Entertainment
Aubrey Plaza says grief feels like a monster-filled gorge and admits ‘sometimes I want to dive into it’
“It’s a daily struggle,” Aubrey Plaza tells Amy Poehler while reflecting on husband Jeff Baena’s tragic death by suicide earlier this year
Aubrey Plaza, the acclaimed actress known for her deadpan wit and compelling performances, has spoken candidly about the devastating grief she has endured following the sudden loss of her husband, Jeff Baena. In a recent emotional appearance on Amy Poehler’s Good Hang podcast, Plaza described her pain as an “ocean of awfulness” that never truly goes away.
Baena, a respected writer and director most known for Life After Beth and Joshy, died by suicide at the age of 47 on January 3, 2025. The couple had been together since 2011 and quietly married in 2021 — a fact revealed only when Plaza lovingly referred to him as her “darling husband” in an Instagram post.
Now, eight months after his death, Plaza is slowly returning to public life and using her platform to open up about mental health, loss, and the reality of healing.

“I think I’m okay, but it’s a daily struggle”
During the episode, Parks and Recreation co-star and long-time friend Amy Poehler gently prompted the conversation by acknowledging what Plaza has been through.
“You’ve had this terrible, terrible, tragic year… you lost your husband… how are you feeling today?”
Plaza’s reply was raw and vulnerable.
“Right in this very, very present moment, I feel happy to be with you. Overall, I’m here and I’m functioning… I feel really grateful to be moving through the world. I think I’m okay, but it’s like a daily struggle, obviously.”
The 41-year-old Agatha All Along actress noted how even simple daily tasks can feel monumental under the weight of grief. But she emphasized gratitude — for her dog Frankie, for the people around her, and for being able to simply exist in the world.

A monster-filled gorge: How Plaza visualizes grief
In what many fans are calling a deeply relatable metaphor, Plaza compared her grief to the 2025 film The Gorge, a genre-blending thriller starring Miles Teller and Anya Taylor-Joy.
“There’s like a cliff on one side and a cliff on the other, then there’s this gorge in between filled with monster people trying to get them… I swear when I watched it, I was like that feels like what my grief is like.”
“At all times, there’s a giant ocean of awfulness. Sometimes I just want to dive into it. Sometimes I look at it. Sometimes I try to get away from it. But it’s always there.”
This brutally honest visualization resonated with many listeners, offering a more tangible way to understand the chaos that follows such immense personal loss.
Public tragedy, private strength
Following Baena’s death, Aubrey Plaza and his family issued a joint statement calling his passing an “unimaginable tragedy.” Friends and fans from the entertainment industry — including Nick Offerman, Alison Brie, and Chris Pratt — shared their condolences, highlighting Baena’s influence as both a creative and a compassionate soul.

Despite the public nature of her loss, Plaza has kept much of her mourning private — making her podcast appearance all the more significant. It marked one of the first times she has spoken at length about her husband’s death and the emotional aftermath.
Finding healing in small ways
While the road ahead remains uncertain, Plaza credits small moments and support systems for helping her stay grounded. She said her dog Frankie has become her unofficial “therapy dog,” and that connecting with close friends — like Poehler — has made all the difference.
Plaza also touched on the importance of finding new ways to live alongside grief, rather than trying to move past it.
“Grief isn’t something you conquer… it’s something you carry.”
It’s a sentiment that’s resonated deeply with fans across social media, many of whom have taken to platforms like X (formerly Twitter) and Reddit to share their own grief stories, finding solace in Plaza’s courage.
A quiet return to creativity?
While no official word has been given on upcoming projects, insiders suggest that Plaza may soon begin filming a new A24 feature later this year. She remains attached to several in-development titles, including a long-rumored dramedy set in New York.
For now, Plaza’s focus appears to be on healing — and if her appearance on Good Hang is any indication, she’s doing so with bravery, honesty, and profound emotional insight.
“I don’t have all the answers,” she told Poehler, “but I know I’m still here. And that counts for something.”
Entertainment
One Battle After Another” Swept Six Oscars But What Michael B. Jordan Did for Sinners Left Everyone Speechless…
The 98th Academy Awards belonged to Paul Thomas Anderson’s epic, but Ryan Coogler’s vampire masterpiece stole hearts — and a few records along the way.
Hollywood had its grandest night of the year on Sunday, March 15, and by the time Conan O’Brien wrapped up his hosting duties at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles, the film world had a new champion. Paul Thomas Anderson‘s One Battle After Another took home six Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director The Hollywood Reporter — a sweep that cemented the Warner Bros. drama as the defining film of its year. But the night was far from a one-film show.
Paul Thomas Anderson’s Long-Awaited Crown
For anyone who has followed awards season long enough, Sunday felt like a reckoning. Anderson took the statuette for Best Directing after winning earlier for Best Adapted Screenplay for One Battle After Another — his first Academy Awards after 11 previous nominations dating back to 1998. Deadline That’s nearly three decades of “almost.” He became just the ninth person in history to win Best Picture, Directing, and Screenplay Oscars on the same night. Deadline
The ceremony also marked the debut of a brand-new category — Best Achievement in Casting — with One Battle After Another taking home the inaugural award. ABC News Best Casting is the first new category at the Academy Awards in 25 years. CBS News Casting director Cassandra Kulukundis made history as the first-ever winner of that prize.
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One Battle After Another‘s Sean Penn won Best Supporting Actor, following up his win at the Actor Awards this month. It’s his third career Oscar, but his first in the Supporting Actor category. Deadline Penn, notably, was not present at the ceremony to accept the award in person.
Michael B. Jordan and the Sinners Wave
If One Battle After Another was the evening’s crown jewel, Ryan Coogler‘s Sinners was its most electric story. Sinners scooped up four Oscars, including Best Actor for Michael B. Jordan The Hollywood Reporter, who delivered a tour-de-force dual performance as twin brothers Smoke and Stack in the film’s vampire-infused Depression-era setting.
Ryan Coogler won his first Oscar for Best Original Screenplay NPR, a deeply personal project years in the making. Sinners also nabbed the award for Best Original Score for Ludwig Göransson and Best Cinematography for Autumn Durald Arkapaw, who became the first woman to ever win the award. The Hollywood Reporter That last win was historic, quietly revolutionary, and deserved every standing ovation it got.
Sinners had the most nominations of any movie ever with 16. CBS News Sixteen. It walked away with four. The math may sting, but those four wins were seismic.
Jessie Buckley, Amy Madigan, and the Women Who Won
Jessie Buckley received the Best Actress Oscar for her role in Hamnet, while Amy Madigan secured the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role in Weapons. ABC News Both wins came as genuine crowd pleasers. Buckley’s portrayal in the Shakespeare-inspired drama had been building buzz since its festival debut, and Madigan’s win — in a stacked supporting category — felt like a long-overdue recognition of one of American cinema’s most underappreciated talents.

Frankenstein’s Craft Sweep and Netflix’s Strong Night
Netflix‘s Frankenstein took three wins for craft awards, including Best Makeup & Hairstyling, Best Costume Design, and Production Design. Deadline The film, directed by Guillermo del Toro, had long been considered a strong contender in the technical categories, and it delivered precisely there. Amid the studio’s $110 billion acquisition by Paramount Skydance, Warner Bros. led all distributors with 11 statuettes. Netflix was next with seven, including three for Frankenstein. Deadline
K-Pop Makes Oscar History
In one of the night’s most unexpected moments, KPop Demon Hunters won the Oscar for Best Animated Feature, while the film’s song “Golden” became the first K-pop song to ever win an Oscar, for Best Original Song. The Hollywood Reporter The win sent shockwaves across social media and beyond, marking a genuine cultural watershed moment for the Korean music industry and its global fanbase.
Moments Beyond the Movies
The 98th Oscars weren’t without their political undertones. Javier Bardem, while presenting the award for Best International Feature Film, said on stage, “No to war and free Palestine.” NPR David Borenstein, co-director of winning documentary Mr. Nobody Against Putin, spoke about how a country is lost through “countless small, little acts of complicity.” NPR
The ceremony also featured a rare tie in the Live Action Short Film category. NPR The last Oscar tie was back in 2013.
In the In Memoriam segment, Billy Crystal began the tribute with a remembrance of his “best friend” Rob Reiner, and Barbra Streisand paid heartfelt tribute to her late The Way We Were co-star Robert Redford. Deadline
The Big Picture
The 98th Academy Awards were, by almost every measure, a great night for cinema. One Battle After Another rewarded a filmmaker who had waited a lifetime for recognition. Sinners shattered records and broke barriers. Hamnet gave us a best actress winner to remember. And K-pop got its first Oscar. Whatever you thought was going to happen walking into Sunday night — Hollywood found a way to surprise you anyway.
Entertainment
Conan O’Brien Called Himself ‘The Last Human Host’ at the Oscars and What He Said About Timothée Chalamet Had the Whole Room Talking…
From roasting Netflix’s Ted Sarandos to going after Sean Penn and the Epstein files, O’Brien’s Oscars monologue was sharper, weirder, and far more political than anyone expected.
Nobody walking into the Dolby Theatre on Sunday night quite knew what version of Conan O’Brien they were going to get. The late-night legend had publicly downplayed the political edge of his planned monologue in pre-show interviews — and then proceeded to absolutely ignore that promise the moment the spotlight hit him.
In what many are already calling one of the most memorable Oscars openings in years, O’Brien delivered a rapid-fire, surprisingly barbed monologue at the 98th Academy Awards that bounced between absurdist comedy, Hollywood industry shots, and genuine political nerve. He dished out jokes ranging from mocking Timothée Chalamet‘s ballet and opera controversy, making cracks about Sean Penn and Ted Sarandos, and taking aim at the lack of arrests over the Jeffrey Epstein files. The Hollywood Reporter Not exactly light dinner-party conversation — but then again, this was never going to be that kind of night.
“The Last Human Host” Opens With a Warning
O’Brien opened by declaring, “I’m Conan O’Brien and I’m honored to be the last human host of the Academy Awards. Next year it’s going to be a Waymo in a tux.” The Hollywood Reporter It was a sharp, self-aware jab at the AI conversation consuming Hollywood, and it set the tone perfectly — this was a host who had done his homework, knew exactly where the landmines were, and was going to step on every single one of them.
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He also noted that “Last year, when I hosted, Los Angeles was on fire. But this year, everything’s going great!” The Hollywood Reporter — delivered with the kind of deadpan that only someone who has survived decades in late-night television truly masters.
The Chalamet Ballet Bomb
If there was one joke the internet had been waiting for all week, it was this one. Referencing Best Actor nominee Timothée Chalamet’s recent controversial comments about ballet and opera, O’Brien joked that organisers had been warned about potential outrage from arts communities. “I’m told there’s concern about attacks from both the opera and ballet communities,” he said. “They’re just mad you left out jazz.” The Nightly
The cameras quickly cut to a smiling, white-suited Chalamet in the audience. Deadline He took it graciously, which honestly may have been the most impressive performance of his entire awards season.
Nominated for Best Actor for his lead performance in ping-pong pic Marty Supreme, Chalamet has been Topic #1 on chat boards, late night comedy shows, and daytime talkers since his podcast comment that nobody cared anymore about ballet and opera. Deadline O’Brien, naturally, was never going to let that one go.
Ted Sarandos Gets the Theater Treatment
Noting that Netflix boss Ted Sarandos was in the audience, O’Brien said: “Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos is here. And this is exciting: It’s his first time in a theater!” The Nightly He then slipped into character, imagining Sarandos’s internal monologue: “Why are they all together enjoying themselves? They should be home alone, where I can monetize it.” Variety
Sarandos, laughing in the audience, seemed to take the ribbing well. Deadline Which is either a sign of a good sport — or a man who knows that Netflix just won seven Oscars and can afford to laugh.
Sean Penn, Film Jokes, and Going After Everything
O’Brien didn’t stop at the soft targets. He took clear aim at the films themselves with the kind of jokes that walk a very fine line. On Sinners director Ryan Coogler, who declined to become a voting member of the Academy, O’Brien said: “But the rest of you pricks seem to love it.” Boston.com The room’s reaction was half-shocked, half-delighted — which is pretty much the sweet spot for any good Oscars joke.

He also riffed that “Between Hamnet and Bugonia it’s been a big year for movies that sound like off-brand lunch meat.” Boston.com On Jessie Buckley‘s Hamnet, where Shakespeare‘s wife gives birth alone in the woods: “Or as we call that here in America, affordable healthcare.”
He also wasn’t going to let the political elephant in the room go unacknowledged. On the possibility of things getting too political: “I should warn you: Tonight could get political. Okay? And if that makes you uncomfortable, there’s an alternate Oscars being hosted by Kid Rock. It’s at the Dave & Buster’s down the street.” Variety
The Sketch That Started It All
Before a single joke was spoken at the podium, O’Brien had already set the tone with a pre-recorded opening sketch. He opened the show by cosplaying as Aunt Gladys, the viral witch from Weapons played by nominee Amy Madigan, during a pretaped sketch. While being chased by children, he ran through the sets of many of this year’s Oscar-nominated films. Gold Derby It was chaotic, funny, and exactly the kind of commitment to a bit that has always made O’Brien stand apart from the average awards show host.
A Serious Note to Close
For all the laughs — and there were plenty — O’Brien also knew when to put the jokes down. Towards the end of his monologue, O’Brien said: “Tonight’s Oscars are being watched by more than a billion people around the world. Tonight is an international event. If I can be serious for just a moment, everyone watching right now around the world is all too aware that these are very chaotic, frightening times. It’s at moments like these that I believe that the Oscars are particularly resonant.”
He went on to note that 31 countries across six continents were represented at the awards show, saying, “Every film we salute is the product of thousands of people speaking different languages, working hard to make something of beauty.”
It was a genuine moment — the kind that reminded you why a good host is irreplaceable. Whatever a Waymo in a tux may do next year, it’s going to have a very hard time following this.
Entertainment
Jessie Buckley Channelled Grace Kelly, Zendaya Arrived Fashionably Late, and Chase Infiniti Stole the Whole Oscars Red Carpet Here’s What You Missed…
From princess gowns to peacock feathers to a mother-daughter moment nobody saw coming, the 2026 Oscars red carpet was a fashion night for the ages.
Before a single Oscar was handed out inside the Dolby Theatre on Sunday, Hollywood had already given the world something to talk about. The red carpet for the 98th Annual Academy Awards was, by any measure, one of the most visually stunning in recent memory — a sprawling parade of couture, diamonds, feathers, and a few deliberate fashion Easter eggs that only true cinema lovers would catch.
Here is a walk through the night’s most memorable arrivals, one stunning look at a time.
Jessie Buckley: The Grace Kelly Tribute Nobody Expected
Jessie Buckley, up for Best Actress for her star turn in Hamnet, continued her Chanel streak in a custom pink bustier chiffon dress with a red satin leather stole that was inspired by a look Grace Kelly wore to the Oscars in the 1950s. W Magazine It was the kind of fashion reference that rewards the people paying attention — and Buckley, who went on to win Best Actress that night, looked every inch the legend she was paying homage to.
Chase Infiniti: A Debut That Felt Like a Coronation
It’s easy to forget that Chase Infiniti isn’t just making her Oscars red-carpet debut this year — One Battle After Another is her first movie, period. Marie Claire She made her Oscars debut early in a custom lavender Louis Vuitton floor-length ruffle dress and a diamond De Beers London choker. Dazed For a first-ever red carpet appearance, it was impossibly composed — the kind of arrival that veterans spend years trying to master.
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Rose Byrne: Pure Elegance in Dior
Nominee Rose Byrne donned a black Dior dress that dipped halfway down her back, echoing themes from designer Jonathan Anderson‘s sophomore collection shown earlier this month, with beaded flowers that evoked a stroll through the Tuileries. W Magazine Byrne had told press ahead of the season that the one feeling she’s always chasing on the red carpet is “elegance.” Consider it delivered.
Teyana Taylor: Chanel Reimagined
Teyana Taylor has levelled up her red carpet style with every stop on the One Battle After Another awards circuit. In her first red carpet dress by Chanel creative director Matthieu Blazy, Taylor proved that the codes of even the most traditional fashion houses can be remixed in the name of Hollywood’s biggest night. A Tiffany & Co. necklace featuring more than 18 carats of diamonds added almost more sparkle than the step-and-repeat could handle. Marie Claire Pre-show, she had told Variety, “Oh, my God, it’s going to be good.” She was not wrong.
Elle Fanning: A Real-Life Disney Princess Moment
Elle Fanning was the picture of a princess in a Givenchy by Sarah Burton gown, fitted with a strapless bodice, tulle ball skirt, and hand-stitched lavender-tinted wisteria petals. Marie Claire Fanning revealed on the carpet that Burton is a “dear friend” and that her team personally sewed every single petal onto the gown. First-ever Oscar nomination, first unforgettable red carpet moment — not a bad night for the Sentimental Value star.

Anne Hathaway’s Devil Wears Prada Wink
This one was for the fans. Anne Hathaway cleverly nodded to her Devil Wears Prada character Andy Sachs in an all-over floral gown by Valentino Marie Claire — a reference to one of that film’s most iconic lines. Anna Wintour declined to comment on Hathaway’s dress when they presented the Best Costume Design award side by side. CNN The irony was absolutely not lost on anyone in the room.
Timothée Chalamet Keeps It Classic
Timothée Chalamet arrived in a white shirt, white silk tie, and off-white tuxedo jacket, all by Givenchy. CNN Understated, clean, and quietly effective — the perfect outfit for a man who knew he was already the most-talked-about person at the ceremony before he’d even stepped out of the car. His partner Kylie Jenner, who has been dating the Marty Supreme star for three years, arrived in a show-stopping Schiaparelli gown that became one of the night’s most-photographed looks.
Goldie Hawn and Kate Hudson: The Arrival Everyone Needed
Mother-daughter duo Kate Hudson and Goldie Hawn arrived arm-in-arm at the Oscars. Marie Claire Hudson wore Giorgio Armani and the two shared a laugh before the cameras. CNN In a night full of carefully constructed solo moments, this one felt genuinely warm and unscripted — and the internet responded accordingly.
Zendaya: The Most Fashionably Late Arrival of the Night
Most years, Kylie Jenner is the only celebrity sneaking into the Oscars late. But for the 98th Annual Academy Awards, the title of most fashionably late arrival went to Zendaya. After stylist Law Roach teased her arrival, Zendaya joined The Drama co-star Robert Pattinson to present the award for Best Director in a custom Louis Vuitton gown — a chocolate brown minimalist dress featuring a slanted single shoulder and draping along the hips. Marie Claire Late and still the best dressed in the room. Some people just have that gift.
Michael B. Jordan, Demi Moore, and More
Michael B. Jordan adjusted his Louis Vuitton suit on the carpet before heading inside to win Best Actor. CNN Demi Moore arrived in what can only be described as peacock realness — a custom Gucci feathered number. Dazed Priyanka Chopra Jonas also made her presence felt CNN among the night’s star-studded arrivals, turning the step-and-repeat into what felt less like a photo call and more like a declaration.
The Bigger Picture
With plenty of gothic feathers and Glinda-style dresses, the looks this year were polarised between princess-core and avian-chic. Dazed It was a carpet that somehow managed to feel both timeless and completely of this moment — fashion that said something, worn by people who knew exactly what they were saying. The awards inside the Dolby Theatre were remarkable. But out here, under the lights and flashbulbs on a Sunday evening in Hollywood? The real show had already begun.
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