Chandra Wilson Says After 20 Years, 'It Is Time' to Watch "Grey's Anatomy" for Herself: 'Got as Far as Season 3' (Exclusive)

Disney/Anne Marie Fox Chandra Wilson tells PEOPLE she started watchingGrey's Anatomyduring the COVID pandemic and made it up to season 3 Wilson and James Pickens Jr. are the only two remaining season 1 stars who regularly appear on the show "I'm always excited that we have the opportunity to keep these stories going forward," Wilson tells PEOPLE Chandra Wilsonhas spent the last two decades starring inGrey's Anatomy, giving her little opportunity to watch and enjoy the show. In a red carpet interview with PEOPLE before the Disney 2025 Upfront presentation in New York on Tuesday, May 13, Wilson says she began watchingGrey's Anatomyduring COVID, but only got up to season 3! "I got as far as season three during COVID, and then we went back to work, so I stopped, and then I haven't gone back since, so it's time, right?" Wilson, 55, exclusively tells PEOPLE. "I need to go back.  I need to know what they're talking about." Wilson stars asDr. Miranda Bailey, whom she has played on the long-running ABC medical drama since the show's first season in 2005.James Pickens Jr., who stars as Dr. Richard Webber, is the only other first-season star still regularly appearing on the show. John Nacion/WireImage However,Ellen Pompeo, who was the lead star through season 19 as Dr. Meredith Grey, continues making sporadic appearances. Pompeo, 55, recently toldEl Paísshe sawno financial reason to leaveGrey'spermanently. Wilson also sees no reason to leave, mostly because she loves playing Miranda so much. "I enjoy bringing her to life," Wilson tells PEOPLE. "I enjoy people seeing different sides of her. I enjoy that her hair keeps changing all the time." Wilson also notes that the cast and crew still love making the show, too. "It's really exciting and as long as they want us to do it, hey, we'll be here to do it," Wilson says. Grey's Anatomywill start its 22nd season in the fall and will pass 450 episodes early in the new season. Wilson says they started celebrating the milestone last year. Disney/Anne Marie Fox Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. "I'm always excited that we have the opportunity to keep these stories going forward, and, you know, to keep our family together and keep it moving forward," Wilson tells PEOPLE of the show's future. "I don't have the slightest idea what a season 22 would be about." Once the season 21 finale airs, Wilson says fans will be left wondering, "What in the world is season 22 gonna be about?" Grey's Anatomyairs on ABC on Thursdays at 10 p.m. ET, with new episodes available to stream on Hulu the next day. Read the original article onPeople

Chandra Wilson Says After 20 Years, ‘It Is Time’ to Watch “Grey’s Anatomy” for Herself: ‘Got as Far as Season 3’ (Exclusive)

Chandra Wilson Says After 20 Years, 'It Is Time' to Watch "Grey's Anatomy" for Herself: 'Got as Far as Season 3...
Newark problems and recent crashes put focus on air traffic controller shortage and aging equipmentNew Foto - Newark problems and recent crashes put focus on air traffic controller shortage and aging equipment

The recent chronic delays and cancellations at New Jersey's largest airport have highlighted the shortage of air traffic controllers and the aging equipment they use, whichPresident Donald Trump's administration wants to replace. The Federal Aviation Administration is working on a short-term fix to the problems at the Newark airport that includes technical repairs and cutting flights to keep traffic manageable while dealing with a shortage of controllers. Officials are meeting with all the airlines that fly out of Newark starting Wednesday to discuss the plan. But even before those problems, aviation was already in the spotlight ever since the deadlymidair collisionof a passenger jet and a U.S. Army helicopter above Washington, D.C., in January, and a string of other crashes and mishaps since then. The investigations into those crashes continue while the U.S. Department of Transportation tries to make progress on the long-standing issues of not having enough air traffic controllers and relying onoutdated equipment. A U.S. Senate hearing Wednesday morning will focus on the FAA's efforts. What happened in Newark? Twice in the past two-and-a-half weeks, the radar and communications systems that air traffic controllers in Philadelphia who direct planes in and out of Newark rely on failed for a short time. That happened because the lines that carry the radar signal down from another FAA facility in New York failed, and the backup system didn't work immediately. So the controllers were left unable to see or talk to the planes around Newark Liberty International Airport for as long as 90 seconds onApril 28andMay 9. The lines — some of which were old copper wires — failed a third time on Sunday, but that time the backup system worked and the radar stayed online. But the first one of those stressful situations prompted five to seven controllers to take a 45-day trauma leave, and that worsened the existing staff shortage at the Philadelphia control facility, prompting the FAA to limit the number of flights in Newark each day. The FAA currently has 22 fully certified air traffic controllers and five supervisors assigned to Newark in the Philadelphia facility, but the agency wants to have 38 controllers there. Another 21 controllers are in training there, and 10 of them are certified on at least part of the area. What has been done in Newark? The FAA quickly limited the number of flights in Newark to between 24 and 28 arrivals and the same number of departures every hour to make sure the remaining controllers could handle them safely. At times when controller staffing is especially lean, like Monday, the FAA is limiting traffic even further. Before the problems, 38 or 39 flights would take off and land every hour in Newark. The meetings FAA officials are having with all the airlines starting Wednesday are focused on a plan that continues limiting takeoffs and landings to no more than 28 apiece an hour until at least mid-June. By then, a runway construction project should be wrapped up, and the controllers who took trauma leave would be scheduled to return. After that, the FAA has said it might be able to bump up the limit to 34 arrivals and 34 departures an hour. Meanwhile, the number of flights a day must be cut because the airport can't handle everyone on the schedule. That's why Newark has generally led the nation in cancellations and delays in recent weeks. After the FAA meets with the airlines, it will give them a couple of weeks to submit information in writing, so it won't issue a decision before May 28. The FAA has been able to install new fiber optic lines at Newark airport and the two other major airports in the New York area — Kennedy International and LaGuardia — but those are still being tested and won't come online until the end of the month. Officials were able to update some computer software last week thatkept the radarfrom going offline a third time on Sunday when the primary linefailed yet again. Longer-term, the FAA is also planning to build a new radar system in Philadelphia, so that controllers there won't have to rely on the signal piped down from New York anymore. But that might not be done for months, although officials are working with contractors to speed up that project. Why not hire more controllers? The FAA has been working for a long time to hire more air traffic controllers to replace retiring workers and handle the growing air traffic. But it can be hard to find good candidates for the stressful positions, and it takes years to train controllers to do the job. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy has made several moves to try to hire more controllers. The FAA is trying to shorten the time it takes between when someone applies to the air traffic controller academy in Oklahoma City and when they start, and the agency is also trying to improve the graduation rate there by offering more support to the students. The candidates with the highest scores on the entrance exam are also getting top priority. The FAA is also offering bonuses to experienced controllers if they opt not to retire early and continue working to help ease the shortage. More high-tech simulators are also being used at airports across the country, including Newark, to train air traffic controllers. The FAA said Tuesday that controllers tend to complete training more quickly when they use one of the 111 simulators it has. "These new simulators give air traffic control trainees a high-tech space to learn, develop and practice their skills," said acting FAA Administrator Chris Rocheleau. What about the outdated equipment? The Transportation Department plans to ask Congress for billions and billions of dollars to pay for an overhaul of the air traffic control system nationwide to replace the 618 radars, install 4,600 new high-speed connections and upgrade all the computers controllers use. The exact price tag hasn't been determined. Duffy blames former President Joe Biden's administration for failing to upgrade the air traffic control system, but Congress first recognized the system was struggling to keep up with the growing number of flights as far back as the 1990s, so the problems go back decades — long before the Biden or first Trump administrations. Biden's former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has defended their efforts to upgrade some of the technology and expand air traffic controller hiring. Some of the decades-old computer equipment that controllers rely on was on display at last week's news conference about the plan, which has drawn broad support from more than 50 groups across the industry. Duffy has used an assortment of colorful metaphors to emphasize how old the equipment is, saying the gear looks like it came off the set of the movie "Apollo 13" and comparing it to a 1967 Volkswagen Beetle.

Newark problems and recent crashes put focus on air traffic controller shortage and aging equipment

Newark problems and recent crashes put focus on air traffic controller shortage and aging equipment The recent chronic delays and cancellati...
Tom Cruise returns to Cannes with 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning'New Foto - Tom Cruise returns to Cannes with 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning'

CANNES, France (AP) — Three years after Tom Cruise and "Top Gun: Maverick"flew into the Cannes Film Festival, he's coming back Wednesday to the Croisette with "Mission: Impossible — Final Reckoning." Christopher McQuarrie's latest "Mission: Impossible" installment is the biggest Hollywood tentpole wading ashore inCannes this year, which will only magnify the spotlight on Cruise's Cannes return. In 2022, Cruise received an honorary Palme d'Or from the festival and the "Top Gun: Maverick" premiere included an impressively timed jet fly over. Whether the 62-year-old Cruise has anything up his sleeve this time will be much anticipated at Cannes. On Sunday, Cruise climbed atop the roof of the British Film Institute in London. "The Final Reckoning," which launched in Tokyo last week, opens in North American theaters on May 23. ___ For more coverage of the 2025 Cannes Film Festival, visithttps://apnews.com/hub/cannes-film-festival.

Tom Cruise returns to Cannes with 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning'

Tom Cruise returns to Cannes with 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning' CANNES, France (AP) — Three years after Tom Cruise and...
Sony's profits rises on robust performance for music, movies and gamesNew Foto - Sony's profits rises on robust performance for music, movies and games

TOKYO (AP) — Japanese technology and entertainment company Sony logged an 18% rise in profit for the fiscal year through March on healthy results at its music andvideo-gameoperations. Tokyo-based Sony Corp. said Wednesday that its annual profit totaled 1.14 trillion yen ($7.8 billion), up from 970.6 billion yen in the previous fiscal year. Annual sales were virtually unchanged, inching down to 12.957 trillion yen ($88 billion) from 13.020 trillion yen. One area that lagged among Sony's sprawling businesses was the financial segment, where revenue stalled. But its film division and its imaging and sensor solutions segment did well. Among the movies that fared positively at the box office for the fiscal year through March were "Venom: The Last Dance," featuring the Marvel Comics superhero, and "Bad Boys: Ride or Die," an action comedy, in which Will Smith and Martin Lawrence come back in their popular cop roles, the fourth installment in the series. Sony, which makes the PlayStation console and game software played on that machine, also marked healthy results in the gaming business. Its music operations, which also held up, include recordings, streaming services and music for games. The top-selling recorded music projects for the latest fiscal year globally was SZA's "SOS Deluxe: LANA," followed by Beyonce, Future & Metro Boomin and Travis Scott. For the Japan music business, the top-seller was Kenshi Yonezu's "Lost Corner" album, followed by offerings from Stray Kids and Six Tones. For the January-March quarter, Sony posted a 197.7 billion yen ($1.3 billion) profit, up 5% from 189 billion yen the same quarter in the previous fiscal year. Sales were 2.6 trillion yen ($17.7 billion), down 24% from 3.48 trillion yen. Sony is forecasting a nearly 13% drop in profit for the fiscal year through March 2026, to 930 billion yen ($6.3 billion), on 11.7 trillion yen ($80 billion) sales, down 2.9% on-year. Sony officials are set to brief reporters on the latest company strategy for growth later in the day. Sony stocks lost 3% in Tokyo morning trading.

Sony's profits rises on robust performance for music, movies and games

Sony's profits rises on robust performance for music, movies and games TOKYO (AP) — Japanese technology and entertainment company Sony l...
Menéndez brothers get chance at freedom with resentencing in wake of Ryan Murphy show, Netflix docNew Foto - Menéndez brothers get chance at freedom with resentencing in wake of Ryan Murphy show, Netflix doc

VINCE BUCCI/AFP via Getty Lyle MenéndezandErik Menéndezhave their first shot at freedom after more than 30 years in prison. Los Angeles Superior Court judge Michael V. Jesic resentenced the brothers on Tuesday to life in prison with the possibility of parole, according to theNew York Times. They were originally sentenced to life without the possibility of parole in 1996 for the 1989 murders of their parents, Kitty and José Menéndez. Members of the Menéndez family testified on the brothers' behalf yesterday, appealing to Jesic that Lyle and Erik had taken advantage of educational and community resources at the Richard J. Donovan Correctional Facility near San Diego to better themselves. Tuesday's ruling grants them immediate eligibility for parole, for which the brothers will plead their case before the state's parole board during a hearing scheduled for June 13. The decision comes amid a renewed chorus calling for the brothers to be granted clemency for time served, bolstered by a recent film and seriesrevitalizing interest in their case. Netflix released both projects last fall. The first,Ryan Murphy'sMonsters: The Lyle and Erik Menéndez Story, castCooper KochandNicholas Alexander Chavezas the brothers as well asChloë SevignyandJavier Bardemas their parents in a dramatic reenactment of the infamous crime. Erikcriticized the seriesas being "rooted in horrible and blatant lies," whileMurphy took creditfor the mounting calls for their freedom, declaring, "The Menéndez brothers should be sending me flowers." The second, a documentary simply titledThe Menéndez Brothers, took a more direct approach to the case, interviewing several family members who testified at their original trials, as well as journalists, jurors, and expert witnesses. Miles Crist/Netflix The case for the Menéndez brothers has largely revolved around an aspect of their original defense, that the killings were perpetrated in self-defense after years of physical and sexual abuse at the hands of their father. The brothers were first tried separately, but both trials resulted in deadlocked juries. Testimony from family members corroborating their accounts of abuse was controversially limited at the joint trial, which ultimately resulted in their conviction. Sign up forEntertainment Weekly'sfree daily newsletterto get breaking TV news, exclusive first looks, recaps, reviews, interviews with your favorite stars, and more. Over 20 relatives of the brothers gathered in Los Angeles last October tourge the District Attorneyto consider resentencing. Joan Andersen VanderMolen, the sister of Kitty Menéndez, described the brothers as "failed by the very people who should have protected them — by their parents, by the system, by society at large." Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Menéndez brothers get chance at freedom with resentencing in wake of Ryan Murphy show, Netflix doc

Menéndez brothers get chance at freedom with resentencing in wake of Ryan Murphy show, Netflix doc VINCE BUCCI/AFP via Getty Lyle Menéndezan...

 

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