HBO/Courtesy Everett

Entertainment Weekly 'The Sopranos' cast members Joseph R. Gannascoli, Joe Pantoliano, Steve Schirripa, Steven Van Zandt, and James Gandolfini HBO/Courtesy Everett 

Steve Schirripastill smells a rat.

The 68-year-old, Brooklyn-born actor recently looked back on his time on the indelible mob dramaThe Sopranos, which recently celebrated its 27th premiere anniversary. Together with Michael Imperioli, who played the erratic Christopher Moltisanti to his gentle, reliable Bobby Bacala, Schirripa opened up about the famously secretive set — and the extra precautions against that maybe should have been taken in hindsight.

"There was a leak on set because somebody was selling information," Schirripa alleged in a recent interview withThe Independent. "We had some suspects," he explained, but the series' creative crew never did identify the source of the apparent leak.

Steve Schirripa and James Gandolfini on 'The Sopranos' HBO/Kobal/Shutterstock

HBO/Kobal/Shutterstock

Imperioli noted thatThe Sopranoshelped create the economy for such information, becoming one of the first "prestige" dramas of the modern eras to cultivate what he called an "intense fandom."

Still, Imperioli stated he would "never say anything bad about anybody... I mean, I could, but I won't. I'm sure people say bad things about me — I wouldn't be surprised — but we tried to keep it above the belt. No low blows. I find it not classy."

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The Sopranospremiered on HBO in 1999, and wound up running six seasons through 2007. While the series was critically praised from its inception, it took fans a few years to cotton on to twisty drama written and created by David Chase. But by its final season,The Sopranos'ratings surpassedmost of its network competitors - a feat for a series broadcast on a premium cable channel.

That kind of devotion inspired displays of fandom that sometimes threatened the show's very existence on the air, however.

In 2002, the first four episodes of the series' fourth and highest rated season wereleaked on the internet, spoiling plot details long before the advent of peak online spoiler culture, and the invention of defenses to stem such leaks.

The cast of 'The Sopranos' in 2024 Jason Mendez/Getty 

Jason Mendez/Getty

One of the most memorable examples of theSopranoscrew responding to such threats came in the approach to the shocking decision to kill of Drea De Matteo's Adriana La Cerva. In a 2023 oral history of the scene fromGQ, De Matteo recalled when Chase informed her "we're going to shoot it two ways. We're gonna shoot it where you get away, and we're gonna shoot it where you get killed so I have options, and so we don't mess with the confidentiality on the show."

According to De Matteo, "none of us knew" how the season 5 episode that eventually featured Adriana's death would end — but that way, neither would any potential leakers.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

“The Sopranos ”set had a leak, star Steve Schirripa says: 'Somebody was selling information'

HBO/Courtesy Everett Steve Schirripastill smells a rat. The 68-year-old, Brooklyn-born actor recently looke...
John Legend gets 'free babysitting' from Adam Levine filming 'The Voice'

LOS ANGELES — The plethora of new elements in this season of "The Voice" has upped the ante on this all stars-like iteration. But veteran coachesAdam LevineandJohn Legendfeel like they've got more "chill" – and that can be attributed to being working parents.

USA TODAY

Sitting down with USA TODAY on "The Voice" set in September as they filmed this first-ever fully pre-recorded season, Season 29 (premiering Feb. 23 at 9 p.m. ET) marked the first time they were reuniting with third coachKelly Clarksonsince Season 16 in 2019.

(Levine and Legend were coaches on Season 27, and this is Clarkson's first time back since Season 23).

"I feel like we're all cooler. We've become dads and moms," says Legend, whose fourchildrenrange from 2 to 9 years old. "Parenting and growing up, we're at a really nice place in our lives, and I think it helps us be better as coaches. We're more rounded-out human beings."

"Our chill is more. When I left [after Season 16], I was a little nutty, and when I came back I felt like it was some calm energy," says Levine, who has three kids in the same age range as Legend's.

<p style=Aiden Ross, a 20-year-old student from College Station, Texas, was crowned the winner of Season 28 of NBC's "The Voice." The Team Niall singer took home the crown during the second part of the season finale on Tuesday, Dec. 16.

In honor of the NBC singing competition's 28th season, let's look back at all of the winners who sang their way to the top in past seasons.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Adam David won "The Voice" Season 27. David, one of two of coach Michael Bublé's singers, marked Bublé's second victory in a row on the NBC show following his Season 26 win.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Sofronio Vasquez, who moved from the Philippines to Utica, New York, in 2023, won the 26th season of "The Voice" in December 2024.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Soulful powerhouse Asher HaVon nabbed the Season 25 title for Team Reba with the help of his gospel-influenced vocals and heartfelt performances. <p style="Thank you for giving me such a safe place to be my authentic self," HaVon, right, told coach Reba McEntire moments before his win. "Thank you for making me believe in myself, and I promise you I will never let you down."

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Huntley, right, rocked his way to the top. The powerhouse Virginia singer led Team Niall to victory on Season 24 with his gravelly tone and stadium-ready stage presence. Pop songbird Gina Miles' win is a reminder to never count out the dark horse. The soft-spoken 19-year-old transformed herself into a captivating torch singer with the help of coach Niall Horan and <a href=won Season 23 on May 23, 2023. " style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Georgia singer <a href=Bryce Leatherwood proved that good ol' cowboy charm never goes out of style, becoming the winner of Season 22 on Dec. 13, 2022." style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=The Season 19 finale of "The Voice" ushered in the youngest male winner ever at 15 years old: Carter Rubin, from Team Gwen Stefani.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Blue sang with his coach, Alicia Keys, on the Season 12 finale of Jordan Smith's vocals took him to the top during Season 9. <br> <br> His rendition of Sia's "Chandelier" led all four coaches to turn their chairs, but he chose to be on Adam Levine's team. Craig Wayne Boyd won Season 7 of the show, coached by Blake Shelton. <p style=Chin went on to perform at the White House and at the National Memorial Day Concert in Washington, D.C.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> Pope has gone on to perform at a variety of country music festivals, including the Stagecoach Festival. Javier Colon won the very first season of

Look back at all 'The Voice' winners, from Aiden Ross to Cassadee Pope

Aiden Ross, a 20-year-old student from College Station, Texas, wascrowned the winner of Season 28 of NBC's "The Voice." TheTeam Niallsinger took home the crown during the second part of the season finale on Tuesday, Dec. 16.In honor of the NBC singing competition's 28th season, let's look back at all of the winners who sang their way to the top in past seasons.

Adam Levine is John Legend's 'free babysitter'

"The Voice" set, located in a massive soundstage on Universal Studios' famous backlot, has a family-friendly atmosphere for the coaches, who are all parents. (Clarkson has an 11-year-old daughter, River Rose, and a 9-year-old son, Remington "Remy" Alexander.)

"We both have brought our kids to the set this season. Luna [9] and Miles [7] have been here a lot. They like to bother Adam, so I'm sorry," Legend says. "I'm getting free babysitting from Adam Levine."

Levine jokes, "I do some nanny work in my free time. We're super tight now."

John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's older children, Luna (left) and Miles (right), have visited him on "The Voice" set. They also share son Wren (in Legend's arms) and daughter Esti (seen in front of Miles)

Levine's children with Behati Prinsloo, 9-year-old Dusty Rose and 7-year-old Gio Grace (and a 3-year-old son whose name has not been shared publicly), are pretty big fans of "The Voice," to Levine's chagrin.

"They love to watch it. That's a new thing for me, because I usually can't watch it. I don't like to watch myself at all," he says. "And now they watch it, and I'm like, 'Don't watch it.' Now I watch 'The Voice' more than I ever have in my entire life."

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But Legend is convincing his fellow coach that this isn't necessarily a bad thing.

"The good thing about watching it is they edit us so well. They make us so funny and clever," Legend says.

Levine agrees: "They make us seem so cool, right?"

'The best coaches in 'Voice' history' lead an all-star season

But when the cameras are rolling, the competitive spirit among the coaches that "The Voice" fans love is front and center.

This season's higher stakes are intentional — and a synergistic move timed to NBA games returning to NBC's broadcast, according to Executive Producer Audrey Morrissey, who calls this "Battle of Champions" season "an all-star season."

Legend agrees: "We're the best coaches in voice history, the three of us."

The three-coach panel is a first in the show's nearly 15-year history. As is the "triple-turn competition," a fight for the most three-chair turns during the auditions inspired by the NBA, per Morrissey, which earns the winner a "super steal" during the Battle rounds.

For Legend, the Blind Auditions were a true test of grit. "The competition feels more intense for me because I always felt like I was fighting with Adam or Kelly for an artist anyway" in past seasons, he says.

"Obviously, the blind [auditions are] different because we're going at each other, but in general I feel we focus on our teams and how we can make them the best so that they can win," Levine says. "We get fired up but in all of the right ways and not the petty, weird ways."

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Adam Levine is John Legend's 'free babysitter' on set of 'The Voice'

John Legend gets 'free babysitting' from Adam Levine filming 'The Voice'

LOS ANGELES — The plethora of new elements in this season of "The Voice" has upped the ante on this all stars-...
NFL players preach importance of mental health after death of Vikings WR Rondale Moore

Content warning:This story contains references to suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide and needs support now, call or text 988 or chat with the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at988lifeline.org.

Yahoo Sports

Thedeath of Rondale Moore, a talented wide receiver whose pro and college careers were marred by injuries, sent a tragic jolt through the NFL on Saturday.

The news came after two straight missed seasons for Moore, who sustained season-ending knee injuries during the preseason in both 2024 and 2025. His talent had never been in doubt since his All-American season at Purdue as a freshman in 2018, but luck was never on his side.

New Albany police chief Todd Bailey told reporters on Saturday night thatMoore was found in a garage with a gunshot wound suspected to be self-inflicted.

What soon became clear is that Moore was beloved and respected by his NFL peers, all of whom knew what he was capable of when healthy. He had friends throughout the league, and one of them, Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver Marquise Brown, was hit particularly hard.

The two played together for two seasons on the Arizona Cardinals, and Brown posted on social media that he had received messages from Moore just hours earlier. He later posted a screenshot of an encouraging message he sent Moore last August, a couple of days after Moore's injury.

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Both Cardinals quarterback Kyler Murray and Atlanta Falcons tight end Kyle Pitts Sr. alluded to recent conversations with Moore, as well.

The NFL Players Association, for which Moore served as a player rep,posted a statement urging its members to reach out for support if they're struggling with mental health and to check on their teammates:

"In moments like this, we are reminded of how much our players carry, on and off the field. To our members: Please know that support is always within reach. Check on your teammates and prioritize your mental health. If you or someone you know is struggling, we encourage you to take advantage of the many confidential resources and services available to you through the NFLPA."

Many other players concurred, telling their followers to check in on their loved ones.

Carolina Panthers cornerback Mike Jackson also came forward with his own experience going to therapy.

Las Vegas Raiders safety Jamal Adams had his own take, questioning the treatment of "injury prone" players such as Moore and reminding his followers how arduous the recovery process can be, both mentally and physically.

Above all, the reaction is a reminder that athletes are humans at their core. No one feels the pain of an injury as much as they do, but that doesn't stop the torrent of vitriol that can be aimed at them on social media for the crime of not being able to do their jobs. It seems to be a league-wide frustration — one that spans the sports industry, really — and the players can only hope they're listened to in the aftermath of Moore's death.

NFL players preach importance of mental health after death of Vikings WR Rondale Moore

Content warning:This story contains references to suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide and ...

 

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