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Inside the Production Design of The Lowdown

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The best noirs have a strong sense of time and place. But what if your noir hero is pretty messy? And what if your place is somewhere not instantly recognizable like Los Angeles or New York City? That was the challenge put to the crew of Sterlin Harjo’s acclaimed FX series “The Lowdown,” which stars Ethan Hawke as Lee Raybon, a self-described “truthstorian” stumbling upon conspiracies and crimes in Tulsa, Oklahoma.

Shot entirely in and around Tulsa, “The Lowdown” offered unique challenges to production designer Brandon Tonner-Connolly, who’s no stranger to the Oklahoma metropolis, having worked with Harjo on “Reservation Dogs” for three years.

“We wanted to approach this shaggy detective story where somebody is roaming through the different zones of a city and different subcultures and everything, but instead of it being LA or New York, we want it to be Tulsa, and show this world that you haven’t really seen in film or TV before,” he explained.

The overall look of the show’s sets was inspired by the harsh Tulsa weather – very hot in the summer, very cold in the winter. “Things tend to wear a bit,” he said. “You kind of get that dust bowl noir quality to it.”

But the first step in building out the world was finding where to create Lee’s apartment and place of business, a cozy and fittingly disorganized used book store. Tonner-Connolly also needed to craft additional locations nearby for some of Lee’s usual haunts – namely a law office and a diner. Luckily, all four materialized in the form of an abandoned block on which the crew built these locations. The camera could trail Lee out of the bookstore, onto the street, then inside the law office, all with a picturesque view of the Tulsa skyline.

“We don’t have any soundstages, so we built everything into these spaces that we found there,” Tonner-Connolly said. “The whole premise of the show is you’re following Ethan’s character as he dips in and out of these different spaces and worlds with this madcap energy sometimes, so we wanted to have the freedom where he could be walking down 6th Street, pop into this store, pop out, pop into this thing and not worry about cutting up the exteriors and interiors.”

Ethan Hawke and Peter Dinklage in "The Lowdown"
Ethan Hawke and Peter Dinklage in “The Lowdown” (FX)

Tonner-Connolly, an avid bookstore fan, raided local used bookstores to fill out Lee’s shop—but not too tidily. The messiness of Lee’s mind is made manifest in the store. The result was so convincing that passersby would frequently knock on the faux bookstore asking when it was going to open.

Indeed, Tonner-Connolly leaned on the Tulsa community and even Facebookn Marketplace to source props and set dressing, given that the city doesn’t have a local prop house like L.A. He sees that as a feature, not a bug. “We’re not renting the same old thing that you might see in some other show. We’re forced to go out there, and we’re finding new and unique things.”

Sometimes that involved meeting up with a stranger at a gas station to buy a sculpture or resurrecting pieces from a decades-abandoned local theme park for a sequence set at a counterfeit caviar cove tucked away by a lake.

“One of the things that I love about this show, and about Sterlin’s writing in general, is he treats all the characters with empathy,” Tonner-Connolly said.

So when it came time to create this illegal lake-adjacent compound, the production designer put a lot of thought into the reason the brothers in charge of the operation were running it. “How can we create a backstory and design a space that tells the story of these people, and tells the story of these characters, and doesn’t leave it as a one-note thing, but actually invites you to look at why they’re there and what they’re doing?” Even if what they’re doing is selling paddlefish eggs as caviar.

Welcome to Oklahoma.

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‘Josie and the Pussycats’ Singer Risks Losing Insurance Over Residual Dispute

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Kay Hanley, the frontwoman for Letters to Cleo and the singing voice for Rachael Leigh Cook in 2001’s “Josie and the Pussycats,” shared she’s at risk of losing her health insurance over a SAG-AFTRA residual dispute.

The musician took to X on Thursday, where she told her followers that she was allegedly not being paid for her vocal performance for the comedy-musical.

“I’m not being paid residuals for my singing on ‘Josie and the Pussycats’ bc film producers failed to provide paperwork to @sagaftra for my 20+ vocal sessions in 2000,” Hanley wrote. “SAG says I had 2 years (??) to report but I found out this year. Didn’t hit 25 earnings. I lose my health [insurance] July 1.”

A representative for SAG-AFTRA did not immediately respond to TheWrap’s request for comment.

The 2001 adaptation of the beloved Archie Comic notably underperformed at the box office following its release, bringing in only $14.8 million at the time. However, the film, which also starred Tara Reid, Rosario Dawson, Alan Cumming and Parker Posey, has gone on to become a cult classic in the years following.

In fact, one of the songs from the film, titled “Pretend To Be Nice,” continues to garner attention on YouTube, with fans in 2026 praising both the camp elements of the movie and its pop score.

“Massively underrated movie,” one fan commented earlier this year. Another chimed in with, “Super underrated movie and soundtrack.”

As for Hanley, “Josie and the Pussycats” wasn’t her only movie work, as the singer also appeared on the soundtracks for 1996’s “The Craft” and 1999’s “10 Things I Hate About You.” Letters to Cleo, meanwhile, was best known for its 1994 single, “Here & Now.”

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Box Office: ‘Toy Story 5’ Eyes Franchise Record With $14M+ Previews

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EXCLUSIVE: We’re hearing from box office sources that Disney/Pixar‘s Toy Story 5 is in play for a franchise record tonight when it comes to previews, around $13M-$14M, maybe more. Anything higher than $12M is a record preview night for the franchise. That’s what Toy Story 4 posted back in 2019 off previews that begin in select theaters at 5PM followed by a 6PM wide break.

If that $13M-$14M+ figure holds, that would rep the best previews 2026 has seen so far, higher than Lionsgate’s Michael ($12.6M), Amazon MGM Studios’ Project Hail Mary ($12M) and Disney/Lucasfilm’s Star Wars: Mandalorian and Grogu ($12M). A reminder that Illumination/Universal didn’t hold previews for Super Mario Galaxy Movie, which currently owns the best 3-day opening at the domestic box office YTD with $131.7M.

All good vibes for Toy Story 5 heading into the weekend with a 94% certified fresh critical score. No audience score yet. We heard heading into the weekend that the Andrew Stanton directed fifthquel had $25M in advance ticket sales, ahead of Super Mario Galaxy Movie. Domestic outlook is $140M+ at 4,425 locations with more than enough battery life from PLF and Imax screens. Global forecast is $275M, $135M expected from an 87% footprint abroad including China.

Biggest previews ever for a Pixar movie in U.S./Canada belongs to 2018’s Incredibles 2 ($18.5M), which also owns the weekend record for the Emeryville, CA studio ($182.6M).

2010’s Toy Story 3 posted previews of $4M, back when showtimes began at midnight.

We’ll have more updates in the AM.

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Kimmel Has One Assignment for Guest Host Rosie O’Donnell

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Jimmy Kimmel confirmed he’s set to take a two-month break from “Jimmy Kimmel Live!,” sharing the list of guest hosts filling in for him while he’s gone.

“Well, I hope you’re paying attention this summer because I will be taking the next two months off,” Kimmel told his right-hand Guillermo Rodriguez during Thursday’s monologue. “This time voluntarily.”

He continued: “But we have assembled a potent group of hosts to fill in for me, beginning with Tiffany Haddish, Colman Domingo, Ike Barinholtz, Anthony Anderson, Jelly Roll and, as a special treat for our commander-in-chief, I asked one of his all-time favorites, Rosie O’Donnell, to be here to keep the hits coming.”

As Kimmel’s studio audience erupted into applause, the late night host had a message for Trump, too: “And all I ask in return, Mr. President, is that you don’t do anything stupid while I’m gone.”

It’s unclear when exactly O’Donnell is set to step into the hosting duties, which will be a first for her on “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” (Though, O’Donnell is a veteran TV host, having led her own talk show “The Rosie O’Donnell Show” for six seasons between 1996 and 2002, as well as serving as a co-host on “The View” for two separate stints.)

However, ABC did confirm that Haddish would lead things off this summer, as she’s set to host the week of July 6. She will be followed by Anderson, Barinholtz, Domingo and Roll, per the network.

O’Donnell is a notable choice, however, given her nearly two-decade feud with Trump – which has seen the actress and the president exchange a number of jabs at one another over the years.

Watch Kimmel’s full monologue, which included a surprise from Matt Damon, above.

“Jimmy Kimmel Live!” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on ABC.

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