Entertainment
Ryan Condal reveals ‘House of the Dragon’ final season plans
The end of House of the Dragon is officially in sight.
Showrunner Ryan Condal has confirmed that the Game of Thrones spinoff will conclude with its fourth season.
Condal shared the update during a late-December appearance on the Escape Hatch podcast, where he discussed the progress of season 3 and revealed that season 4 is already in development—and will be the final chapter.
“It really feels like we’ve turned a big page here. Knowing there’s only one more season left, it feels like we can leave it all out on the field. We’ve started the writing process for Season 4, which will be the last one,” Condal said on the podcast.
Season 3 of House of the Dragon is currently in post-production and is expected to premiere sometime this summer. HBO recently released new images from the upcoming season, giving fans a first look at what’s next in the Targaryen civil war.
While an official release date has not been announced, season 4 is expected to debut in 2028, bringing the series to a planned and definitive ending.
The Game of Thrones universe, however, is far from over. Another spinoff series, A Knight of the Seven Kingdoms, is set to premiere on January 18.
The show has already been renewed for a second season, signaling HBO’s continued commitment to expanding George R.R. Martin’s fantasy world.
With one season left to tell the rest of the story, Condal’s comments suggest that House of the Dragon is heading toward a focused and ambitious finale.
Entertainment
5 key takeaways from Pete Hegseth’s Pentagon press conference on Iran-US war
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and Joint Chiefs Chairman General Dan Caine addressed the media on Monday, March 2.
This marks the first Pentagon press conference since the U.S.-Israeli operation against Iran.
The Operation Epic Fury started on Saturday, February 28.
Here are the major key takeaways from their remarks.
1. “We didn’t start this war, but we’re finishing it”
Hegseth started the conference by framing the conflict as the culmination of decades of Iranian aggression. He quoted that the Iranian attacks date back to the 1983 Beirut barracks bombing and recent strikes on U.S. forces in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Hegseth said, “For 47 long years, the Iranian regime has waged a savage, one-sided war against America. We didn’t start this war, but under President Trump, we’re finishing it.”
He also noted that the primary objectives of the U.S. are “laser-focused” on destroying the missiles of Iran. It also focuses on damaging Iran’s missile production capabilities, naval infrastructure, and making sure Iran never acquires nuclear weapons.
2. Four service members are dead
Caine confirmed that the U.S. has suffered its fourth combat fatality since operations started, with the service member succumbing to injuries from Iran’s counterattacks.
Commenting on it, Hegseth said, “War is hell and always will be. Our grateful nation honours the four Americans we have lost thus far and those injured, the absolute best of America.”
Caine also warned that additional casualties are expected as the operation continues.
3. No American ground forces in Iran
Hegseth confirmed that the American ground forces have not entered Iran and have declined to rule out the possibility as the operation evolves.
Criticising earlier Pentagon administration for disclosing the operational details, he said: “We’re going to go into the exercises of what we will or will not do. We will go as far as we need to.”
Gen. Caine later confirmed additional forces are flowing to the Middle East.
4. U.S.-Iran war is not endless, but the timeline remains unclear
Hegseth said, “This is not Iraq. This is not endless. I was there for both. Our generation knows better, and so does this president.”
However, he also mentioned that Iranian capabilities will not be destroyed “overnight.” When asked about the precise duration, Hegseth grew adversarial, stating Trump has “all latitude in the world” to determine whether the operation takes “four weeks, two weeks, six weeks.”
5. Operation’s purpose is not regime change
While carefully describing, Hegseth stated that the operation’s aim is not regime change, even as Iran’s supreme leader has been killed.
Hegseth said: “This is not a so-called regime change war, but the regime sure did change, and the world is better off for it.”
He considered the leadership transition in Iran a fortunate byproduct rather than a primary objective.
Entertainment
Christa Miller describes how her life experiences helped inspire "Shrinking"
Actor Christa Miller speaks about starring in “Shrinking,” how her life experiences helped to inspire the series and what it’s like to work with her husband, who is a co-creator of the show.
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