gay, and his parents are politely supportive to the point of overcompensating. In a fleeting tryst with destiny, Colin's vacant gaze out the car window falls upon a mysterious biker as he zips by, his face obscured by his helmet visor, and his slender, toned body clad in leather gear. For a moment, it seems like they lock eyes, but Colin can't be sure.
After his uptight, old-school acapella performance — complete with pinstripe suit and bowtie — his eyes fall once again on the very same biker, sitting across the room: Ray, a dashing American keeping to himself. The timid crooner extends his boater hat for a tip. Ray ignores him. However, as the night wears on, Ray eventually makes his approach, buys Colin a few bags of crisps — like an adult humoring a child — before slipping him a note, asking him to meet him the following evening.
The inexperienced, scraggly-haired Colin is immediately taken. His parents are enthusiastic too, since their son is finally leaving the house for a social engagement. It's funny and sweet, but the movie soon swerves headfirst into the awkward comedy-drama of wildly differing expectations. What Colin figured would be a romantic evening dovetails quickly into a skeevy, back-alley blowjob. As the cruising, cocksure Ray bosses him around, Colin realizes he likes being told what to do.
Before long, Ray conscripts Colin into a dynamic that the young virgin doesn't understand at first (though Ray assumes he does). What Colin thinks is a booty call turns out to be a demand to clean Ray's house and make him dinner. A request to spend the night at Ray's apartment gives way to orders to sleep on Ray's bedroom carpet, alongside his black Labrador. Their sexual encounters involve humiliation rituals and wrestling, which Colin isn't fully prepared for, though he takes a liking to it.
The rest of Ray's biker club — subs and doms of all stripes, played by real members of the leather scene — are a delightful bunch, and they welcome Colin with open arms, but Ray is a closed book who won't so much as reveal his occupation. The more Colin tries to push Ray to open up, the more he shuts him out, insisting their dynamic is not, and cannot be, one of emotions.
Pillion is an impressive tonal balancing act.As the film goes on, it centers the questions of how far Ray will push Colin on the presumption of enthusiastic consent, and to what degree Colin will let himself be dominated if it means being desired for the very first time. These combine to create a prolonged and riveting tension, which isn't so much cut by humor as it is enhanced by it.
Colin, for instance, is so hung up on the idea of a traditional romance that he meets even Ray's distinctly untraditional treatment with naïve requests, like asking Ray to dinner with his parents. These scenes are downright side-splitting thanks to Melling's straight-faced delivery, and Ray's silent bewilderment in response. However, Lighton isn't satisfied with letting these instances slip away. They are, after all, some of the movie's most dramatically interesting moments too, and some of its most thematically lucid.
While neither man comes right out and lists their desires, they fight to express their wants and expectations in the only ways they know how, jogging right up to the line of explicitness before walking back. The film probes ever deeper into what this relationship — or any relationship — becomes when there's a breakdown of communication, and both parties start acting out. It just so happens that Colin and Ray exist at an extreme end of the spectrum when it comes to socially acceptable taste, though the movie never calls their desires into question.
SEE ALSO: 'Babygirl' finally shows us what subspace feels likeIf anything, the fact that Colin does not (and perhaps, cannot) explain their relationship to his parents is about the only thing that leads to incredulity, when their sweet boy suddenly shows up with a shaven head and a bike lock around his neck. The film derives its humor not from condescension, but from the unease of transformation. However, it also uses this as a source for some of its most affirming moments too — often shot in slow-motion, with a gentle hand — both when Colin finds unexpected self-confidence, and when Ray realizes he might just enjoy something more intimate in return.
Harry Melling and Aleksander Skarsgård deliver career-best work in Pillion.In a film so dependent on neither lead character speaking their mind, you need actors who can do the heavy lifting in silence. You also need actors who can meet Lighton on his complicated tonal wavelength, and who neither get bogged down by the story's slowly rupturing emotions, nor swept up in its energetic humor.
Melling and Skarsgård are more than up to the task. Lighton uses their respective "types" from their mainstream genre success — as Harry Potter's oafish cousin Dudley, and True Blood's sexy vampire antihero Eric Northman — as jumping-off points to launch an investigation into how being seen a certain way can mold your outlook on the world, and your sense of self. This is especially true when sex and relationships are involved, and neither actor is afraid to access the vulnerability required for its many sexual moments, verging on pornographically explicit.
Featured Video For You Does the 'Murderbot' cast relate to Murderbot?If anything, that's the easy part. What's more challenging is the way Melling navigates the gestures, the body language, and the all-permeating uncertainty of the kind of character whose embarrassment in social situations is generally the root of comedic scorn. Pillion is the kind of movie that knows full well what people find funny, and it doesn't begrudge them that. But it also forces them to confront the reasons why in the long run, using Melling's moving, captivating performance as a prism, and eventually, a mirror to lifelong anxiety and self-loathing. As a young man in search of himself through the demands of another person, he compliments each broad comedic stroke with a tremendously nuanced look at its effects, whether they gradually break him down, build him up, or some combination of the two.
It also helps to be paired opposite an exceptionally attractive Skarsgård, who's always had a magnetic presence but whose build and poise are practically otherworldly in this film. As Ray, he runs so hot and cold as to sear your flesh and give you frostbite in alternating strokes. After a while, his behavior becomes its own form of mystery, assisted by Lighton's lingering medium shots that capture both his body language and expressions at once — his naked torso and his obfuscated sense of self. However, Pillion doesn't seek to present answers that Ray doesn't want to give, or that Colin cannot find. Because in a film about the complexities of being pushed away — how it devastates and allures in equal measure — being presented with something concrete would mean losing out on the abstract mysteries Ray represents for Colin's mutating sense of self.
To call a queer performance involving nudity "brave" is an age-old cliché, but Skarsgård and Melling's bravery is revealed not through performing queerness. Rather, it's a result of accessing male vulnerability, to such a riveting degree that you perfectly understand the emotional deadlock of what one character desperately wants and the other deeply needs. The slow collision of these two forces is the heart and soul of Pillion, and it makes for some of the most entertaining drama and comedy you're likely to see this year.
Pillion was reviewed out of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival. It is slated for a 2025 release.
On May 19, President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump beamed to press and allies as they signed the administration's first major piece of tech regulation, the bipartisan Take It Down Act.
It was seen as a win for those who have long been calling on the criminalization of NDII, or the nonconsensual distribution of intimate images, and a federal pathway of redress for victims. Cliff Steinhauer, director of information security and engagement at the National Cybersecurity Alliance, explained it may be a needed kick in the pants to a lethargic legislative arena.
"I think it's good that they're going to force social media companies to have a process in place to remove content that people ask to be removed," he said. "This is kind of a start; to build the infrastructure to be able to respond to this type of request, and it's a really thin slice of what the issues with AI are going to be."
But other digital rights groups say the legislation may stir false hope for swift legal resolutions among victims, with unclear vetting procedures and an overly broad list of applicable content. The law's implementation is just as murky.
SEE ALSO: Trump administration detonates expansion of rural broadband access The act's notice and takedown provision could pose major problems"The Take It Down Act’s removal provision has been presented as a virtual guarantee to victims that nonconsensual intimate visual depictions of them will be removed from websites and online services within 48 hours," said the Cyber Civil Rights Initiative (CCRI) in a statement. "But given the lack of any safeguards against false reports, the arbitrarily selective definition of covered platforms, and the broad enforcement discretion given to the FTC with no avenue for individual redress and vindication, this is an unrealistic promise."
Exacerbating free speech and content moderation concernsThese same digital rights activists, who had issued warnings throughout the bill's congressional journey, will also be keeping a close eye on how the act may affect constitutionally protected speech, with the fear that publishers may remove legal speech to preempt criminal repercussions (or flatly suppress free speech, such as consensual LGBTQ pornography). Some worry that the bill's takedown system, modeled after the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), may over-inflate the power of the Federal Trade Commission, which now has the power to hold online content publishers accountable to the law with unlimited jurisdiction.
"Now that the Take It Down Act has passed, imperfect as it is, the Federal Trade Commission and platforms need to both meet the bill’s best intentions for victims while also respecting the privacy and free expression rights of all users," said Becca Branum, deputy director of the Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT)'s Free Expression Project. "The constitutional flaws in the Take It Down Act do not alleviate the FTC's obligations under the First Amendment."
A lack of government infrastructureOrganizations like the CCRI and the CDT had spent months lobbying legislatures to adjust the act's enforcement provisions. The CCRI, which penned the bill framework that Take It Down is based on, has taken issue with the legislation's exceptions for images posted by someone that appears in them, for example. They also fear the removal process may be rife for abuse, including false reports made by disgruntled individuals or politically-motivated groups under an overly broad scope for takedowns.
The CDT, conversely, interprets the law's AI-specific provisions as too specific. "Take It Down’s criminal prohibition and the takedown system focus only on AI generated images that would cause a 'reasonable person [to] believe the individual is actually depicted in the intimate visual depiction.' In doing so, the Take It Down Act is unduly narrow, missing several instances where perpetrators could harm victims," the organization argues. For example, a defendant could reasonably get around the law by publishing synthetic likenesses placed in implausible or fantastical environments.
Just as confusing is that while the FTC's takedown authority for applicable publishers is vast, its oversight is exempt for others, such as sites that don't host user-generated synthetic content, but rather their own, curated content. Instead of being forced to take down media under the 48-hour stipulation, these sites can only be pursued in a criminal case. "Law enforcement, however, has historically neglected crimes disproportionately perpetrated against women and may not have the capacity to prosecute all such operators," the CDT warns.
Steinhauer theorizes that the bill may face a general infrastructure problem in its early enforcement. For example, publishers may find it difficult to corroborate that the individuals filing claims are actually depicted in the NDII within the 48 hour period, unless they beef up their own oversight investments — most social media platforms have scaled back their moderation processes in recent years. Automatic moderation tools could help, but they're known to have their own set of issues.
No cohesion on AI regulationThere's also the question of how publishers will spot and prove that images and videos are synthetically generated, specifically, a problem that's plagued the industry as generative AI has grown. "The Take It Down Act effectively increases the liability for content publishers, and now the onus is on them to be able to prove that the content they’re publishing is not a deepfake," Manny Ahmed, founder and CEO of content provenance company OpenOrigins. "One of the issues with synthetic media and having provable deniability is that detection doesn’t work anymore. Running a deepfake detector post hoc doesn’t give you a lot of confidence because these detectors can be faked or fooled pretty easily and existing media pipelines don't have any audit trail functionality built into them.”
It's easy to follow the logic of such a strong takedown tool being used as a weapon of censorship and surveillance, especially under an administration that is already doing plenty to sow distrust among its citizens and wage war on ideological grounds.
Steinhauer still urges an open mind. "This is going to open a door to those other conversations and hopefully reasonable regulation that is a compromise for everyone," he said. "There's no world we should live in where somebody can fake a sexual video of someone and not be held accountable. We have to find a balance between protecting people, and protecting people's rights."
The future of broader AI regulation remains in question, however. Through Trump championed and signed the Take It Down Act, he and congressional Republicans also pushed to include a 10-year ban on state- and local-level AI regulation in their touted One Big Beautiful Bill.
And even with the president's signature, the future of the law is uncertain, with rights organizations predicting that the legislation may be contested in court on free speech grounds. "There's plenty of non pornographic or sexual material that could be created with your likeness, and right now there's no law against it," added Steinhauer. Regardless of whether Take It Down remains or gets the boot, the issue of AI regulation is far from settled.
Jupiter, the largest planet orbiting the sun, used to be much bigger and stronger when the solar system was just beginning to take shape, a pair of astronomers say.
Two scientists at Caltech and the University of Michigan suggest that early Jupiter was at least double its contemporary size. The primitive version of the gas giant could have held some 8,000 Earths within it, said Konstantin Batygin, lead author of the new study.
What's more, young Jupiter probably had a magnetic field 50 times more powerful. A magnetic field is an invisible force surrounding a planet that interacts with charged particles coming from the sun and cosmic rays.
To calculate those measurements, the scientists looked at how Jupiter’s moons move through space and how the planet spins. This unconventional approach, which didn't rely on traditional models, may fill gaps in the solar system's history. Many scientists refer to Jupiter as the "architect" of the solar system because its immense gravity influenced the orbits of other planets and carved up the cloud from which they all emerged.
"More than any other planet, Jupiter played a key role in shaping our solar system," Batygin said in a post on X. "Yet details of its early physical state are elusive."
SEE ALSO: Private spacecraft circling moon snaps photo with strange optical illusion NASA's Juno spacecraft snaps images of Jupiter and catches the tiny moon Amalthea as it orbits the planet. Credit: NASA / JPL-Caltech / SwRI / MSSS / Gerald EichstädtThe paper, published in the journal Nature Astronomy, rewinds the clock to just 3.8 million years after the first solid objects formed in the solar system and the cloud of gas and dust from which everything formed started to evaporate. This period — when the building materials for planets disappeared — is thought to be a pivotal point, when the general design of the solar system was locked in.
Jupiter, roughly 562 million miles from Earth today, has nearly 100 moons. But Batygin and his collaborator Fred Adams' research focused on two of the smaller ones, Amalthea and Thebe. Both are inside the orbit of the much larger moon Io, the most volcanically active world in the solar system, according to NASA.
These smaller moons have curiously tilted orbits, and their paths around the planet seem to hold clues about how Jupiter and its bevy of moons moved in the past, Batygin told Mashable. As Io migrates away from Jupiter, its gravity causes a kickback — sort of like how a gun recoils when it's fired — that has contributed to the tilts of the smaller moons.
"Similar to how our moon gradually moves away from Earth due to tides, Io is slowly drifting outward from Jupiter," Batygin said.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.By measuring Amalthea and Thebe's tilted orbits, the scientists reconstructed Io’s previous position. That location, they said, should help determine the outer edge of the disk of gas and dust that once surrounded the planet. Based on where they believe the disk ended, the researchers extrapolated how fast Jupiter was spinning back then: about once per day, comparable to its spin now.
Knowing Jupiter's early spin also helped them calculate its size. By applying the physics rules of spinning objects, they figured out how big Jupiter had to have been to match that rotation. The size of a young planet sheds light on its heat and interior dynamics as well. The scientists have concluded that early Jupiter must have started out extremely hot — about 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. That's a far cry from its modern average temperature of about -170 degrees.
The heat suggests Jupiter had a much stronger magnetic field. That allowed the team to calculate how fast Jupiter was collecting gas and growing — about the weight of one modern-day Jupiter every million years.
"It's astonishing," said Adams in a statement, "that even after 4.5 billion years, enough clues remain to let us reconstruct Jupiter's physical state at the dawn of its existence."
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TL;DR: Live stream Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3) in the 2025 NBA playoffs for free on YouTube. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
The 2025 NBA playoffs are slowly coming to their dramatic conclusion. The conference finals have already delivered a lot of massive moments, and we're expecting more of the same from the next contests.
The challenge facing the Minnesota Timberwolves is enormous. The Oklahoma City Thunder are 2-0 up in the series, and haven't looked particularly uncomfortable so far. It's time for Anthony Edwards to step and take over.
If you want to watch Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3) in the 2025 NBA playoffs for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3)?Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3) starts at 8:30 p.m. ET on May 24. This game takes place at Target Center.
How to watch Minnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3) for freeMinnesota Timberwolves vs. Oklahoma City Thunder (Game 3) in the 2025 NBA playoffs is available to live stream for free on YouTube.
This free live stream is geo-restricted to India, but anyone can access with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in India, meaning you can access this free live stream from anywhere in the world.
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There's an earnest thread of hope in Wes Anderson's The Phoenician Scheme, despite its anti-hero being a monument of corruption. Like many of Anderson's movies (The Royal Tenenbaums, Asteroid City, The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou, Fantastic Mr. Fox), his latest film focuses on a deeply flawed father who is determined to better connect to his brood. The biggest obstacle in his mission is always the man himself. But Anderson finds new flair in this film by playing within a new genre: the espionage thriller.
Anderson has long been condemned by those critics unmoved by the flattened delivery of his ensembles and his cinematic worlds painted in muted hues of pink and yellow, often condescendingly described as twee. Within these pillars of his style, Anderson has been rigorously interrogating toxic masculinity and how it collides with professional ambition and personal relationships. With The Phoenician Scheme, he brings assassins, spies, poisonous gas, gunplay, and explosions into the mix. These pops of blood and violence are more shocking because of how they visually disrupt Anderson's picture-book aesthetic. Yet, the father at the film’s core might be Anderson's most tender yet.
The Phoenician Scheme is a father-daughter story. Benicio del Toro as Zsa-zsa Korda and Mia Threapleton as Liesl in director Wes Anderson's "The Phoenician Scheme." Credit: TPS Productions / Focus FeaturesBenicio del Toro stars as notorious businessman Zsa-zsa Korda; he has no loyalty to nations, an unfettered ambition for wealth, and a reputation for international scheming and rampant corruption. He also has 10 children, including his eldest and only daughter Liesl (Mia Threapleton), who is preparing to take her vows as a nun. Well, that is unless the irreligious Korda has his say.
Hated by world governments, spy agencies, and business rivals, Korda has the peculiar accomplishment of having survived a series of assassination attempts, including six plane crashes. Fearing his time may be running out, he reconnects with his estranged novitiate to compel her to leave the church and become the heiress to his fortune. But first, she has to be the assistant in his latest enterprise, "The Phoenician Scheme."
In explaining this complicated building project of tunnels, trains, and dams, Korda presents a number of various shoe boxes, harkening to Anderson's adoration for a static shot of personal relics. (Later, a so-called family reliquary will also relish the delicate beauty of treasured objects.) He'll take her on a cross-country trip through 1950 Phoenicia, during which they'll meet an array of colorful characters, played by the likes of recurring collaborators Tom Hanks, Bryan Cranston, Richard Ayoade, Jeffrey Wright, Scarlett Johansson, and Benedict Cumberbatch, as well as new-to-the-troupe members Michael Cera and Riz Ahmed.
Though Liesl insists she wants a life of simplicity and devotion, Korda peppers her with a series of elaborate gifts, like a bejeweled rosary. Despite her protests, his effect on her can be seen in her changing appearance. Over the course of their adventure, Liesl's all-white novice uniform becomes peppered with color: red lipstick, green eye shadow, vibrant green tights, and a golden dagger. Her effect on her father is slower to show, but more profound, as he begins to question whether slave labor and man-made famines are not suitable business practices after all, and indeed may be "damnable — to hell!"
Benicio del Toro and Mia Threapleton are terrific together. Credit: TPS Productions / Focus FeaturesIt’s more than a generation gap that lies between the two, as Liesl harbors deep resentments against a father too emotionally guarded to accept responsibility for his shortcomings. This emotional disconnect grounds Anderson’s style of dialogue, which sprinkles abrupt honesty and intellectual curiosity in dialogue delivered softly yet sternly. When Liesl accuses her father of murdering her mother, her tone is restrained yet resolute. In response, he may bluster. But his bellowing is typically reserved for business partners in negotiations, where figures of traditional masculinity in formal finery or athletic gear roar sharp and fast at each other, much like the growling animals in Fantastic Mr. Fox.
Del Toro manages both modes, the softly grumbling patriarch and the hollering con man, with aplomb. As in The French Dispatch, he brings a bedraggled, world-weary texture to Anderson’s script, which silently speaks of a vulnerability beneath Korda's invincible persona.
Credit: TPS Productions / Focus FeaturesThreapleton proves a perfect scene partner for del Toro. With her big eyes and naturally frowning face, she ripples with tremors of emotion, ranging from annoyance to curiosity to protectiveness and love. Like her father, she speaks flatly. So even when she says of a particularly gaudy gift, “I love it,” her lack of enthusiasm amuses. But her swift action of immediately using the item speaks of her sincerity.
This conflict between the aural and visual plays out in several wonderfully throwback bits of comedy. Anderson harkens back to the era of the Great Stone Face, Buster Keaton, with characters facing off against deadly threats with comic physicality and pouncing into action with exaggerated poses of attack despite stoic expressions. Whether facing down another assassin or chasing a familial foe, the film’s stars have a winsome hilarity. Cera in particular, as a tutor besotted by Liesl, is laugh-out-loud funny.
Michael Cera was born to be in a Wes Anderson movie. Michael Cera as Bjorn and Mia Threapleton as Liesl in director Wes Anderson's "The Phoenician Scheme." Credit: TPS Productions / Focus FeaturesAs bug expert Bjorn, Cera is on the sidelines for much of the film, perched in the background with a curly wedge of blonde hair and carrying an array of baggage, a constant reminder Bjorn is but another acquisition of Korda's. Until he is not.
In his pursuit of Liesl, Bjorn reveals another, more swaggering side to himself. It’s an amusing and surprisingly sexy on-screen makeover. Cera plays both versions of Bjorn masterfully. With his gentle Swedish accent, he has a soft silliness as he earnestly speaks about the wonders of insects or gently tempts Liesl with a cold beer. Later, however, he is the rare truly self-confident Anderson character, an eccentric who owns up to his secrets but refuses to shrink from them. Joining with del Toro and Threapleton, Cera engages in a delicate dance of silliness and sincerity, nailing every step.
Of course, a Wes Anderson movie is always stuffed to the brim with terrific actors in quirky roles. The Phoenician Scheme does not disappoint on this front. It’s a thrill to see longtime collaborators like Bill Murray and Willem Dafoe pop up in a black-and-white series of heavenly visions. Recent collaborators like Bryan Cranston and Tom Hanks pop up for a brief yet splendidly entertaining sequence about bruised egos and competing masculinity. Where some Anderson movies have an actor who can’t quite find the tone and so ends up sticking out like a sore thumb, every piece of The Phoenician Scheme ensemble fits into its peculiar puzzle of corruption and family just right.
Credit: TPS Productions / Focus FeaturesOut of the Cannes Film Festival, several critics have condemned this film as one of Anderson’s very worst. Sincerely, I cannot connect to that reading. The Phoenician Scheme employs the pillars of style that have long supported Anderson's stories, while diving more deeply into a tale of a big, powerful man who's trapped by his own stodgy view of what being a man means. It is not Korda’s fleet of sons who might save his soul, but one pushy daughter who can’t resist a bit of shimmer. In that, The Phoenician Scheme becomes a charmingly hopeful tale about how even with our flaws we might find love, family, and salvation.
The Phoenician Scheme was reviewed out of the Cannes Film Festival. The movie will open in limited release in the U.S. on May 30 before going wide June 6.
In 2025, dating app fatigue is real, and frankly, who can blame daters? Popular apps are starting to look (and function) more and more like copies of each other and adding more and more AI features. Some daters are going to IRL events, even dungeon sound baths, to find love.
That being said, for those of us who are busy and/or a bit more introverted, dating apps have their pros. You can meet a wide range of people you wouldn't otherwise if you go to your local bar, and you can find out more about them from their profiles than what drinks they order.
SEE ALSO: The best dating apps worth downloading in 2025The truth is, dating apps aren't going away — and they're a big way potential partners meet each other.
So, are dating apps worth it?Even using the right app for you may still bring moments of uncertainty and frustration (you're dating, after all), but finding the app with the features that most align with your style of dating and the type of partnership you're looking for can absolutely still make online dating worth it.
According to a survey by the Pew Research Center, 44 percent of adults say they use dating apps to find a long-term partner rather than just casual dating or hookups. This survey also found that one in 10 partnered adults met their current partner through a dating app. So, even if you've yet to find that magical, swoon-worthy connection, the statistics show that it's definitely possible to find true love through online dating. Some of our own writers and editors have even found lasting love on these apps.
If you've been using apps for a while and are experiencing serious burnout, it's always fair to take some time off and come back to them when you feel ready. Our guide will be here for you! Even the best app can feel exceptionally tedious when you simply don't have the energy.
Which dating app is best for serious relationships?There are so many dating apps, but not all of them are created equal when it comes to finding a serious, committed relationship.
Some free dating apps are better suited for casual flings or hookups (e.g., Tinder, Grindr, etc.), while others have matching algorithms and profile features specifically designed to help users find meaningful connections (e.g., eharmony, OkCupid, Hinge, and Coffee Meets Bagel).
The good news is that we've done the research (and hands-on testing) to figure out which apps work best for long-term relationships, and Match Group isn't the only player in the game. Plus, all of these platforms are available via Google Play and the App Store, so having an Android or iPhone won't limit your options. Some of the old-school dating sites still maintain a desktop version as well.
To find your match, here are the best dating apps for serious relationships in 2025:
Netflix has a lot of shows and movies from which to choose. Like, a lot. Sifting through all the streaming options can cause chronic indecision, leaving us scrolling down the Netflix main page just trying to pick something to watch.
Instead of getting overwhelmed and rewatching a Netflix OG classic like Stranger Things, Bridgerton, or Squid Game, how about trying something new? Sure, even that selection can be overwhelming. But we've done the hard part of watching them, and can confidently vouch for these.
Here are the best new Netflix original series released in the past 12 months.
1. Adolescence Owen Cooper as Jamie Miller in "Adolescence." Credit: Courtesy of NetflixThe buzziest title to hit the streamer since Baby Reindeer (and just as unlikely a success story), Adolescence is a four-part series created by British playwright Jack Thorne and actor Stephen Graham. It tells of the murder of a 13-year-old girl and the resulting investigation that narrows in on her classmate Jamie (an astonishing performance from young actor Owen Cooper), who is quickly accused of the crime. The story is refracted through several different perspectives, including Jamie's family (with Graham giving a deeply affecting turn as Jamie's conflicted father, Eddie), the police, and the psychologists grappling with the aftermath. Heralded as an incisive commentary on modern boyhood and parenting, Adolescence is about as can't-miss a television event as there is these days. You should expect this series to win all sorts of awards in the near future. — J.A.
How to watch: Adolescence is now streaming on Netflix.
2. The LeopardItalian author Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa's 1958 novel has only been adapted one time previously. But since that adaptation, which dropped five years after the book, was from the legendary director Luchino Visconti and starred gorgeous movie stars Alain Delon, Claudia Cardinale, and Burt Lancaster (among many others), it's understandable it took another 60 years for anybody to want to go near the material again.
Still, the story — which focuses on an aristocratic family during the tumultuous unification of Italy in the 1850s — is epic enough that it made sense for it to now get the big-budget streamer miniseries treatment, and in the re-making, Netflix spared no expense. Costing $45 million, shot on location across Sicily, and utilizing thousands of extras on top of the main cast, The Leopard's six episodes are ones you'll want to watch on the biggest screen you've got in your home. More than one reviewer used the word "sumptuous" to describe it, and it's fitting to a T. — J.A.
How to watch: The Leopard is now streaming on Netflix.
3. Forever Michael Cooper Jr. as Justin Edwards and Lovie Simone as Keisha Clark "Forever." Credit: Elizabeth Morris / NetflixJudy Blume's 1975 novel has long been the subject of controversy thanks to its honest depiction of teenage sexuality — it's pretty much been on banned-book lists since its release. With book bannings in schools getting more frequent, it feels pointed in the best way to finally get a proper adaptation here. Starring Lovie Simone and Michael Cooper Jr. as young lovers-to-be Keisha and Justin, Blume's classic has been modernized a bit by series creator Mara Brock Akil (Girlfriends). Now set in 2018, the two teenagers are Black athletes who, besides the usual high-school anxieties (including getting into college), have dreams of athletic greatness. Produced by Oscar-winner Regina King (who also directed the first episode), the series takes its time across eight episodes to immerse us in Keisha and Justin's lives, making us feel like we're right there in the confusing hormonal tumult of their teenage love story. — J.A.
How to watch: Forever is now streaming on Netflix.
4. The Glass DomeWe do love a dark Nordic crime thriller, and The Glass Dome is checking all of those boxes. Léonie Vincent plays Lejla, a big city criminologist who returns to her small Swedish hometown when her mother dies only to find herself then sucked into the murder of a childhood best friend. Of course Lejla has her own troubling past — she was abducted as a child — and her methodical uncovering of this new mystery begins to dig up long buried memories of her own traumas. And yes, all of this sounds like a dozen other series we've seen before, but if it's an itch you find yourself getting, this is a great way to scratch it, as the six episodes of The Glass Dome are awash in plenty of moody atmosphere and exquisitely disturbing imagery. — J.A.
How to watch: The Glass Dome is now streaming on Netflix.
5. Ransom Canyon Josh Duhamel as Staten and Minka Kelly as Quinn in "Ransom Canyon." Credit: Anna Kooris / NetflixBased on a series of Western romance novels by writer Jodi Thomas, Ransom Canyon should be considered the gingham-sexy flip side to the Yellowstone franchise. Starring Josh Duhamel as the rancher Staten Kirkland and Minka Kelly as the local dancehall proprietress Quinn O’Grady, who catches his stoic eye, it's all very "what Kathleen Turner's character Joan Wilder was writing in the movie Romancing the Stone." Handsome men in denim, handsome women in denim, and their tumultuous love affairs set against the prairies, yadda yadda. Which very much has its place! And Ransom Canyon fits said place like a ranch-hand's beaten up and dusty glove. —J.A.
How to watch: Ransom Canyon is now streaming on Netflix.
6. The Four SeasonsUpdating Alan Alda's 1981 film by the same name into an eight-part limited series, Tina Fey co-wrote and stars in The Four Seasons, a light dramedy of sorts that follows three couples across four vacations, one landing in each season of the year. Fey plays Kate, who is married to Jack (Will Forte), and who is longtime besties with Danny (Colman Domingo) and Nick (Steve Carell). For their parts, Danny's married to Claude (Marco Calvani) while Nick is going through a divorce from his wife Anne (Kerri Kenney-Silver)...
If that sounds confusing, no worries, it all sorts itself out quick enough for anybody who's ever seen The Big Chill (which this series also gives off distinct vibes of) or any other generational friendship comedy of this kind. Which is to say that The Four Seasons is sweet and slow and observant, nothing like the manic laughs of 30 Rock, so we can properly sit back and watch these relationships shift and change with time while everybody's doing stellar lived-in work in their roles. (Domingo in particular continues being one of the great blessings of our age.) — J.A.
How to watch: The Four Seasons is now streaming on Netflix.
7. Zero Day Robert De Niro as George Mullen in "Zero Day." Credit: JoJo Whilden / NetflixWhile the political thriller Zero Day suffers from the both-sides-ism rampant in our current spineless media landscape — god forbid anyone takes sides when corporations are paying the tab! — it can still be enjoyed as a tangled-up spin on '70s paranoia thrillers with an exceptional and starry cast. You've got Robert De Niro (in his very first TV leading man gig) playing the former president, with Angela Bassett as the current one, and the two forced to work together after terrorists shut down the country via cyberattack. Lending ample support from there, you've got Jesse Plemons, Lizzy Caplan, Joan Allen, Connie Britton, Matthew Modine, Bill Camp, and Dan Stevens — a real who's who of hell yeahs. — J.A.
How to watch: Zero Day is now streaming on Netflix.
8. Tastefully YoursYou know the plot of the classic Jimmy Stewart movie The Shop Around the Corner? What about the plot of You've Got Mail then, since that's Nora Ephron doing a remake? It's the basis for basically every other rom-com in the 80 years since — two people in opposition at work because one values the thing being made while the other values the money the selling of the thing makes. But they fall in love despite their differences! Romance bridges the gap! Well, that's Tastefully Yours, a Korean meet-cute about food conglomerate heir Han Beom-woo (Kang Ha-neul) and picky chef Mo Yeon-joo (Go Min-si) who are forced to work together and end up finding love buried beneath all the kimchi. Bonus: besides the show's two leads being gorgeous and having buckets of chemistry, Tastefully Yours is spectacular food porn to boot. — J.A.
How to watch: Tastefully Yours is now streaming on Netflix.
9. Pulse Colin Woodell as Xander Phillips in "Pulse." Credit: Courtesy of NetflixA bit of an also-ran that got lost against the tidal wave of love for Noah Wyle's heart-pounding E.R. drama The Pitt, Netflix's similarly themed medical show Pulse still has plenty to recommend. Set in a Miami hospital that's engulfed by a hurricane, the show's first season is aided immeasurably by the ticking-clock feelings you get from its condensed time period — it's as if everything in Mother Nature's arsenal is being tossed at these beleaguered professionals all at once.
That includes a whole subplot about sex in the workplace when it turns out the chief surgeon (Colin Woodell) has been suspended after a report of inappropriate behavior with our lead, Dr. Simms (Willa Fitzgerald). That story lurks in between the show's chaos though — the main event is all of the shock and awe of an emergency room, and Pulse delivers that stuff in spades, staying compulsively watchable enough to keep your heart pitter-pattering the way these medical series are best intended to. — J.A.
How to watch: Pulse is now streaming on Netflix.
10. You (Season 5)If you've made it all the way to the fifth and final season of You, Netflix's sicko serial killer anti-romance starring a devilishly charming Penn Badgley, congratulations — it has plenty of the outlandish twists and turns you've come to expect. Now a prince of New York in a happily-ever-after marriage to a rich and influential woman (Charlotte Ritchie), Joe's promised to leave all of that nasty murder business in the past.
But that wouldn't make for a very entertaining series of episodes, now would it? Sure enough, before long Joe's back to his old dirty business again, and it's all gotten so over-the-top that you're best off just slamming shut the thinking part of your brain and taking the silly, sexy, sickening ride to its silly, sexy, and sickening conclusion. Don't stop to consider the amorality of it all until tomorrow, once your binge is done. Bad boys for life! — J.A.
How to watch: You is now streaming on Netflix.
11. The Gardener Álvaro Rico as Elmer in "The Gardener." Credit: Niete / NetflixRomance with amoral psychopaths is really in right now. Just in general — in the world at large, obviously. But also in entertainment! And so it goes with The Gardener, a slick Spanish six-part thriller starring the swoon-worthy Álvaro Rico as Elmer, a contract killer with a green thumb. Or vice versa. While the sign on the door might be for plant rescue, everybody's really buying murder when they walk into this greenhouse.
And that's fine for Elmer, because he was injured in a car accident as a child and doesn't have any of those fussy "emotions" that other people are always whining about. Not until he meets a sweet kindergarten teacher named Violeta (Catalina Sopelana) — nevermind that he's been hired to kill her too. These crazy kids will work through it, I'm sure! If Elmer's mother (Cecilia Suárez), the diabolical brains behind the operation, doesn't get in their way, that is. — J.A.
How to watch: The Gardener is now streaming on Netflix.
12. Bad ThoughtsComedian Tom Segura isn't for everybody, And not every skit in this twisted six-episode sketch comedy series lands. (Anybody so obsessed with "pushing the limit" can and will occasionally grate.) But when the bits do land, they make for a smorgasbord of hilariously disgusting surrealism and the lesser moments in between seem to fall away. Presented as a series of Segura's worst instincts brought to fantastical life, Bad Thoughts is a lot of shock and awe — mostly shock. (If explicit shit-plop potty humor ain't your cuppa, you'll probably wanna run in the opposite direction.)
And while there are guest stars like Dan Stevens, Rachel Bloom, and Shea Whigham popping up in every episode, Segura saves the biggest humiliations for the characters Segura plays himself. Which, as Johnny Knoxville proved back in the day with a million kicks to his own nuts, is as it should be for any respectable jock o' shock comedy. Transgress unto yourself before transgressing unto others. — J.A.
How to watch: Bad Thoughts is now streaming on Netflix.
13. The Residence Uzo Aduba as Cordelia Cupp in "The Residence." Credit: Jessica Brooks / NetflixSince we can only get a new Benoit Blanc mystery every couple of years, here comes The Residence to save the day. Starring Emmy-winner Uzo Aduba (Orange Is the New Black) as the colorful sleuth slash bird-watcher Cordelia Cupp, a murder has occurred at a White House state dinner, and everybody's a suspect! And that's a lot of mustache-twirling everybodies — eyebrow-raising representatives from across the globe are on hand, played by a wide world of comedy wizards including Jane Curtin, Jason Lee, Ken Marino, Giancarlo Esposito, Randall Park, Bronson Pinchot, Taran Killam, and, naturally, Kylie Minogue as herself. Among many, many others. Produced by Shonda Rhimes, The Residence maybe stretches a single mystery a little thin at eight episodes, but everybody's having so much fun it mostly whizzes by and goes down easy nonetheless. — J.A.
How to watch: The Residence is now streaming on Netflix.
14. UnseenNow into its second season, this South African action drama stars Gail Mabalane as a wallflower of a cleaning lady named Zenzi whose search for her missing husband leads her into a labyrinthine John Wick–like criminal underworld. Like in the original French series this is a remake of, it's Zenzi's ability to not get noticed that works in her favor… for a while, anyway! Until Zenzi's in way over her head with all of the piling-up bodies. Thankfully for as over-the-top as things get (wait til you see her fight off an attacker while chained to a table in prison early in the second season!) Mabalane remains extremely easy to root for, and Unseen is as addictive as ever. — J.A.
How to watch: Unseen is now streaming on Netflix.
15. Black Mirror (Season 7) Chris O'Dowd and Rashida Jones in "Black Mirror" Season 7 episode, "Common People." Credit: Robert Falconer / NetflixThe latest season of Charlie Brooker's astonishingly long-legged science-fiction anthology series is as good as anything the show's put out since premiering in the UK a full decade and a half ago. Brooker is somehow still finding new and stomach-churning ways to mine the unease of technological advances, gifting us with Twilight Zone–ish affairs of humor and horror in equal measure — there's Issa Rae and Emma Corrin starring in a black-and-white classic-Hollywood queer romance by way of AI; you've also got Paul Giamatti mining his memories for public display at an old friend's memorial service.
The real gut-punch of the season (there's always at least one) is the one called "Common People," starring Chris O'Dowd and Rashida Jones as a couple who get sucked into a nefarious medical program run by a terrifyingly chipper Tracee Ellis Ross. Lambasting the nightmare state of healthcare in this country, this episode, the very first of the season, will knock you on your ass if you've ever had to deal with the real-world equivalent of the industry's hamster wheel economics. It's too close to home, Mr. Brooker! — J.A.
How to watch: Black Mirror is now streaming on Netflix.
Netflix Starts at $7.99/Month at NetflixConnections: Sports Edition is a new version of the popular New York Times word game that seeks to test the knowledge of sports fans.
Like the original Connections, the game is all about finding the "common threads between words." And just like Wordle, Connections resets after midnight and each new set of words gets trickier and trickier—so we've served up some hints and tips to get you over the hurdle.
If you just want to be told today's puzzle, you can jump to the end of this article for the latest Connections solution. But if you'd rather solve it yourself, keep reading for some clues, tips, and strategies to assist you.
SEE ALSO: Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more: Play games on Mashable What is Connections Sports Edition?The NYT's latest daily word game has launched in association with The Athletic, the New York Times property that provides the publication's sports coverage. Connections can be played on both web browsers and mobile devices and require players to group four words that share something in common.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Each puzzle features 16 words and each grouping of words is split into four categories. These sets could comprise of anything from book titles, software, country names, etc. Even though multiple words will seem like they fit together, there's only one correct answer.
If a player gets all four words in a set correct, those words are removed from the board. Guess wrong and it counts as a mistake—players get up to four mistakes until the game ends.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Players can also rearrange and shuffle the board to make spotting connections easier. Additionally, each group is color-coded with yellow being the easiest, followed by green, blue, and purple. Like Wordle, you can share the results with your friends on social media.
Here's a hint for today's Connections Sports Edition categoriesWant a hint about the categories without being told the categories? Then give these a try:
Yellow: Teams located in the Volunteer State
Green: Baseball stats
Blue: Recent world champions
Purple: Cup Competitions
Need a little extra help? Today's connections fall into the following categories:
Yellow: Tennessee Pro Teams
Green: Baseball Stat Abbreviations
Blue: Last Four Teams to Win A Super Bowl
Purple: Soccer "Cups"
Looking for Wordle today? Here's the answer to today's Wordle.
Ready for the answers? This is your last chance to turn back and solve today's puzzle before we reveal the solutions.
Drumroll, please!
The solution to today's Connections Sports Edition #243 is...
What is the answer to Connections Sports Edition todayTennessee Pro Teams - GRIZZLIES, NASHVILLE SC, PREDATORS, TITANS
Baseball Stat Abbreviations - HR, PA, SO, WHIP
Last Four Teams to Win A Super Bowl - BUCCANEERS, CHIEFS, EAGLES, RAMS
Soccer "Cups" - CARABAO, FA, MLS, WORLD
Don't feel down if you didn't manage to guess it this time. There will be new Connections for you to stretch your brain with tomorrow, and we'll be back again to guide you with more helpful hints.
Are you also playing NYT Strands? See hints and answers for today's Strands.
If you're looking for more puzzles, Mashable's got games now! Check out our games hub for Mahjong, Sudoku, free crossword, and more.
Not the day you're after? Here's the solution to yesterday's Connections.
TL;DR: Live stream PSG vs. Arsenal in the Women's Champions League for free on DAZN. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
This weekend is absolutely stacked with huge games across a number of sports, including the Women's Champions League final. Arsenal take on defending champions Barcelona in this showpiece event.
The last time that Arsenal won this competition was back in 2007, and they are going up against a dominant force in this final. Barcelona has competed in the last four Women's Champions League finals, winning three of them. Another win here makes it four from five — that's the challenge facing Alessia Russo, Leah Williamson, and Katie McCabe.
If you want to watch Arsenal vs. Barcelona in the Women's Champions League final from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is the 2025 Women's Champions League final?Arsenal vs. Barcelona in the Women's Champions League final kicks off at 12 p.m. ET on May 24. This fixture takes place at the Estádio José Alvalade.
How to watch the 2025 Women's Champions League final for freeArsenal vs. Barcelona in the Women's Champions League final is available to live stream for free on DAZN.
This free live stream is not available all around the world, but anyone can access with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can unblock this live stream on DAZN to watch the Women's Champions League final for free from anywhere in the world.
Live stream the Women's Champions League final for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK
Visit DAZN
Watch Arsenal vs. Barcelona for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free-trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can access free live streams of the Women's Champions League final without actually spending anything. This obviously isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream Arsenal vs. Barcelona before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for DAZN?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on DAZN, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including the UK
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to eight simultaneous connections
30-day money-back guarantee
A two-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $139 and includes an extra four months for free — 61% off for a limited time. This plan includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee.
Live stream Arsenal vs. Barcelona in the Women's Champions League final for free with ExpressVPN.
TL;DR: Live stream PSG vs. Reims in the Coupe de France final for free on France TV. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
PSG are on the brink of a truly special season. They've already secured the Ligue 1 title and they face off against Inter Milan in the Champions League final on May 31. But there's another massive game on their schedule: the final of the Coupe de France.
PSG meet Reims in the final of this competition. PSG will be favorites to win this showpiece event, but we've already seen plenty of surprise results this season. Can Reims follow the lead of the likes of Bologna and Crystal Palace by upsetting the odds and winning the domestic cup?
If you want to watch PSG vs. Reims in the Coupe de France final for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is the 2025 Coupe de France final?PSG vs. Reims in the Coupe de France final starts at 3 p.m. ET on May 24. This fixture takes place at the Stade de France.
How to watch the 2025 Coupe de France final for freePSG vs. Reims in the Coupe de France final is available to live stream for free on France TV.
France TV is geo-restricted to France, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These handy tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in France, meaning you can live stream on France TV from anywhere in the world.
Live stream PSG vs. Reims for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in France
Visit France TV
Live stream PSG vs. Reims for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free-trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can watch PSG vs. Reims without committing with your cash. This isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream the Coupe de France final before recovering your investment.
if you want to retain permanent access to free streaming platforms from around the world, you'll need a subscription. Fortunately, the best VPN for streaming live sport is on sale for a limited time.
What is the best VPN for live sport?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on France TV, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including France
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to eight simultaneous connections
30-day money-back guarantee
A two-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $139 and includes an extra four months for free — 61% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee.
Live stream PSG vs. Reims in the Coupe de France final for free with ExpressVPN.
TL;DR: Live stream Aberdeen vs. Celtic in the Scottish Cup final for free on BBC iPlayer. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
Aberdeen last won the Scottish Cup in 1990, but they've got an opportunity to put 35 years of hurt behind them as they face off against Celtic in the 2025 Scottish Cup final. Sure, Celtic will be favorites as they look to add to their 41 victories in this competition, but anything can happen in a final.
We've already seen Crystal Palace upset the odds in a domestic cup final this season, so why can't Aberdeen do the same?
If you want to watch Aberdeen vs. Celtic in the Scottish Cup final for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is the 2025 Scottish Cup final?Aberdeen vs. Celtic in the Scottish Cup final starts at 3 p.m. BST on May 24. This fixture takes place at Hampden Park.
How to watch the 2025 Scottish Cup final for freeAberdeen vs. Celtic in the Scottish Cup final is available to live stream for free on BBC iPlayer.
BBC iPlayer is geo-restricted to the UK, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These handy tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in the UK, meaning you can unblock BBC iPlayer from anywhere in the world.
Live stream Aberdeen vs. Celtic for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in the UK
Visit BBC iPlayer
Live stream Aberdeen vs. Celtic for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free-trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can watch Aberdeen vs. Celtic without committing with your cash. This isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream the Scottish Cup final before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for live sport?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on BBC iPlayer, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including the UK
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to eight simultaneous connections
30-day money-back guarantee
A two-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $139 and includes an extra four months for free — 61% off for a limited time. This plan also includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee.
Live stream Aberdeen vs. Celtic in the Scottish Cup final for free with ExpressVPN.