惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

The Hacker News
The Hacker News
F
Full Disclosure
Cloudbric
Cloudbric
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
W
WeLiveSecurity
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
B
Blog
GbyAI
GbyAI
C
Check Point Blog
B
Blog RSS Feed
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
O
OpenAI News
V
V2EX
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
IT之家
IT之家
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
S
Security @ Cisco Blogs
C
Cisco Blogs
Security Latest
Security Latest
S
Security Affairs
V
Visual Studio Blog
C
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency CISA
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
博客园 - 司徒正美
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
Microsoft Azure Blog
Microsoft Azure Blog
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
雷峰网
雷峰网
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
博客园_首页
U
Unit 42
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
Project Zero
Project Zero
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
H
Hacker News: Front Page

The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix In Final Talks to Buy Radford Studio Lot at Around $330 Million Price Tag How Scriptation Broke Hollywood’s Addiction to Paper The Conservative Climate Activists Hollywood Ignores Diamonds Are Forever. But Are They Sustainable? Dave Mason, Traffic Co-Founder and “We Just Disagree” Singer, Dies at 79 ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ Will Resume Production Following Filming Pause Amid Taylor Frankie Paul Investigation ‘Michael’: What Critics Are Saying About the King of Pop’s Biopic ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre’: ‘Obsession’ Filmmaker Curry Barker in Talks to Write, Direct T-Mobile Deepens Its Promise of Fastest 5G Internet With Same-Day Delivery, Powered by DoorDash Dwayne Johnson and Stephen Merchant Adapting ‘Fighting With My Family’ Into Stage Musical Inside ‘Blue Heron,’ the Most Acclaimed Film of 2026 So Far Broadway Box Office: Grosses Fall Amid Spring Openings, Daniel Radcliffe Cracks Top Five How Peaches Gives Dan Levy’s ‘Big Mistakes’ a Queer Thrill ITV’s ‘Believe Me’: Daniel Mays on the Toll of Playing the “Black Cab Rapist” and Writer Jeff Pope on Focusing on Victims Rather Than the Predator K-pop Icons BigBang Announce World Tour, Tease Group’s “Reset” During Final Coachella Set John Oliver Mocks Trump for Calling Pope “Weak on Crime”: “OK, But Who Gives a Sh**?” Taylor Frankie Paul Posts About “Ugly Parts” of “Healing” After Learning She Won’t Face Additional Domestic Violence Charges ‘Euphoria’ Defecating Pig Starts a Drug War, With Rue Stuck in the Middle Frank Marshall Says ESPN Pulled His Doc ‘Rachel, Breathe’ “An Hour Before Broadcast” Over Rights Disagreement Barack Obama Says His and Michelle’s Production Company Higher Ground Will Go Independent After Netflix Deal Ends Asobi System Artists, Executives on Global Aspirations and Asobi Expo Hawaii 2026 ‘Facts of Life’ Star Mindy Cohn Reveals Cancer Diagnosis How a Gold House Dinner Helped ‘Beef’ Creator Lee Sung Jin Land Season 2 Star Charles Melton Dave Chappelle Pitches Eddie Murphy on Joining Potential ‘Chappelle’s Show’ Reboot at AFI Gala Noah Wyle on the Origins of and Real-Life Connection to His Dark ‘Pitt’ Season 2 Journey Billie Eilish and SZA Join Justin Bieber for Coachella Weekend Two Headlining Set PinkPantheress Throws Star-Studded Birthday Bash During Coachella Set With Slew of Celeb Guests Former U.S. Presidents, Entertainment, Sports and Media Leaders Convene in Rare Gathering to Celebrate Country’s 250th Anniversary Olivia Rodrigo Debuts “Drop Dead” Live During Surprise Appearance at Addison Rae’s Coachella Set Nadia Farès, ‘The Crimson Rivers’ Actress, Dies at 57 Charlize Theron Jabs at Timothée Chalamet’s Ballet, Opera Remarks: “AI Is Going to Be Able to Do His Job in 10 Years” Andrew Lloyd Webber Says He’s a Recovering Alcoholic Nathalie Baye, French Actress Known for ‘Downton Abbey’ and ‘Catch Me If You Can,’ Dies at 77 She Broke Barriers as a Production CEO in the Middle East. Then She Had to Evacuate the Region L.A. Production Crisis Now Mayoral Race Flashpoint Horror Highlights from the 2026 Overlook Film Festival Why Sundance Winner ‘Ricky’ Is Self-Distributing: “We Refuse for You Not to See It” Meet a Hollywood Advocate for Animal Welfare Brandi Rhodes, Wife of WWE Champion Cody Rhodes, Is Getting a New Reality Show (Exclusive) Hollywood Winners & Losers: CinemaCon Edition — Marvel Soars, DC Slips Jill Biden Tried to Win a Role on ‘Heated Rivalry’ — But She Was Outbid Online Personalities and Comedians Overtake TV and Newspapers as Primary News Sources Tyrese Haliburton Launches Production Company, Signs Multiyear Development Deal With Wheelhouse (Exclusive) Why the New ‘American Gladiators’ Doubled Down on Pro Wrestlers Hulu Nabs Four More Video Podcasts As Licensing Heats Up (Exclusive) ‘Humboldt USA’ Explores How Our Relationship With Nature Has Changed Through the Prism of a German Proto-Environmentalist ‘Heat’ Is a Doc That Asks Who We Become When Being in Our Own Skin Is Unbearable (Exclusive VdR Trailer and Chat) ‘Perfect Crown’ Scores Disney+’s Biggest K-Drama Debut to Date Ben Stiller Reveals He Didn’t Love All the ‘Meet the Parents’ Sequels ‘American Pie’ Star Shannon Elizabeth Says She Joined OnlyFans After Hollywood “Controlled the Narrative” of Her Career How ‘Hacks’ Finally Killed Its Central Feud Pam Abdy and Sandra Bullock Talk Paramount-Warners Deal and ‘Practical Magic 2’ ‘The Pitt’ Boss Says Noah Wyle’s Season 2 Storyline “Shows What Can Happen if You Don’t Take the Time to Resolve Mental Health Issues” Lynette Howell Taylor, Sara Murphy and Nastasya Popov to Discuss Power at Archer Film Festival The Best HBO Max Deals and Free Trial Hacks to Watch ‘Euphoria,’ ‘The Pitt’ and More Singer D4vd Arrested for Murder of Teen in Los Angeles, Police Say ‘Street Fighter’ Movie Trailer Brings the Pain — and the Camp Why CBS Remains Bullish on First-Run Syndicated Shows Pete Hegseth Reads Tarantino’s Fake Bible Quote From ‘Pulp Fiction’ at Prayer Service Tribeca Festival 2026 Lineup: Katie Holmes-Joshua Jackson Reunion Movie ‘Happy Hours,’ Films With Susan Sarandon, Dustin Hoffman, Quentin Tarantino Brian Williams Returns: Former NBC News and MSNBC Anchor Launching Netflix Podcast USC Has Just Launched an AI “Institute” for Actors For ‘The Roots of Madness,’ a Filmmaker Traveled to Conflict Zones to Explore Why So Many People Become Refugees ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Review: Jack Reynor and Laia Costa Grapple With Ancient Evil and Grand Guignol Gore in Visceral Family Nightmare Juilliard Names Interim Drama School Leadership Team, Including Laura Linney Jamie Dornan Gets Puffy for Moncler by Eating Popsicle and Blowing Piece of Bubble Gum Carey Mulligan on Going Ballistic in ‘Beef’ Kit Connor, Taika Waititi to Voice Animated ‘Charlie vs. the Chocolate Factory,’ Netflix Drops First Look Roku Hits 100 Million Streaming Households Worldwide Behind the Hacker Leak of ‘Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender’ Nicholas Hoult Leads a Crew of Criminal YouTubers in First ‘How to Rob a Bank’ Footage Anne Hathaway and Dakota Johnson Face Off in First ‘Verity’ Trailer ‘Four Minus Three,’ Film About Family, Tears, Clowns and Hope That Won a Berlin Award, Sells to France, Canada, Australia Mel Brooks Unveils Title to ‘Spaceballs’ Sequel James Bond Casting Process Teased by Amazon MGM: “A Responsibility We Don’t Take Lightly” Jason Statham Unleashes ‘The Beekeeper 2’ Footage on CinemaCon “All Hail the Queen”: Donna Langley’s Power on Full Display as Snoop Dogg, Christopher Nolan, Steven Spielberg Bet on Universal ‘Masters of the Universe’: Camila Mendes Saves Nicholas Galitzine’s Life in New Footage Michael B. Jordan, Adria Arjona Get Flirty in Action-Packed ‘Thomas Crown Affair’ Trailer ‘The Fear of 13’ Theater Review: Adrien Brody Brings Unquestionable Commitment to a Death Row Drama Dulled by Pedestrian Writing Survival Horror Video Game ’99 Nights in the Forest’ Movie in the Works at 20th Century Studios Alec Baldwin on Career Ups and Downs, ‘Rust’ Prosecution’s Toll on His Health and Future Plans: “I Want to Retire” ‘Rooster’ Star Danielle Deadwyler Has Always Been the Goofball ‘The Audacity’ Creator Looks for Humanity in Silicon Valley: “It’s the Only Way Forward” Katy Perry Denies Ruby Rose’s Graphic Sexual Assault Claim: “Dangerous Reckless Lies” Lena Dunham Talks Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” Making ‘Girls’ in New Memoir Mario Adorf, German-Italian Star of ‘The Tin Drum’ and ‘Winnetou,’ Dies at 95 Trump’s $10 Billion Lawsuit Over Epstein Story in Wall Street Journal Dismissed — but Not for Good Valerie Lee, One of the Young Munchkins in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ Dies at 94 Netflix’s ‘Big Mistakes’ Took Dan Levy Out of His Comfort Zone. He Wants Hollywood to Know Why That’s OK Israeli Artist Noga Erez Gets Emotional During Coachella Set: “I’m Just Heartbroken and Sad” Justin Bieber’s Low-Key Coachella Performance Fuels Sexism Debate Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Attend Ted Sarandos’ ‘Beef’ Season 2 Event Following Netflix Drama Coachella Hot Shots: All the Highlights From Weekend One in the Desert Scarlett Johansson Says It “Was Tough” in the Early 2000s Because Actresses Were “Pulled Apart for How They Looked” Lila Raicek Broke Up With Roy Price Amid Scandal. Her Debut Novel is Definitely Not About It. When Wonder Woman Gave Primetime a Lift Justin Bieber Goes Heavy On ‘Swag’ In Much-Anticipated Coachella Headlining Set Trump Calls Tiger Woods From Rehab as Melania Addresses Her Epstein Statement on ‘SNL’ Box Office Milestone: ‘Super Mario Galaxy’ Soars Past $300M in U.S. and $600M Globally
‘The Boys’ Star Erin Moriarty Opens Up About Season 5 Health Challenges and Teases a “Heartbreaking” Finale
Brian Davids · 2026-04-23 · via The Hollywood Reporter

Logo text

[This story contains spoilers from The Boys season five, episode four, “King of Hell.”]

Erin Moriarty can’t bring herself to watch The Boys’ final season. Of course, she loves the show and her signature role of Annie “Starlight” January, but she isn’t ready to revisit such a debilitating time in her life. 

In June of 2025, Moriarty went public with her then-recent Graves’ disease diagnosis. At that point, she was six months into filming The Boys season five, and her doctor’s conclusion immediately explained why she hadn’t been feeling like herself throughout production. Her various symptoms, including chronic fatigue and nausea, soon fell by the wayside thanks to immediate treatment, and she finally felt human again in time for the series finale.

“It did lead to me not being as present for Annie during this final season as I would’ve hoped, and that was super painful for me. I thought, Oh my God, I’m failing Annie and I’m failing our audience,” Moriarty tells The Hollywood Reporter. “It was like I was offline for the first six to seven episodes, and then I came back online. I finally felt present at the very end of season five.”

Moriarty is also offering her thoughts on season five’s fourth episode, “King of Hell.” 

Rattled by Hughie’s (Jack Quaid) latest brush with death, Annie decides to leave her boyfriend and allies behind to track down her estranged father, Rick (Tim Daly). Annie’s mother, Donna (Ann Cusack), originally claimed that Rick walked out on them due to shoddy investments. But in the season one finale, Annie exposed that lie after confronting her mother about her superpowers being created in a lab, not by God, as she had led her to believe. Donna still didn’t come completely clean, insisting that Rick left after regretting their decision to inject Annie with the superhero serum known as Compound V. Annie then speculated at the time that her father probably didn’t want to lie about the nature of her powers.

Annie’s theory proved to be correct when Rick confirms that Donna’s pious fraud caused him to leave. He also reveals that he proudly tracked Annie/Starlight’s accomplishments from afar and urged her not to turn her back on the people she loves like he did.

“He really galvanizes her and catalyzes her to find herself and her heroism for the remainder of the season. If she had previously gone to her father for this information, it would’ve fueled further resentment toward her mother,” Moriarty tells The Hollywood Reporter. “That would’ve negated her ability to move forward in her story. But right now, she’s like, ‘You know what? Mom did the best she could.’ It’s a testament to Annie’s emotional maturation at this point.”

As for the upcoming May 20 series finale of showrunner Eric Kripke’s superhero satire, Moriarty believes it will leave the audience both satisfied and heartbroken. 

“It’s a heartbreaking episode. It’s not overtly cynical. When I read the finale as a script, it was my favorite episode this season, as it should be,” Moriarty shares. “I think the audience is going to be so immensely satisfied by the finale. I never like to give a resolute prediction like that, and I never have, but I’m saying it now because I have so much excitement and confidence in it.”

Below, during a conversation with THR, Moriarty also discusses Annie’s new bad habit she recommended in between seasons, before revisiting the show’s collective anxiety surrounding season four’s finale. 

***

You probably shed most of your tears during production, but now that we’re halfway through The Boys’ final season, what are your emotions at the moment?

It’s very bittersweet. I sound like a broken record, because that’s the term we all keep coming back to, but there aren’t words to suffice this moment in time. The mourning and goodbye to my character happened when season five wrapped. But now that the world is watching our final season, I’m experiencing a very, very sharp sense of extreme gratitude. Sincere gratitude gets me emotional, it all still feels so surreal to me. I still feel like it was yesterday that I was auditioning for the role.

When we were filming season five, I was very much in a pre-mourning phase about the show coming to an end. It was such an emotionally pregnant period of time that I tried to balance my feeling of pre-mourning with a level of presence that hadn’t existed in previous seasons.

Annie January aka Starlight (Erin Moriarty) in The Boys season five. Jasper Savage/Amazon Prime Video

Annie is battle weary this season. She even has a vaping habit now. She was worried about what Hughie might think of her actions during their year apart. How much detail did [showrunner] Eric Kripke offer you about that missing time period between seasons four and five? 

I’m very fortunate that Eric Kripke gave me a lot. Between seasons, we would always sit down and discuss what has transpired. It was really important because no season has started right after the previous season concluded. A significant amount of time passed between seasons, so meeting with Eric became a really integral part of my preparation process each season.

The cool thing about Eric is that he informs us circumstantially about what has happened, but he also allows collaboration at that point. I said to him, “I want Annnie to pick up a nervous habit that allows her to have micro-escapist moments as scenes are transpiring.” She’s still metabolizing the trauma that has happened in earlier seasons, but what has happened in between seasons four and five has been the hardest for her to swallow. There have been so many casualties as a result of this Starlighter Movement that she’s at the head of, and she’s at her most stressful breaking point.

I even deem her as being suicidal. She sees that the only redemptive way for her to become a hero is to sacrifice herself in honor of the casualties that resulted from the Starlighter Movement. So I wanted there to be this new flavor of Annie, and I wanted her to pick up a mannerism that reflected the stress of what she’s going through right now. I’ve always tried to make sure that Annie, although she’s a superhero, remains human forward. And those moments of stress represented through vaping and other things felt very human to me. 

I watched your interview with David Dastmalchian, and it sounds like you were going through a lot during the final season, health-wise. I don’t mean to trivialize Graves’ disease, but did it end up serving the character’s weariness at all? 

I wish I could say that it did. I’ve been open about this, and I will continue to be open about this. I’ve got no hesitation around it. It’s important for me to be vocal about autoimmune diseases. I was starting to feel so ill, and even though I come from a family of doctors, no one thought to say, “Go get your levels tested.” So it did lead to me not being as present for Annie during this final season as I would’ve hoped, and that was super painful for me. It was like I was offline for the first six to seven episodes, and then I came back online. I finally felt present at the very end of season five.

I wish I could have used it to enhance or to relate to her weariness, but to be honest, I was on set every day just really, really, really struggling to get through it all. I was very fortunate to be surrounded by a really supportive cast and crew, but it was really scary at times. For example, I’ve watched every season of The Boys. I love this show so much. But I’m not watching the final season simply because it’s really important for me at this moment in time to put my psychological health above all other things. 

I wasn’t able to transcend the physical and mental toll that this disease took on me until episode seven. It’s a testament to how profoundly impactful these autoimmune diseases can be, and I don’t think that people are aware to the degree that they can be. So I wish I was able to say it served the character, but unfortunately, it was a matter of getting through every day. The psychological toll that it took on me, I’ll be able to use it in the future, but I couldn’t while it was going on simultaneously. Sadly not. 

Thank you for your candor. Hughie’s (Jack Quaid) near-death in the third episode traumatized Annie to the point where she finally tracks down her estranged father (Tim Dalys’ Rick) after all these years. Her mom (Ann Cusack’s Donna) originally told her that her father left them over bad investments, but then she later divulged that he regretted their decision to inject Annie with Compound V. He then clarified in the fourth episode that he actually left in protest of her mom’s dogma that Annie was a Chosen One. How do you think this revelation affects her relationship with her mom, if at all?

That’s an interesting question. Annie’s relationship with her mother is very much one that many people can relate to. Every parent is a flawed parent. But at this point in time, Annie is able to look at things with nuance. She’s had an immense amount of distance from Donna, and I think she’s reached an emotionally mature enough point where it’s not going to fuel more resentment toward her. This episode was really about her relationship with her father. It was about what she needed from her father and not about feeling more resentment toward her mother. 

Annie’s dad gave her exactly what she needed in this episode to keep going without it fueling more toxicity with her mother. He really galvanizes her and catalyzes her to find herself and her heroism for the remainder of the season. There’s this kismet alignment with these characters at this moment in time. If she had previously gone to her father for this information, it would’ve fueled further resentment toward her mother, and that would’ve eaten away at her and negated her ability to move forward in her story. She would’ve confronted her mother about how she lied to her. But right now, she’s like, “You know what? Mom did the best she could. ” It’s a testament to Anne’s emotional maturation at this point.

The series finale is still under lock and key. Have you let yourself wonder how the audience might receive it? 

I have because I’m excited for the audience to see the finale. When I read the finale script, it was my favorite episode this season, as it should be. Our showrunner and our writers are so cognizant of the fact that the finale is such an integral part of this entire story. They have worked so relentlessly hard to ultimately honor what they believe our audience will want. That’s what we’ve all been working for, and that’s why we were able to end the show with integrity. I really believe the writers did that. I’m just excited for fans to see it. I think the audience is going to be so immensely satisfied by the finale. I never like to give a resolute prediction like that, and I never have, but I’m saying it now because I have so much excitement and confidence in it.

Is it shocking in The Boys’ patented fashion?

Shocking? Yes, but by the time that episode eight airs, so many shocking moments will have happened that I think it will be more satisfying and heartbreaking. Heartbreaking would be the word that I would use. At that point, the audience will have been heartbroken by many characters that are lost along the way. Our showrunner has said that will happen, so it’s not a spoiler. 

It’s a heartbreaking episode. It’s not overtly cynical. But it’s still an episode that really drives home the finality of the show and the characters that we’ve all become emotionally invested in, whether they’re good or bad. The point of the show is that these characters are nuanced. They aren’t black and white. So the losses of characters that you thought you weren’t rooting for can all of a sudden be emotional because no one is all bad and no one is all good on this show.

Have actors from the more conventional superhero projects ever expressed to you in private how they wish their show or movie could do the risqué things that The Boys does every episode?

They have. (Laughs.) They’ve also come up to me and said that they want the catharsis that us Boys actors are lucky to be a part of when it comes to taking on topical issues. There’s so much, pardon my language, shit going on in the world, and whether it’s social or political commentary, I know that a lot of us have benefited from the cathartic element of being a part of a show that doesn’t ignore those things. So other actors will primarily come up to me and say, “I wish I was on a show that wasn’t just specifically catered toward the genre, but also deals with the things that we’re all observing and feeling uneasy about.”

Sometimes, the show responds to events that have already happened, and other times, it foretells what is about to happen. Is there an example of real-world relevance that stands out above the rest?  

Yes, there was something in the season four finale that eerily paralleled the real world and was very much connected to myself. I played two characters in that episode: Annie and a shapeshifter. And my shapeshifter character attempts to assassinate the President-elect [Jim Beaver’s Robert Singer]. The episode title was originally called “Assassination Run,” but we had to rename the episode because it was set to air five days after the [July 13, 2024] assassination attempt against Trump. We shot the episode a year before it was released [on July 18, 2024].

We contemplated not airing that episode for my own safety. We didn’t know if I would get death threats. I had to do media training for that episode. But that eerie alignment and close proximity of time was insane. Of course, no one could have predicted that. I remember sitting at my friend’s house and being a little bit scared in anticipation of the episode airing. 

That being said, Amazon and my showrunner were so respectful. We all got on the phone to speak about it, and I was all for the episode airing. But in terms of paralleling the outside world, I never could have imagined something more eerily aligned than that.

Annie’s overall arc is still unfolding, but how would you summarize your own arc from when you first stepped onto the set of the pilot? Have you been able to wrap your head around your entire experience in that way yet? 

First and foremost, I’m just so grateful. That is the predominating feeling. I know I’ve grown and evolved with this show. I’ve learned so much, personally and professionally, that I’ll take with me forever. But it’s going to take a few years to truly absorb the entire experience in my mind and figure out how much the show has affected me and how much I’ve grown from it. 

There’s this very meta element to Starlight. When she joined the Seven, people on the street suddenly called out her name. Simultaneously, I was starting to be known as Starlight too. A lot of what Annie has gone through has weirdly paralleled my own life. This character is known for her purity, and as I’ve gotten older and grown with the character, people have also expected me to retain that initial pure element to Annie. So we have both matured over time.

I’ve learned a lot from how she’s constantly questioning whether or not she’s doing good. I’ve learned that as long as you’re questioning yourself and trying to do good, it means you’re a good person. As a Type A or Type A-minus person, I would constantly question whether I was doing enough for this character and the audience. When I got sick during the final season, I thought, Oh my God, I’m failing Annie and I’m failing our audience.

So playing Annie as she’s questioning whether or not she’s doing good is a testament to the fact that she is doing good, and it was healing for me and my own questions. If I was able to say that Annie is good merely by trying to do good in every situation that she enters, then that meant that I’d done my best by constantly trying to do my best for the character and the audience. So I no longer question whether I’ve done right by Annie and the audience, and that’s been my ultimate goal.

***
The Boys season five is currently streaming new episodes every Wednesday on Amazon Prime Video.