Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith Are Friendly Exes as They Leave L.A. Restaurant Arm-in-Arm

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith were spotted arm-in-arm after dining with their children in Beverly Hills on Saturday, April 25

People Antonio Banderas and his ex-wife Melanie GriffithCredit: BACKGRID

NEED TO KNOW

  • The former couple, married for 18 years, have maintained a close friendship since their 2015 divorce

  • Banderas has called Griffith his "best friend" and praised their shared experiences, including raising their daughter Stella

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith may have divorced in 2015, but the pair are still clearly on good terms.

On Saturday, April 25, Banderes, 65, and Griffiths, 68, were spotted leaving Beverly Hills sushi restaurant Matsushia arm-in-arm after emnjoying dinner together. They were also joined by their daughter,Stella Banderas, 29, as well as Griffith’s son, Alexander Bauer, 40, who she shares with her first ex-husband, actor Steven Bauer.

The actress’ other daughter, actress Dakota Johnson, who she shares with her second ex-husband Don Johnson, appeared to have missed the family outing.

Antonio Banderas and his ex-wife Melanie GriffithCredit: BACKGRID

The pair, who were married for 18 years before theirdivorceover a decade ago, wore complementary outfits for their dinner date, both opting for cropped jackets and jeans while theMask of Zorrostar held his baseball cap in his hands.

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Antonio Banderas and his ex-wife Melanie GriffithCredit: BACKGRID

The actors — who firstbonded while filmingtheir 1995 rom-com,Two Much— have maintained a famously close relationship despite no longer being married.

When they met, Griffith and Banderas were both still married to their former partners —Don Johnsonand Ana Leza — but by 1996, they were both divorced and they married in London that May.

In October 2019, Banderas was full of praise for his ex-wife. “Melanie is not my wife anymore, but I thinkshe is my best friend," he told PEOPLE. "I love her and will love her until the day I die. She’s my family.”

Meanwhile, in June 2020, Banderas once again reflected on their relationship toEl Break de las 7. He shared that there were “wonderful moments” in their marriage that he won’t forget, per Spanish outletHola!. The actor noted, “We had a wonderful daughter that we both love and that is the end result of our relationship, the most beautiful thing we have ever done together.”

In addition, in April 2023, Griffith reminisced about their relationship while celebrating Holy Week. Aftersharing photosof the festivities on Instagram, she looked back on attending Holy Week with her ex-husband. “During the 19 years I was married to Antonio, one of the many extraordinary experiences he gave to me and the kids was our introduction to and subsequent love for Semana Santa (Holy Week),” she wrote on social media.

Read the original article onPeople

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith Are Friendly Exes as They Leave L.A. Restaurant Arm-in-Arm

Antonio Banderas and Melanie Griffith were spotted arm-in-arm after dining with their children in Beverly Hills on Saturday, April 25 ...
Price hikes due to Iran war will be felt for at least eight months, minister warns

Price hikesas a result of theIran warwill be felt for at least eight months after the conflict ends, a government minister has warned.

The Independent US

Chief Secretary to the prime minister,Darren Jones,warned people will see higher energy, food and flight prices “as a consequence of what Donald Trump has done in the Middle East” and said there will be a “long tail from this”.

The government has stepped up planning for how tooffset potential shortagessparked by the conflict, following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key shipping lane crucial for the supply of a fifth of global oil and gas, which sent oil prices soaring.

Meanwhile, peace talks planned for this weekend have stalled, with Iran insisting no direct talks would take place andDonald Trump calling off a trip for US negotiatorsto visit mediators in Pakistan.

The prime minister will chair another meeting of the Cabinet committee set up to deal with the fallout on Tuesday, after the so-called Middle East Response Committee met last week.

Darren Jones said price hikes will be felt for more than eight months after the Iran war ends (PA)

Meanwhile, a contingency planning group of ministers led by Mr Jones is meeting twice a week. They are focusing on live monitoring of stock levels and seeing what plans are in place to address supply chain disruption.

But Mr Jones told the BBC that consumers are more likely to see prices go up rather than gaps on supermarket shelves as a consequence of the conflict.

“Quite frankly, that's probably going to come online, not just in the next few weeks, but the next few months. There's going to be a long tail from this”, he said.

Pressed on how long people will see economic disruption, Mr Jones said: "I think our best guess is eight plus months from the point of resolution that you'll see economic impacts coming through the system.

"So people will see higher energy prices, food prices and those types of issues, flight ticket prices as a consequence of what Donald Trump has done in the Middle East.

“The government here in the UK, the work that I'm doing with the prime minister is looking at all of those things and saying, ‘what can we do within our power to help people to get through those difficult times?’”

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Oil and gas prices have increased sharply since the conflict began at the end of February.

And earlier this month, the Bank of England warned that around 1.3 million more UK households are facing a jump in theirmortgage costsfollowing the economic shock caused by the conflict.

The Bank’s latest financial stability report (FSR) said the UK economic outlook has “deteriorated”, increasing pressure on UK households and businesses.

The government has been seeking to calm the public, urging drivers to keep filling up with petrol and not to change their travel plans amid fears over potential jet fuel shortages.

It comes after leaked government documents last week revealed the UK could seeshortagesof key supermarket goods this summer if theIran warcontinues.

Officials have put together contingency plans for a “reasonable worst-case scenario”, highlighting that the closure of the crucialStrait of Hormuzshipping route could lead to carbon dioxide shortages.

The secret analysis – firstreported byThe Times– was codenamed “Exercise Turnstone” and was run by the government’s emergency committee, Cobra.

The “reasonable worst-case scenario” was based on the assumption that the Strait of Hormuz had not been reopened and nopeace deal had been reached.

It warned supplies of CO2 could fall to just 18 per cent of current levels – a warning based on a key UK plant suffering a mechanical error, and high gas costs leading to a fall in production across Europe of ammonia and fertiliser, which make CO2 as a by-product.

Farming and hospitality would be the two worst-hit industries, because CO2 is used to prolong the shelf life of foods, including salad, packaged meats, and baked goods.

Supermarkets have since said they are working with the government to plan for a worst-case scenario where food producers would be impacted.

Price hikes due to Iran war will be felt for at least eight months, minister warns

Price hikesas a result of theIran warwill be felt for at least eight months after the conflict ends, a government minister has warned. ...
Kate Jackson Says She Never Doubted “Charlie’s Angels” Was ‘Going to Be a Hit’ (Exclusive)

Kate Jackson revealed she pitched the original concept for Charlie's Angels to Spelling-Goldberg Productions

People Kate Jackson at PaleyFest LA 2026Credit: Steve Granitz/FilmMagic/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • The actress said credited the TV series’ success to its unique premise and the chemistry of the cast

  • Jackson also said her friendships with costars Jaclyn Smith and Cheryl Ladd remain strong 50 years after the show’s debut

Fifty years afterCharlie's Angelspremieredin 1976,Kate Jacksonrevealed she always knew the TV show would be a success.

The actress reunited withcostarsJaclyn SmithandCheryl Laddduring PaleyFest LA 2026 for theCharlie's Angels50th Anniversary Celebration on April 6. She opened up her role in pitching the show's premise to production company Spelling-Goldberg Productions.

Jackson, 77, told PEOPLE in an exclusive interview at the event that she sat down with executives, who had pitched a different concept that she had doubts about. “I was looking down, listening, thinking, ‘This is the worst thing I ever heard in my life,’ ” she recalled.

Kate Jackson in 'Charlie's Angels' (1976)Credit: ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty

She had previously brainstormed ideas for the subject of the new show and used her previous role as a rookie cop onThe Rookiesas inspiration for similar idea to pitch the executives.

"It was really easy becauseThe Rookieswas about three young rookie cops. So just flip that and have three young women who go to the police academy, meet each other, become close friends [and] work their way up to plainclothes detectives,” Jackson said.

She shared her idea for the new show with executive producer Aaron Spelling, and the show debuted just one year later. The star is credited with givingCharlie's Angelsits name, after producers had originally pitchedAlley Cats.

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"We started shooting the pilot, and I never doubted. I don't know why, but I never doubted that it was going to be a big hit. It was unique," the actress said.

Part of the reason she had such confidence in the show's success, Jackson said, is the chemistry she instantly shared with her costars.

"It was unusual. The three of us had chemistry that was ... I mean, we're still sisters today and you people are all so crazy that you're still around after 50 years. I can't believe it," she continued.

Kate Jackson in ‘Charlie’s Angels’ (1978)Credit: ABC Photo Archives/Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty

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Jackson said her friendships with Smith, 80, and Ladd, 74, remain strong as ever, even after the show's debut five decades ago. She said that "there's a real genuine care" between the actresses.

"It is a real love. It doesn't go away. You might not think about it every day, but you don't question it. It's just there," Jackson said.

Read the original article onPeople

Kate Jackson Says She Never Doubted “Charlie’s Angels” Was ‘Going to Be a Hit’ (Exclusive)

Kate Jackson revealed she pitched the original concept for Charlie's Angels to Spelling-Goldberg Productions NEED TO KNOW ...
Syria’s first public trial of Assad-era officials opens in Damascus

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — The first public trial in Syria of officials linked to the rule of former President Bashar Assad opened in Damascus Sunday.

Associated Press Atef Najib, former head of the Political Security Branch in the Daraa area during Bashar Assad's rule, sits in the defendants' cage during a trial session at the Palace of Justice in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, April 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed) Atef Najib, former head of the Political Security Branch in the Daraa area during Bashar Assad's rule, sits in the defendants' cage during a trial session at the Palace of Justice in Damascus, Syria, Sunday, April 26, 2026. (AP Photo/Ghaith Alsayed)

Syria Trial

Atef Najib, a former Syrian army brigadier general who was head of the Political Security Branch in southern Syria's Daraa province under Assad, appeared in the courtroom to face charges related to “crimes against the Syrian people,” state-run news agency SANA reported.

Najib was in that position in 2011 when teenagers who scrawled anti-government graffiti on a school wall in Daraa were arrested and tortured. The case became a catalyst for mass protests against the repressive policies of Assad's government security forces.

The protests were met by a brutal government crackdown and spiraled into a 14-year civil war that ended with Assad's ouster in December 2024 in a lightning rebel offensive. Assad fled to Russia, while most members of his inner circle also escaped Syria.

Assad himself and his brother, Maher, former commander of the Syrian military's 4th Armored Division — which Syrian opposition activists have accused of killings, torture, extortion and drug trafficking, in addition to running its own detention centers — were charged in absentia, along with a number of other former high-ranking security officials.

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Najib was the only one of the defendants who was arrested and present in person in court Sunday for a preparatory session in the trial, which will continue next month.

Crowds gathered outside the courthouse to celebrate.

The government of interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa has faced criticism over delays in launching a promised transitional justice process. Syria is struggling to heal following 14 years of civil war that left an estimated half a million people dead, millions more displaced, and the country battered and divided.

Authorities now appear to be moving more aggressively to prosecute officials linked to Assad.

Syrian authorities on Friday arrested Amjad Yousef, a former intelligence officer who appeared ina video leakedfour years ago that purportedly showed him and his comrades executing dozens of blindfolded and shackled prisoners in the Damascus suburb of Tadamon during the country’s civil war.

Syria’s first public trial of Assad-era officials opens in Damascus

DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — The first public trial in Syria of officials linked to the rule of former President Bashar Assad opened in Damas...
Pope Leo signals shift away from Catholic Church's focus on sex

By Joshua McElwee

Reuters

VATICAN CITY, April 27 (Reuters) - Pope Leo's four-nation Africa tour featured firm denunciations by the pontiff of despotism and war and also unprecedented attacks from U.S. President Donald Trump that grabbed headlines.

But a smaller moment, in which the pope said the ‌Catholic Church should prioritise questions of inequality and justice over those of sexual ethics, may prove to be of longer-lasting importance for ‌the Church's 1.4 billion members, said experts.

"The unity or division of the Church should not revolve around sexual matters," Leo, the first U.S. pope, said in a press conference on his ​flight home on Thursday.

"I believe there are much greater and more important issues such as justice, equality... that would all take priority before that particular issue," he said.

Marianne Duddy-Burke, executive director of Dignity USA, a group that supports LGBTQ Catholics, called the pope's remarks "a very significant and overdue reorientation of priorities".

Priests and bishops in the global Church have long emphasised as high priorities its teachings on sexual issues, including its bans on abortion, birth control and same-sex marriage.

On his first trip ‌to Africa in 2009, the late Pope Benedict XVI ⁠sparked an international outcry when he said the Church could not relax its ban on Catholics using condoms, even to help fight the transmission of HIV/AIDS.

Benedict said allowing condoms would only "increase the problem" ethically.

POPE'S APPROACH SEEN AS NEW FOR GLOBAL ⁠CHURCH

Leo made his comments on Thursday in response to a question about the Church offering blessings for same-sex couples.

He said he supported a landmark 2023 decision by the late Pope Francis allowing pastors to give blessings to same-sex couples informally, outside of a ritual service, and on a case-by-case basis.

But Leo said he wanted to prioritise ​other ​ethical questions and did not want the blessings to be formalised further.

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"To go beyond that ​today, I think that the topic can cause more disunity ‌than unity," said the 70-year-old pontiff.

Rev. James Keenan, an academic at Boston College, called Leo's approach new for the global Church.

The pope is "stating that the Vatican has a hierarchy of concerns and the perception that matters of sexuality have singular priority of place is not the case," said Keenan, a Jesuit priest who founded a global network of Catholic academics focused on ethical issues.

"This is clearly a prudential judgment by the pontiff... that issues of blessing gay marriage ought not eclipse more immediate challenges of dictatorships and war," said Keenan.

The Catholic Church teaches that sexual relationships outside heterosexual marriage are sinful. It says ‌people with same-sex attractions should try to be chaste.

LEO'S 'WHO AM I TO JUDGE' MOMENT

Francis, ​who led the Church for 12 years until his death last April, largely also sought ​to emphasise the Church's teachings on justice issues.

Asked in 2013 about rumours ​surrounding a priest working at the Vatican being gay, Francis famously responded: "If a person is gay and is seeking the ‌Lord and has good will, who am I to judge ​them?"

Those remarks, signalling unprecedented openness from a ​pope toward LGBTQ Catholics, became a seminal moment in Francis' tenure, quoted widely and printed on merchandise and T-shirts.

"This seems like Leo's 'Who am I to judge?' moment," said David Gibson, a Vatican expert and academic at Fordham University, about Leo's Thursday remarks.

"(Leo) is about peace and ​justice and sees those moral teachings as equally important ‌as sexual ethics," said Gibson.

Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, another group that supports LGBTQ Catholics, praised Leo's response.

"He listed ​other matters, more social matters -- justice, equality, freedom -- as being of greater moral concern," said DeBernardo. "For years, Catholic advocates for LGBTQ+ ​people have been saying the same thing."

(Reporting by Joshua McElweeEditing by Gareth Jones)

Pope Leo signals shift away from Catholic Church's focus on sex

By Joshua McElwee VATICAN CITY, April 27 (Reuters) - Pope Leo's four-nation Africa tour featured firm denunciations by the po...
Jamie Lynn Spears Reflects on Being a Mom to Daughter Maddie Ahead of Her High School Graduation

Jamie Lynn Spears’daughterMaddieis all grown up!

Us magazine GettyImages-1448914115-Jamie-Lynn-Spears-Posts-Ahead-of-Daughters-School-Graduation.jpg

Taking to Instagramon Friday, April 24, Jamie Lynn, 35, got emotional as she reflected on motherhood ahead of Maddie’s high school graduation.

“Welp….the grad invites are sent, the cap and gown arrived, and the last regular day of school is here….I guess the lovely state of denial that I forced myself to be in has to end, bc the reality of time is coming at me like a freight train,” Jamie Lynn wrote of Maddie, 17.

“I know the saying ‘the days are long, but the years are short’ is one of the most cliche sayings, bc it’s said so much, but I now know that cliches are only said so much bc they continue to ring true in every lifetime throughout the test of time.”

Jamie Lynn Spears Says She Was ‘Mortified’ Telling Parents About 1st Pregnancy at 16

Jamie Lynn, who isthe younger sister ofBritney Spears, went on to describe how much it meant to her to watch her daughter grow up.

“Having the privilege of watchingyour children grow upis one of the most beautiful & fulfilling things we can experience as humans, and I am so grateful for each every up & down moment throughoutthe journey of motherhoodthis far,” she wrote. “It’s bittersweet, bc you’re so proud of everything they have accomplished this far, and so excited to watch everything that their future will bring, while also longing for them to stay your baby forever.”

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Jamie-Lynn-Spears-Posts-Ahead-of-Daughters-School-Graduation.jpg

She added, “I know I’m one of luckiest mamas in the world, so I’ll stop my rambling now, until I completely lose it on graduation day.”

In 2007, Jamie Lynn found out that she was pregnant with her first baby when she was still a teenager and starring on Nickelodeon seriesZoey 101.

Jamie Lynn Spears’ Daughter Maddie Is All Smiles As She Attends Junior Prom: See Photos

Jamie Lynn and ex-boyfriendCasey Aldridgewelcomed Maddie in June 2008. (Jamie Lynn also shares daughter Ivey Joan, 8, with husbandJamie Watson,who she married in March 2014.)

TheSweet Magnoliasstar opened up toDopplein 2019 about what it was like being a young mom and how her outlook on parenting evolved over time.

“I don’t feel like a young mom at all now, but I guess that’s because I had my first daughter so very young. I used to be insecure at times, because I was always the youngest mom in the room,” she told the outlet.

She added, “I quickly learned that being a good and competent mother has nothing to do with age. I have met some of the most wonderful amazing moms who are anywhere from 20 years old to 50 years old, so young or old, love is all it’s really about.”

Jamie Lynn Spears Reflects on Being a Mom to Daughter Maddie Ahead of Her High School Graduation

Jamie Lynn Spears’daughterMaddieis all grown up! Taking to Instagramon Friday, April 24, Jamie Lynn, 35, got emotional as she ref...
“Matlock” season 2 ending explained: Are we done with Wellbrexa yet?

Matlock, CBS' reimagining of the iconic '80s legal drama, wrapped its second season on April 23 with a two-part finale that delivered some long-awaited justice.

Entertainment Weekly Skye P. Marshall, Jason Ritter, and Kathy Bates on 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

Kathy Batesleads the cast as Madeline Kingston, a retired lawyer who adopts the moniker Matty Matlock while infiltrating a law firm, Jacobson Moore. Why? Because she believes that the law firm conspired with the drug company WellBrexa to keep dangerous opioids on the market. Her daughter, we come to learn,died from an overdose. This is Matty's way of honoring her.

Season 1 ended with the reveal that senior partner Julian (Jason Ritter) was the one who discarded a landmark study that could've helped slow the opioid epidemic. In season 2, a remorseful Julian works with Matty and Jacobson Moore attorney Olympia Lawrence (Skye P. Marshall) to help pin down the architect of the cover-up — his father, Howard "Senior" Markston (Beau Bridges).

The final episodes introduce a ticking clock: Jacobson Moore is on the cusp of a merger that, if it goes through, will free Senior of any liability.

So, does Matty deliver the smoking gun in time? And what's next for Jacobson Moore (and its lovable cast of lawyers)? We break it all down below.

Who was involved in the Wellbrexa cover-up?

Jason Ritter as Julian, Skye P. Marshall as Olympia, and Kathy Bates as Matty in season 2 of 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

Coming into the final episodes, Matty and Olympia thought they had everything needed to implicate Senior in the cover-up. They even recruited Lida (Gina Rodriguez), an agent with the Department of Justice (DOJ), to help bring him down.

But it's soon revealed that Senior, who's been pretending to have dementia, is more aware of their investigation than they realize. He's been playing them, serving up evidence that steered them in the wrong direction. Oh, and that study he had Julian steal from storage way back in 2010? Well, he returned it.

"If it's back, he can claim the whole thing was a clerical error," Julian laments as all three realize that it now looks as if no crime has been committed at all.

Now, they have just four days to rebuild the case from the ground up while scrounging up new evidence untainted by Senior's meddling. The strongest path to pinning him down is through a $350,000 hush money payment to the author of the study, which they learned was handed off during a layover in Dallas.

But in making that discovery, Matty and Olympia also find that the plan was orchestrated not just by Beau and his head of security, but alsoallof the senior partners in charge at Jacobson Moore. The rot runs deep, Olympia notes.

To prove that everyone was involved in the cover-up, they'll need security footage from the Jacobson Moore offices, which only a senior partner in charge can obtain.

How is Eva involved?

Justina Machado as Eva in season 2 of 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

Eva (Justina Machado) is Senior's ex-wife and a senior partner in charge at Jacobson Moore, though she wasn't in a leadership position at the time of the cover-up. When Olympia meets with her to share the evidence and ask for her cooperation, Eva plays along at first, but her preference for a Tom Collins with extra cherries outs her as being complicit. (A receipt from the lunch where the handoff occurred shows that one attendee ordered that very drink.)

"Now we both know that we both know," Eva says.

Eva reveals that she learned of the cover-up during the same meeting when she was promoted.

"And suddenly I understood," she says. "Howard wasn't promoting me, he was implicating me."

Sure, she could've walked away, but Eva justifies her complicity by saying that she wants to be an agent of change among leadership. She implores Olympia to stop working with the DOJ. When the merger goes through, Senior will retire and she'll "cut the old guard loose" so she and Olympia can rebuild the firm as they want to see it. No, Senior won't pay for his crimes, but he'll be "old, alone, and irrelevant," Eva says.

Do Matty and Olympia take Eva's deal?

Justina Machado as Eva and Skye P. Marshall as Olympia in season 2 of 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

They consider it. The case isn't coming together as they'd hoped. When they fail in their efforts to secure testimony from a previous informant. Matty suggests "laying down the sword."

"What about Ellie?" Olympia asks, bringing up Matty's late daughter. "You're doing it for her."

"You know, i think I was looking at it all wrong," Matty replies. "I think Ellie led me here to you. When we first met, I was only looking at the end of my life. And now there's just so much possibility."

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Julian, however, isn't satisfied. He volunteers to wear a wire, but Matty worries about it all blowing up in their faces.

Does Julian wear a wire?

Beau Bridges as Senior and Kathy Bates as Matty in season 2 of 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

He does, but it doesn't go so well for him. As the office celebrates the merger's completion, he charges into his dad's office and says DOJ has approached him with evidence about the cover-up. He's not particularly subtle when he loudly brings up the study — "the one you told me to take."

Senior sees right through it, ripping open Julian's shirt to expose the wire. He rips it off and stomps on it, then sneeringly mocks his son for thinking he could outsmart him, all while owning up to his role in the cover-up.

Does Senior pay for his crimes?

Beau Bridges as Senior, seconds before being arrested at the merger celebration in the 'Matlock' season 2 finaleCredit: Michael Yarish/CBS

Senior may have destroyedonewire, but that wasn't the only recording device in the room.

In a flashback, we see Julian decide to wear the wire.

"If I don't make this choice, I'm just like him," he says.

But then we also see their contingency plan, which involved Matty slipping a wire disguised as a pen into Senior's pocket while riding the elevator with him.

With his confession now recorded, Lida and her fellow agents break up the merger celebration and slap cuffs on not just Senior, but all the senior partners in charge. That includes Eva, who's quick to say she'll snitch. Julian, too, is arrested, but he says it's "worth it."

Will Matty continue using the name Matlock?

Kathy Bates as Matty on 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

Matty was initially intent on unmasking herself as part of the Wellbrexa case, which she knew would invite ample scrutiny (and even legal repercussions) into her life. But it turned out this wasn't necessary.

The question, then, became whether or not she would continue her double life — Kingston at home, Matlock at work. Her husband, Edwin (Sam Anderson), would love to be her husband again publicly. (Part of Matlock's backstory is that she's a widow.) But Matty also confesses that she likes this new version of herself.

"She smiles more, she judges less," she says of her alter ego. "She's not a bull in a china shop."

Edwin is reluctant, but eventually comes around to the idea of her continuing as Matty Matlock. She seems "lighter," he says. And maybe he can do a bit of pretending himself by playing her new boyfriend. It's very cute.

How doesMatlockseason 2 end?

Matty (Kathy Bates) and Olympia (Skye P. Marshall) plot their next move in the season 2 finale of 'Matlock'Credit: Michael Yarish/CBS

The merger has the entire firm on its toes. Who will stay? Who will go? What will the future look like? Earlier in the season, Olympia and Matty floated the idea of opening their own firm: Lawrence and Kingston (or is it Kingston and Lawrence?).

By episode's end, they seem even more determined to carve out their own path. Now, however, their new venture will be called Lawrence and Matlock (or is it Matlock and Lawrence?).

Will season 3 center around their new firm? That's still unclear, but it looks likely.

Showrunner Jennie Snyder Urman has teased a"big reset"for season 3, andpreviously toldEntertainment Weeklythat the season 2 finale "really propels the third season... into a very different area again."

Where can I watchMatlock?

Matlockairs on CBS and streams on Paramount+.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“Matlock” season 2 ending explained: Are we done with Wellbrexa yet?

Matlock, CBS' reimagining of the iconic '80s legal drama, wrapped its second season on April 23 with a two-part finale that del...

 

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