A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms Officially Sets Up Dunk Being Related To 1 Of GOT’s Best Characters

As a huge fan of both A Song of Ice and Fire and The Tales of Dunk and Egg, I’ve always been fascinated by the hints George R.R. Martin drops. It seems pretty clear that Brienne of Tarth is actually descended from Dunk! Martin hasn’t explicitly confirmed it yet in the books, but he’s said he plans to reveal the connection eventually. The first season finale of A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms really felt like a setup for this. When Lyonel asks Dunk if he’s ever been to Tarth, it’s a huge clue, planting the idea in both Dunk’s head and ours. It might take a few more books to fully unfold, but it’s an exciting possibility!

The Bluff Review: Karl Urban’s Pirates of the Caribbean Replacement is Pure Entertainment

This new Amazon MGM film isn’t a standout; it’s a fairly average action adventure that feels heavily inspired by other movies, but doesn’t quite succeed. It relies too much on imitating other films and asks too much of its lead actors. Ultimately, it doesn’t feel original, leaving you to wonder if the stars, Urban and Chopra Jonas, are enough to make it worth watching. The answer? Nearly, but not quite.

The BBC is supposed to belong to you – now’s your chance to be heard

As a film and TV fan, I’ve been thinking a lot about the BBC lately, and honestly, I’m worried. Even if it does manage to stay afloat, will it still be the same BBC we know and love, or will it just become another big commercial company? I’m not sure if it’s truly safe with politicians calling the shots, or even with the people running things right now. It’s easy to forget, but the BBC is supposed to be for us, the public – they even used to say ‘It’s Your BBC!’ – and now, we actually have a chance to make our voices heard about its future.

Why Lord of the Flies author William Golding didn’t put girls on his classic novel’s island

The house was filled with joy when Judy learned her father’s story would be published as a book. She heard the name “Faber and Faber” so many times she mistakenly thought it was the title! But it was actually the publisher of Lord of the Flies, written by her father, William Golding. The book came out in September 1954, when Judy was nine years old. Now, 72 years later, Lord of the Flies is enjoying renewed popularity as a four-part drama series on BBC One, with the final episode airing this week.

Solana’s Staking Frenzy: Is a SOL Squeeze the Next Crypto Drama?

February 23rd, 2026. Mark your calendars, folks. That’s when the Solana saga took a turn from “meh” to “hmm, interesting.” On-chain data-the crypto nerd’s crystal ball-showed that staking on Solana was booming. Not just booming, mind you, but booming like a teenager discovering unlimited Wi-Fi.