Ellen DeGeneres accused of T-boning car in new lawsuit


Ellen DeGeneres has been accused of causing an auto collision in California prior to her move to England.

In documents obtained by Page Six on Friday, a woman driver claimed the former talk show hit her Tesla after allegedly blowing past a stop sign in Santa Barbara County in October 2023.

Per the docs, the woman claimed while driving her Tesla, she came upon an intersection with multiple stop signs, stopped and checed for oncoming traffic before proceeding.

The complainant alleged while moving into the intersection, she was abruptly T-boned by the comedian, 67, causing her an injury.

Ellen DeGeneres has been accused of T-boning a car in a new lawsuit. BACKGRID
The lawsuit alleged the comedian blew past a stop sign before the alleged collision, which happened in 2023 in Santa Barbara, Calif. BACKGRID

Per the docs, citing DeGeneres’ alleged failure to yield at the stop sign, the complainant is suing her for negligence and seeking unspecified damages.

A representative for DeGeneres did not immediately respond to Page Six’s request for comment.

The news comes just over two weeks after a former cameraman on the star’s former eponymous talk show came forward with more claims about the show’s allegedly toxic atmosphere.

“We went through a lot of male employees just in general,” the ex-employee claimed to the Daily Mail last month. “We had a feeling she really didn’t like guys.”

The former talk show host has faced allegations of a toxic workplace in the past. DPTIG / BACKGRID
A male staffer on the now-defunct “Ellen DeGeneres Show” made more claims last month. Michael Rozman/Warner Bros.

While the former staffer on the daily show said DeGeneres could be “nice,” to staffers, if they were “caught in conversation with [her wife] Portia [de Rossi,]” they could be in trouble.

“You just hoped and prayed you weren’t seated by her wife, so you didn’t get her attention,” he claimed. He also accused his former boss of having a feud with “Hell’s Kitchen” star Gordon Ramsay, saying that she once told an EP, “Don’t let this guy on the show again.” 

In 2020, when a deluge of toxic workplace claims emerged, the comedian addressed the allegations on the now defunct show.

“I learned that things happened here that never should’ve happened,” she told the audience. “I take that very seriously, and I want to say I’m so sorry to the people who were affected.” The show came to an end in 2022.

“I’m so sorry to the people who were affected,” she said in 2020 of the scandal. Vendetta dailly / BACKGRID
DeGeneres and wife Portia de Rossi moved to England following the election of Donald Trump. / SplashNews.com

DeGeneres — who also allegedly fell out with Rosie O’Donnell after decades of friendship — fled the United States with de Rossi following the 2024 presidential election and settled across the pond at a dreamy farmhouse in the Cotswolds. In July, news broke they were selling the estate and had already moved to another home nearby.

The actress confirmed that same month that she and the “Arrested Development” star had left the country because of the second election of president Donald Trump.

“We got here the day before the election and woke up to lots of texts from our friends with crying emojis, and I was like, ‘He got in,’” she recalled in an onstage conversation with British host Richard Bacon, per the BBC. “And we’re like, ‘We’re staying here.’”

She added in part, “Everything here is just better — the way animals are treated, people are polite. I just love it here.”



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Sally Jessy Raphael looks unrecognizable in rare photos


Iconic talk show host Sally Jessy Raphael shared rare photos amid her retirement, and looked nearly unrecognizable from her network television days.

In one Instagram photo shared Friday, the former “Sally” host rocked bright red hair, a black and white sundress and a green scarf as she enjoyed a breezy boat ride. She captioned the post with a nod to her “Raphaelites,” adding that she’s “serving you sailboat vibes.”

In two additional pics, the TV host, 90, pulled her fiery red locks into a ponytail and donned a tie-dye T-shirt while lounging at the end of a dock.

Sally Jessy Raphael looked nearly unrecognizable in several recent photos shared to Instagram. thesallyjessy/Instagram
“Hope you’re all enjoying your summer as much as I am,” the 90-year-old former talk show host captioned one July post. thesallyjessy/Instagram
In another pic, she enjoyed oysters during a getaway. thesallyjessy/Instagram

“Hope you’re all enjoying your summer as much as I am 💗,” she captioned the July 19 pics.  

In yet another, the Daytime Emmy Award winner snacked on oysters during a getaway. “In New England enjoying some oysters… aren’t these supposed to be an aphrodisiac?! 😜 ” she joked in the caption.

In February, the TV star shared a snap of herself living her best life in Paris while leaning out a window to check out the City of Lights.

Raphael’s memorable talk show “Sally” — previously known as “Sally Jessy Raphael” — aired from 1983 to 2002, and was known for its sensationalistic audience participation style and issue driven content. The former radio host won a Daytime Emmy Award for Outstanding Talk Show Host in 1989.

Raphael also shared a snapshot from Paris in February. thesallyjessy/Instagram
Raphael hosted her iconic talk show “Sally” from 1983 to 2002. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images

Her husband, Karl Soderlund — with whom she shared adopted son Jason and three foster children — died in 2020 after 57 years of marriage. She also shared daughters Allison (who died in 1992) and Andrea with former husband Andrew Vladimir, whom she divorced in 1963.

Raphael opened up to People in March about turning 90 following a highly visible career in television.

“It’s really interesting being 90 because if you dye your hair and you don’t have any veins in your legs, then people say you look young,” she told the outlet.

“And that’s always nice that people say, although why they think looking young when you can claim 90 is beyond me, but they think it’s a compliment.”

She won a Daytime Emmy Award in 1989. FilmMagic
“People always say, ‘That cute old lady,’ so I guess I’m cute again,” Raphael, seen here in a March Instagram photo, told People. thesallyjessy/Instagram

She also reflected on the benefits of being in her senior years.

“You’re cute when you’re young, and then for a long time, you’re not cute,” she said.

“And then when you get to be 80 or 90, you’re cute again. People always say, ‘That cute old lady,’ so I guess I’m cute again.”





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Episode schedule, where to watch and stream


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Season 27 of the hit reality competition series “Big Brother” returned last week with the official theme of “Big Brother: A Summer of Mystery.”

The series follows a group of people living together in a house outfitted with 94 HD cameras and 113 microphones, recording their every move 24 hours a day, according to CBS. Every week, someone is voted out of the house, with the last remaining houseguest receiving a grand prize of $750,000.

This year, houseguests will spend the summer inside the Hotel Mystère, an enigmatic yet luxurious version of the “Big Brother” house defined by hidden passageways, a wineless wine cellar, a vintage aesthetic, a poison bar and a suspense-filled atmosphere.

“This new group of houseguests is stepping into a summer where nothing is as it seems, where every twist rewrites the rules, and every turn conceals a hidden agenda,” CBS said about the upcoming season.

Here’s what to know about Season 27 of “Big Brother” and how to watch it.

‘Big Brother’ Season 27 episode schedule

Season 27 premiered on Thursday, July 10, with a 90-minute premiere, and another 90-minute episode aired on Sunday, July 13.

Following the first two episodes, “Big Brother” will drop 90-minute episodes on Wednesdays, followed by hourlong episodes on Thursdays and Sundays, through the season finale, according to the network. The Thursday episodes will feature houseguest evictions.

Here’s the weekly schedule of “Big Brother” episodes beginning Wednesday, July 16:

Wednesdays

  • Time: 8-9:30 p.m. ET/delayed PT
  • Channel: CBS
  • Streaming: Paramount+

Thursdays and Sundays

  • Time: 8-9 p.m. ET/delayed PT
  • Channel: CBS
  • Streaming: Paramount+

How to watch ‘Big Brother’ Season 27

“Big Brother” will air on CBS. 

Paramount+ Premium subscribers and Pluto TV viewers can watch the episodes on the platforms’ “Big Brother” live feeds.

‘Big Brother’ Season 27 cast

CBS announced the 16 cast members for Season 27 of “Big Brother” on July 8.

“This season’s cast includes a professional bull rider, event curator, marketing manager, AI consultant, aura painter, attorney and a dungeon master, among others,” the network said. Here is a list of the new houseguests:

  • Adrian Rocha
  • Amy Bingham
  • Ashley Hollis
  • Ava Pearl
  • Clifton Williams
  • Isaiah “Zae” Frederich
  • Jimmy Heagerty
  • Katherine Woodman
  • Keanu Soto
  • Kelley Jorgensen
  • Lauren Domingue
  • Mickey Lee
  • Morgan Pope
  • Rylie Jeffries
  • Vince Panaro
  • Zach Cornell

Contributing: Saman Shafiq, Taylor Ardrey & Anthony Robledo, USA TODAY

Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at Gdhauari@gannett.com.





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‘You’ Finale Review: Bronte Should’ve Aimed Higher


Photo: CLIFTON PRESCOD/NETFLIX

Spoilers follow for the You series finale.

So this is how Joe Goldberg’s story ends: with a public trial that condemns him to life in prison, devoid of touch and women to obsess over, but not before Bronte, his latest infatuation, shoots off his dick and his gored groin becomes the centerpiece for a viral video of his arrest. This arrangement of justice is true to form for You, which traffics in swooning gestures and cute, tidy outcomes for its protago-villain. Speaking with Deadline, Penn Badgley, who plays Joe, contextualized the choice against a larger cultural reckoning with “bad men.” “It does become a question of, ‘What do we do with people like Joe?’” he says. “If somebody was to kill him — and it would be a woman, right — well then actually now what you’ve burdened her with is having committed murder. Torture? Uh, okay, same thing. Prison? Eh, feels a bit not enough. So what do you do?” And thus they landed on the ruination of his junk.

It’s a splashy climax, and pretty amusing, too. Clad in nothing but his underwear, Joe pursues Bronte through the woods like a demon, and Badgley goes hard on making Joe sound like a teeny, whiny baby. “Kill me,” he says, voice squeaking once he realizes he’s been caught. “Please. I know you have it in you!” (Badgley has been consistently great throughout the series, and in a just world he would be in the Emmys conversation.) The move to maim his member also places Joe within the long tradition of castration as the worst possible thing you could do to a dude onscreen. Think back to Theon Greyjoy’s neutering on Game of Thrones, which plays out as the central pillar of his torturer’s campaign to annihilate the character’s sense of self, or the famously thorny scene in Pulp Fiction where Marsellus Wallace exacts revenge on his rapist by firing a shotgun at the guy’s genitals. Castration recurs in pop culture as comeuppance for men who inflict or threaten violence on women: Recall Robocop blasting the family jewels off a nameless criminal attempting to sexually assault a woman on the street or the sequence in Hard Candy where 14-year-old Hayley convinces the pedophile she’s torturing that she’s surgically removing his testicles.

There’s a straightforward logic in subjecting Joe to the same fate; the guy is a warped embodiment of the “but I’m one of the good ones” softboi misogynist who in this case also happens to be a serial killer. There’s narrative justice in lumping him with the weasel, the depraved, the criminal, the pedophile. Yet given everything creators Sera Gamble and Greg Berlanti have communicated about Joe over the show’s five seasons, castration doesn’t quite feel satisfying as a proportional symbolic response to Joe’s tenure of terror. Shooting his dick off is a great punchline, but it’s imprecise.

What made Joe so distinctive as the show’s central figure isn’t just that he’s a serial killer. It’s that he constructs fantasies and narratives about himself to justify his actions. In his mind, he kidnaps, tortures, and kills countless others in the service of love, reframing his use of violence within an internal logic of self-defense or an expression of trauma-induced mental sickness. In this final season, Joe’s internal narrative takes on a valence of self-determination: His violent urges are immutable parts of himself, so leaning into them amounts to a form of radical self-acceptance, and unleashing them against people who “deserve it” (abusive boyfriends, evil executives, smarmy therapists) is analogous to a harm-reduction technique. When it comes to the lovers he’s destroyed, well, there’s plenty to rationalize there, too: Beck didn’t measure up, Love also turned out to be a killer, Kate never accepted him anyway. (Though Marienne didn’t actually die at the end of the fourth season, you figure he’d chalk up her apparent overdose as an accident. Whoopsie.) The beating heart of his monstrosity isn’t his sexual cravings but his sense of romanticism and righteousness, the things that make Joe so compelling as a metaphor for very real men.

Dickless Joe would’ve been a satisfying payoff if You was just contained to its first season. There’s a magic trick to building a story around the villain, and if justice is the endgame, it really should be doled out expeditiously; otherwise, the narrative loses its moral authority of fundamental opposition to its central character. But You went on for four more seasons, and the task of producing a proportionally satisfying comeuppance grew more complicated with each Joe getaway. There’s also the fact that the series is so darn entertaining, an outcome predicated on eliciting an affinity for Joe by virtue of his positioning as the story’s main point of view, his (perfectly reasonable!) class critiques as he infiltrates various glamorous worlds, and the procession of idiots who parade into his life as plot hurdles to navigate (or kill). It’s slippery to make a villain both your protagonist and your target of deconstruction, and the more story You gives Joe, the harder it becomes for it to also challenge the mythologies protecting dangerous men like him. It also gets more difficult to point the finger at society for creating conditions that enable behavior like this when that really means you’re pointing the finger at viewers for wanting to root for someone like Joe. You can’t reap the rewards of successfully making him a protagonist while angsting against the audience feedback loop producing those rewards.

If you boil down Joe’s romantic fantasies as a mere cover for what he always was — a predator acting on violent sexual urges — you could argue that castration serves as a fitting symbol for his atrocities. But for that to really work, You needed to spend a lot more time unpacking Joe’s downfall, which is ultimately compressed into a ten-minute-ish coda slapped on the very end of the series finale. If the fundamental project was to deconstruct Joe’s self-mythologizing, there should’ve been a whole episode forcing him to confront his own monstrosity. (I guess I’m saying You’s series finale should’ve taken a thing or two from Seinfeld’s.)

The more You fleshed Joe out as a character, the bigger the distance grew between him and what he symbolizes: the threat of how any decent-seeming man could, within the space of a heartbeat, reveal himself to be a monster all along, a monster who believes himself to be the hero of his own romantic story with such ferocity that he’s able to convince others to join him in his fantasy. “What is wrong with me that I know who you are and part of me can still feel this good?” Bronte wonders in the finale, even as she prepares to take Joe down. “But who doesn’t love to be loved?” Of course, it’s not really her fault, or the fault of any of the other women who fell victim to his carnage. As she later screams, the fantasy of men like him is how women deal with the reality of men like him — a fantasy he’s all too eager to speak into being. She should’ve aimed for his mouth instead.



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Will ‘You’ return for another season on Netflix? What to know



‘He’s been like my little convict brother, who I’ve had to counsel through our 30s together,’ Penn Badgley told USA TODAY about his ‘You’ character, Joe Goldberg.

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Editor’s note: This story contains spoilers from the “You” Netflix series.

For Joe Goldberg (Penn Badgley), life has come full circle, as one would imagine after killing almost two dozen people and locking up a dozen more in his infamous glass cage.

In the “epic fifth and final season” of Netflix’s thriller drama, “You,” Joe is back in New York to enjoy his happily ever after as society’s “Prince Charming,” until his “perfect life is threatened by the ghosts of his past and his own dark desires,” according to the streaming service.

The final chapter of Joe’s life picks up three years after he and Kate (Charlotte Ritchie) left London for New York City. Kate is now CEO of the Lockwood Corporation, while Joe is her loyal husband, “dubbed Prince Charming by the adoring public.”

While the two are “following through on their pact to help each other do good,” it is not long before Joe’s misadventures catch up with him.

As the curtain drops on “You,” here’s why the series won’t be returning for another season.

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Will ‘You’ be returning for another season?

No. After a successful five-season run, Joe Goldberg’s journey on “You,” which premiered in September 2018 (on Lifetime before it moved to Netflix), has come to an end.

Co-showrunner and executive producer Michael Foley told Netflix’s Tudum the producers knew Joe’s journey would end after five seasons and loved the “idea of things coming full circle” for him.

“We always said that we would stop after five and [that], in a perfect world, we would bring Joe back home to New York,” Foley told Tudum. “We loved the idea of things coming full circle for him. We’re excited by the fact that Joe came home as such a different person than we saw in Season 1. At the core of our final story for Joe is this dichotomy of the old and the new.”

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Penn Badgley says he’s done with Joe

Badgley, meanwhile, in an exclusive interview with USA TODAY’s Anika Reed, said he is done with Joe.

“I’m glad we’re putting him to bed,” the actor said. “I’ve been with (Joe) my entire 30s, actually, I was 30 years old when I signed on to do this. I’m going to be 39 later this year.”

“He’s been like my little convict brother, who I’ve had to counsel through our 30s together,” Badgley added. “And in that way, he’s kind of taught me to be a better man. He’s failing miserably, but I’ve had to reflect on all the things I share with him, even if they’re not that escalated or that magnified.”

Badgley said he’s glad the series is coming to an end at this point.

“The world is a different place now than it was when (‘You’) started,” Badgley said. “I said, I think in the first season, ‘How far are we willing to go to forgive an evil man?’ … It feels like the stakes in the world are a little bit different. I’m glad that this show is closing rather than starting.”

In a separate interview with the Los Angeles Times, Badgley said he’s happy with the way things end for his character.

“The last 20 minutes (of the season) feel good to me,” Badgley told the LA Times. “Here’s the main reason: because, by the end, we’ve deconstructed him and made him less interesting. It’s like, do you want more of this man? Do you really want more? I’m sure there’s a way we can cook something up, but do you really?”

“In those last moments, he’s uninteresting,” the actor added. “He’s like a lizard. He has nothing to offer. At that point, I was just like, ‘I can’t do this man anymore.’”

How many people did Joe kill in ‘You’?

Joe killed a total of 23 people over five seasons of “You,” according to Netflix, including:

  1. His mom’s boyfriend
  2. Benji
  3. Elijah
  4. Peach
  5. Ron
  6. Beck
  7. Jasper
  8. Henderson
  9. Ryan
  10. Love
  11. Malcolm
  12. Simon
  13. Vic
  14. Gemma
  15. Rhys
  16. Tom Lockwood
  17. Tom’s bodyguard
  18. Eddie
  19. Uncle Bob
  20. Reagan
  21. Dane
  22. Clayton
  23. A police officer

The killer, meanwhile, imprisoned 14 people in his cubic cage, of which only 9 survived it.

‘You’ Season 5 cast

While “You” is not returning for another season, here’s who was a part of Season 5’s cast:

  • Penn Badgley as Joe Goldberg
  • Charlotte Ritchie as Kate Lockwood
  • Madeline Brewer as Bronte
  • Griffin Matthews as Teddy Lockwood
  • Anna Camp as Raegan and Maddie Lockwood
  • Natasha Behnam as Dominique
  • b as Phoenix
  • Pete Ploszek as Harrison
  • Tom Francis as Clayton
  • Nava Mau as Detective Marquez

How to watch ‘You’ Season 5

All five seasons of “You” are available to stream on Netflix.

Saman Shafiq is a trending news reporter for USA TODAY. Reach her at sshafiq@gannett.com and follow her on X and Instagram @saman_shafiq7.



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Tracker’s Eric Graise: What to Know About His Bobby Role Before Absence


Tracker fans were paying close attention to Eric Graise‘s character Bobby — so of course they noticed when he went missing for multiple episodes for no apparent reason.

The hit CBS series, which premiered in February 2024, is centered around a survivalist named Colter (Justin Hartley) who travels the country helping to solve a variety of mysteries. Based on Jeffery Deaver‘s novel The Never Game, Tracker follows Colter week to week as he works on cases with help from Teddi (Robin Weigert), Velma (Abby McEnany), technology genius Bobby (Graise) and personal attorney Reenie (Fiona Rene).

“We do have a running joke though, of how many times Colter has broken the law. Our grips department put together a list and it’s ridiculous. My idea was to have, maybe at the end of season 2, my wrap gift to everyone be a hoodie that lists all of the things that he’s done,” Hartley joked with The Wrap in May 2024. “Like assault, breaking and entering, kidnapping, all that stuff. But it’s a long list already. Every episode, he’s doing something illegal, right?”

It wasn’t Colter’s shenanigans that caught the audience’s attention in season 2. Just as Tracker was in the middle of the season, Graise was nowhere to be found. Instead, Bobby’s cousin Randy (Chris Lee) took over in his place for seven consecutive episodes. Bobby ultimately returned in an April 2025 episode — but not before Graise’s absence sparked online concerns.

Related: ‘Tracker’ Questions We Need Answered: Is Gina Alive? Will Billie Return?

Sergei Bachlakov/CBS Justin Hartley‘s hit CBS series Tracker has left a lot of questions unanswered before wrapping up season 2 in early 2025. During the season 2 premiere, which aired in October, Colter (Hartley) reflected on the only case he hasn’t been able to solve. Colter found himself reconnecting with Camille (Floriana Lima) on the […]

Keep scrolling for what to know about Graise after he played Bobby since season 1 on Tracker:

What Projects Was Eric Involved in Before ‘Tracker’?

Who Is Tracker's Eric Graise? 5 Things to Know About the Actor Playing Bobby
CBS

In addition to Tracker, Graise has appeared on Step Up: High Water, Locke & Key, Queer as Folk, The Tomorrow War, Teenage Bounty Hunters, Dynasty and The Walking Dead.

Graise, who is also a dancer, directed a 2018 short film titled Limited Space.

How Did Eric Help Evolve Bobby on ‘Tracker’?

Who Is Tracker's Eric Graise? 5 Things to Know About the Actor Playing Bobby
CBS

“The character was initially written as a very rigid kind of suit and tie type of guy, very posh — and then they met me,” Graise told Ebony in August 2024. “Bobby’s a witty, smart kind of guy. I identify a lot with that. I was excited to bring a little more of myself to the role.”

Graise went on to point out that Bobby was located in Chicago — while he was born in Illinois. “They didn’t even know that,” he added.

How Does Eric Relate to His ‘Tracker’ Character on Screen?

Who Is Tracker's Eric Graise? 5 Things to Know About the Actor Playing Bobby
CBS

Over the years, Graise has discussed having a double leg amputation as a child, telling Ebony in August 2024, “I think what’s fun for me with disabled characters is that I like to see them be a vital part of the story line. But at the same time, it’s the norm … [Bobby is] just like everybody else.”

Graise has been an advocate for representation since being in the public eye. He spoke at the White House during the 25th Anniversary Celebration of the Americans with Disabilities Act event in 2015 alongside Marlee Matlin, Camryn Manheim and Ali Stroker.

Justin Hartley Confirms Wife Sofia Pernas Is Coming Back on Tracker — and She s Not the Only One 519

Related: Most Iconic Guest Stars Featured on Justin Hartley‘s ‘Tracker‘ Series

Justin Hartley‘s CBS series Tracker has won over its audience because of the intriguing cases — and the impressive guest stars. Tracker, which premiered in February 2024, is centered around a survivalist named Colter (Hartley) who travels the country helping people and law enforcement tackle a variety of mysteries. As the series unfolds, viewers learn […]

What Does Eric Want to Explore Professionally Outside of Acting?

Who Is Tracker's Eric Graise? 5 Things to Know About the Actor Playing Bobby
CBS

Graise has opened up about his interest in screenwriting, telling Amplitude in 2020 that he was “writing a pilot” for a series.

“[It’s] been kicking around for three years now. The pilot is basically finished, and I’m working on the story bible right now. It has a lot of backstory to it and tons of family heritage, and I need to know all of that heritage,” he explained at the time. “When I’m writing, I’m writing a character with a disability. I’m not writing the disability, and I’m not writing a character. I’m writing a character with a disability.”

Graise continued: “I think able-bodied writers and actors have a hard time putting the two together. Either they’ll create a character where their whole world is defined by their disability, or they’ll create a character that’s completely devoid of their disability. Neither one is really true to life.”

Why Was Eric Missing From 7 Episodes of ‘Tracker’ in Season 2?

Who Is Tracker's Eric Graise? 5 Things to Know About the Actor Playing Bobby
CBS

Fans started to grow concerned during the back half of season 2 when Graise’s prolonged absence wasn’t addressed for five consecutive episodes. There was a development during a March 2025 episode of the hit CBS series when Colter and Randy confirmed that Bobby was going to his “friend’s funeral.”

Graise ultimately returned after a seven-episode absence. “I am taking it one day at a time,” he said in an April 2025 episode. “But I had to come back and fix this mess.”



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