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How 'Space Jam' Slammed into Summer Pop Culture
The first four films played musical chairs with characters and tone. Fast Five flipped the switch, morphing the series into a full-blown ensemble action heist. Amidst all the nonsense, these movies found a loyal fan base who stayed strapped in for every shift. Ranking this franchise is a bit like ranking your favorite flavors of […]


The first four films played musical chairs with characters and tone. Fast Five flipped the switch, morphing the series into a full-blown ensemble action heist. Amidst all the nonsense, these movies found a loyal fan base who stayed strapped in for every shift.
Ranking this franchise is a bit like ranking your favorite flavors of energy drinks—they’re all kind of wild, sometimes taste questionable, but weirdly addictive. Some films are better made. Others are just more fun. And a few? Well, they feel like they ran out of gas halfway through the race.
11. Fast & Furious (2009)
Directed by: Justin Lin | Written by: Chris Morgan
Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) returns to the FBI, Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) is back in LA, and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) is presumed dead. The plot centers around Brian and Dom tracking a drug lord through underground races and border-hopping hijinks.
It sounds like vintage Fast stuff, but somehow, the engine stalls.
This one lands in last place because it feels more like a narrative patch job than a full story. It attempts to fix continuity issues from the earlier movies, but ultimately ends up creating a filler episode with little payoff.
Just reuniting the cast doesn’t guarantee chemistry or excitement. Story structure matters. Stakes matter. And if you’re rebooting mid-franchise, make sure the reboot actually adds something fresh.
10. The Fate of the Furious (2017)
Directed by: F. Gary Gray | Written by: Chris Morgan
Dom turns rogue. The man who invented “ride or die” decides to turn on his team, coerced by cyberterrorist Cipher (Charlize Theron), who’s holding his ex and their child hostage. Meanwhile, Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and Shaw (Jason Statham) reluctantly team up to track him down. There’s a submarine chase, some ice-drifting Lambos, and a villain who controls everything from cars to nuclear codes.
Sure, the action’s big, and Theron is trying her best. But this lacks the emotional spine that made Furious 7 work. Dom turning against his family might’ve worked had the film earned that twist.
Directors looking to scale up should pay attention: escalation without an emotional anchor doesn’t land.
9. Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw (2019)
Directed by: David Leitch | Written by: Chris Morgan & Drew Pearce
In this spin-off detour, Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) and Shaw (Jason Statham) team up to stop a cyber-genetically enhanced villain, Brixton (Idris Elba), who calls himself “Black Superman.”
Along the way, there’s a virus that could destroy humanity, a few high-octane brawls in exotic locations, and a detour to Samoa where Hobbs reconnects with his roots. Ryan Reynolds and Kevin Hart pop in for cameos because… why not?
This movie is fun, no doubt. The buddy-cop banter works, especially if you’re a fan of Johnson and Statham trading insults. But it barely feels like a Fast film.
If there’s a takeaway here, it’s that tone is everything. You can crank up the action and bring in superheroes, but if it loses the DNA of the original franchise, it risks becoming a different beast altogether. Know your lane.
8. 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003)
Directed by: John Singleton | Written by: Michael Brandt & Derek Haas
Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) is now on the run from the law and lands in Miami, where he teams up with childhood friend Roman Pearce (Tyrese Gibson) to infiltrate a drug kingpin’s operation. Eva Mendes joins the mix as an undercover U.S. Customs agent.
This sequel is absolutely soaked in early-2000s aesthetic. Roman’s wisecracks introduce levity, Brian’s character evolves, and the vibe is pure, uncut DVD-era fun. It lacks Dom, sure, but it establishes the franchise’s willingness to shift tone and location, which later paid off in big ways.
Directors and writers can learn a lot about chemistry from this one. John Singleton took a simple plot and had fun with it.
7. Fast X (2023)
Directed by: Louis Leterrier | Written by: Dan Mazeau & Justin Lin
The Toretto crew is back, and this time, they’re being hunted by Dante Reyes (Jason Momoa), the vengeful son of the drug lord killed in Fast Five. The film jumps between Rome, Rio, London, and Antarctica. Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) fights Cypher (Charlize Theron) in a lab. John Cena returns. Brie Larson shows up.
The film is messy, bloated, and ends mid-climax. But it’s still entertaining. Momoa is having the time of his life. That said, Fast X suffers from being a “Part One”—we don’t get resolution.
Overstuffing a script with too many characters and unfinished arcs weakens the payoff. But casting a villain who’s clearly enjoying every moment? That’s a win.
6. Fast & Furious 6 (2013)
Directed by: Justin Lin | Written by: Chris Morgan
The crew’s living large after the Rio heist, until Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson) asks Dom (Vin Diesel) to take down Owen Shaw (Luke Evans), a precision-focused ex-military baddie. Letty (Michelle Rodriguez), who’s somehow alive and has amnesia, is the bait.
This film marks the peak of the “superteam” era. The ensemble is locked in, the action scenes are outrageous in the best way, and Letty’s return adds genuine stakes. It nails the Fast formula: bombastic action grounded in relationships.
Justin Lin balances character moments with chaos, making sure each team member gets a moment. When the stakes are clear and personal, even the wildest set piece can hit home.
5. F9: The Fast Saga (2021)
Directed by: Justin Lin | Written by: Daniel Casey & Justin Lin
Just when you thought the Fast franchise had hit its ceiling, Dom (Vin Diesel) and crew drive into orbit. F9 introduces Jakob Toretto (John Cena), Dom’s long-lost brother. There’s a MacGuffin device called Project Aries, and yes, Roman (Tyrese Gibson) and Tej (Ludacris) end up in space wearing duct-taped suits in a Pontiac Fiero.
The movie is as unhinged as it sounds, but it leans into the absurdity with a self-aware grin. The family dynamics still anchor the chaos, and Han’s (Sung Kang) resurrection, while baffling, is handled with enough fan service to earn cheers.
One smart move F9 makes is embracing the absurd instead of fighting it. For creators, this is a case study in managing tonal extremes—if your story gets ridiculous, acknowledge it within the world.
4. The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift (2006)
Directed by: Justin Lin | Written by: Chris Morgan
Following repeated run-ins with the law for illegal racing, Sean Boswell (Lucas Black) is sent to live with his father in Tokyo as a last resort to avoid expulsion and jail time. There, he discovers the underground drift-racing scene and falls in with Han (Sung Kang).
Tokyo Drift may have bombed at the box office initially, but it’s aged well. Justin Lin brings an aesthetic precision that would later become his franchise trademark.
This one teaches a crucial lesson: don’t be afraid to pivot. When a franchise needs a fresh start, try a new city, a new character, or a new subculture.
3. Fast Five (2011)
Directed by: Justin Lin | Written by: Chris Morgan
The crew’s on the run in Rio. Brian (Paul Walker), Dom (Vin Diesel), and Mia (Jordana Brewster) plan one last job—stealing $100 million from a drug kingpin. Luke Hobbs (Dwayne Johnson), a relentless DSS agent, is on their tail.
Fast Five is the inflection point. It ditches street racing for globe-trotting spectacle and reinvents the franchise as an ensemble action series.
With Fast Five, we can see that evolution doesn’t mean erasure. It kept the emotional DNA of the series intact while turbocharging its scale. For filmmakers, it’s a textbook example of raising the stakes without losing your roots. You can grow bigger and bolder, as long as you bring the audience with you.
2. The Fast and the Furious (2001)
Directed by: Rob Cohen | Written by: Gary Scott Thompson, Erik Bergquist & David Ayer
Brian O’Conner (Paul Walker) is an undercover cop trying to infiltrate a crew of illegal street racers suspected of hijacking electronics shipments. He meets Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel), falls into the LA racing scene, and finds his loyalty torn between duty and newfound brotherhood. Cue quarter-mile races and a showdown under the California sun.
This is where it all began. Just raw, street-level tension with a gritty edge. The racing feels real, the characters feel human, and the world feels lived-in. It was Point Break with pistons. Dom and Brian’s friendship-turned-conflict set the emotional tone that the series continues to chase.
Sometimes the simplest stories hit hardest. This film proves that grounded stakes, clear motivation, and believable relationships can carry an entire franchise. Before the CGI skyscraper jumps and drifting spacecraft, it was about cars, codes, and character.
1. Furious 7 (2015)
Directed by: James Wan | Written by: Chris Morgan
The crew must protect Ramsey (Nathalie Emmanuel), a hacker who’s created a surveillance device called God’s Eye, while dodging Shaw (Jason Statham), who’s out for revenge. The plot sends them from LA to Abu Dhabi, where Dom (Vin Diesel) and Brian (Paul Walker) drive a $3 million Lykan HyperSport through multiple skyscrapers.
But it’s not the action that makes Furious 7 the best in the series. It’s the farewell. Paul Walker’s tragic death during production transformed this film from a fun action ride into an emotional tribute. James Wan balanced grief, spectacle, and legacy with finesse. The final scene—Dom and Brian parting ways to the tune of “See You Again”—is devastating in its simplicity.
There’s a lot to learn from Furious 7. It shows how to blend heart with adrenaline without tipping into sentimentality. How to wrap a character arc with dignity. And how to honor a performer’s legacy without feeling exploitative. In a franchise built on family, this was the moment it truly meant something.
What’s Next? The Future of Fast & Furious
With Fast XI reportedly closing the main saga, the question is: how do you end a franchise that’s been accelerating for over two decades? Will Dom get a quiet ending? Will we see spin-offs that explore Han’s years in hiding, or Letty’s off-book missions? And is there any chance the series will return to its humble street-racing roots, or are we too far along now?
Whatever happens next, you don’t bet against Fast & Furious.
Sports
Emporia State Volleyball Opens Training Camp on Wednesday
Women’s Volleyball | 8/12/2025 5:01:00 PM Story Links August 12, 2025- As the school year moves closer, Emporia State volleyball begins training camp this week in preparation for their third season under head coach Ken Murczek. The Hornets reported over the weekend and after team meetings and photo opportunities early this […]

Women’s Volleyball | 8/12/2025 5:01:00 PM
August 12, 2025- As the school year moves closer, Emporia State volleyball begins training camp this week in preparation for their third season under head coach Ken Murczek.
The Hornets reported over the weekend and after team meetings and photo opportunities early this week will practice for the first time on Wednesday, August 13 at 9:30 a.m. with a second practice in the afternoon at 3:00 p.m. Practices for the first week will be held in the volleyball practice gym in the HPER Building.
Emporia State’s first action will come on Saturday, August 16 for the Washburn exhibition tournament in Topeka, KS. The Hornets will have an NCAA mandated off day on Monday, August 18 for the first day of classes before beginning their regular practice schedule through the regular season with practices at 3:00 p.m.
The Hornets will have two more exhibition tournaments before the regular season starts. Emporia State will travel to Warrensburg, Mo. on Saturday, August 23 and to the Homefield Kansas City Kansas Showcase Center on Saturday, August 30.
The regular season will open with a trip to the West Coast on September 4-6 for the San Diego Invitational. The Hornets will open the season against Point Loma on Thursday followed by games against Cal State San Bernardino on Friday and Northwest Nazarene on Saturday. The home opener is set for Friday, September 26 against Missouri Western in White Auditorium.
Emporia State went 17-10 last season, their first winning season since 2014 and were the sixth seed in the MIAA Tournament. The Hornets 17 wins are the most in a season for ESU since the 2013 season.
Emporia State Volleyball Training Camp and Exhibition Schedule
Wednesday, August 13 | Practice 1 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 9:30-11:30 a.m. |
Practice 2 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 3:00-5:00 p.m. | |
Thursday, August 14 | Practice 3 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 9:30-11:30 a.m. |
Practice 4 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 3:00-5:00 p.m. | |
Friday, August 15 | Practice 5 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 8:30-10:30 a.m. |
Practice 2 | Volleyball Practice Gym | 3:00-5:00 p.m. | |
Saturday, August 16 | at Washburn Exhibition Tourney | Topeka, KS | 10:00 a.m. |
Sunday, August 17 | Off Day | ||
Monday, August 18 | Off Day – First Day of Class | ||
Tuesday, August 19 | Begin Regular Practice Schedule | Practice Gym or White Auditorium | 3:00-5:00 p.m. |
Saturday, August 23 | at UCM Exhibition Tourney | Warrensburg, Mo. | |
Saturday, August 30 | at Homefield KCK Showcase Exhibition | Kansas City, KS |
Sports
Track Hires Roger An As Assistant Coach
Story Links Eastern Illinois director of track & field James Gildon has announced the hiring of Roger An as an assistant coach with the Panthers team. An comes to EIU after coaching the last four years at Mount St. Mary’s University in Maryland. He will serve as EIU’s sprints and hurdles […]

Eastern Illinois director of track & field James Gildon has announced the hiring of Roger An as an assistant coach with the Panthers team.
An comes to EIU after coaching the last four years at Mount St. Mary’s University in Maryland. He will serve as EIU’s sprints and hurdles coach.
During four seasons coaching at Mount St. Mary’s An coached 36 All-Conference performers with 14 ECAC All-Region performers.
His athletes have continued to have success on the international level ranking in the United Kingdom national rankings along with athletes that competed at both the Pan American Games and Canadian Olympic Trials.
Prior to his time at Mount St. Mary’s, An coached one season at Amherst College preceded by two years at Lake Superior State as an assistant track coach.
An holds a bachelor’s degree from The College of Wooster and a master’s degree from Southern Nazarene University.
He has had additional coaching and athletic department experiences at The College of Wooster, Southern Nazarene University, the North Coast Athletic Conference and Putnam City High School in Oklahoma.
Sports
2025 Fall Preview: Branson Volleyball
By Chris Parker Branson volleyball was a young team with just one senior last season, but that didn’t stop the Pirates from posting a winning record at 15-9-4. “With having a younger team last year, these girls realized they can compete with anyone,” Branson head coach Francie McBride said. “We lost some close matches last […]

By Chris Parker
Branson volleyball was a young team with just one senior last season, but that didn’t stop the Pirates from posting a winning record at 15-9-4.
“With having a younger team last year, these girls realized they can compete with anyone,” Branson head coach Francie McBride said. “We lost some close matches last year which has fueled their desire to be even more competitive this year.”
A wealth of experience including three all-conference players return this season.
Emma Skoglund, a William Penn commit, returns for her senior season. She led Branson in kills (273) and blocks (38) last season.
“Emma is a very driven player with a stellar work ethic,” McBride said. “She has put in countless hours in the off-season to be physically stronger and a better all-around volleyball player. Her commitment is unmatched, and she will be a steadfast leader for us this season. Emma can hit anywhere on the court and has a high volleyball IQ.”
Gigi McAdara earned second-team all-conference honors as a junior. She was second to Skoglund in both kills (217) and blocks (30) last season.
“Gigi has improved tremendously over the past few years,” McBride said. “She has great court awareness and uses her length to her advantage on offense. She is a versatile front-row player and has played all three positions the past two years and brings great experience.”
Kayden Butrum is the final returning all-conference player. The senior was named all-conference honorable mention after she led Branson in both digs (415) and serve receptions (411).
“Kayden is an excellent leader on and off the floor,” McBride said. “She spurs on our defense with her communication, high-level energy, and commitment and brings four-years of varsity experience.”
The final two returning seniors are Remington Holmes and Sarah Cox. Holmes is a team captain and a two-year letter winner. Cox is a utility player who brings energy, positivity and initiative to the program.
Juniors Erinn Swofford (setter), Joree McBride (OH/DS) and Bella Harmon also return. Swofford led the team in assists with 725 as a sophomore. McBride looks to be 100 percent healthy entering the season after fully recovering from a knee injury.
Several sophomores will look to find varsity time.
“We have a very athletic sophomore group this season who are expected to make an impact at the varsity level,” McBride said.
The roster is a close-knit one that has experience playing together.
“Our biggest strength is that these girls genuinely love playing the game of volleyball and they love playing it together and they want to see our program be successful,” Coach McBride said. “With how tight-knit they are I believe we are going to do big things and have lots of fun along the way.”
Branson travels to West Plains for a jamboree on Aug. 26. The jamboree will take place outside on the football field with Glendale and the host Zizzers. The Pirates open the regular season on Aug. 28 at Harrison (Ark.) before hosting their home invitational on Aug. 30.
Sports
Cross Country releases schedule for 2025 season
MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee has released its 2025 cross country schedule, featuring four regular season meets before hosting the Conference USA Championship in Huntsville, Alabama. The Blue Raiders, who finished as runner-up on both the men’s and women’s sides at last year’s CUSA Championships, return with eyes on the title in a season that […]

MURFREESBORO, Tenn. — Middle Tennessee has released its 2025 cross country schedule, featuring four regular season meets before hosting the Conference USA Championship in Huntsville, Alabama.
The Blue Raiders, who finished as runner-up on both the men’s and women’s sides at last year’s CUSA Championships, return with eyes on the title in a season that includes multiple previews of the championship course.
Middle Tennessee opens the season on Aug. 30 at the Memphis Twilight, marking the program’s ninth consecutive appearance at the meet.
On Sept. 12, the Blue Raiders will head to Huntsville, Ala., for the Southern Showcase — a key opportunity to race on the championship course.
The team will then compete in the Louisville Classic on Oct. 4, followed by a trip to College Station, Texas, for the Arturo Barrios Invitational on Oct. 17, hosted by Texas A&M.
The Conference USA Championship will be held on Nov. 1 in Huntsville, with MTSU serving as host.
NCAA Regionals will follow two weeks later, also in Huntsville, marking the Blue Raiders’ third visit to the course this season. The NCAA National Championship will take place in Columbia, Mo., hosted by the University of Missouri.
Keeping up with the Blue Raiders
Keep up with Blue Raider cross country and track and field on Facebook (Middle Tennessee Blue Raider XC/Track & Field), Twitter (@MT_TrackField), and Instagram (@mt_trackfield).
Sports
Volleyball Picked to Finish 13th in NSIC; Local Freshmen on Track Team
BSU women’s volleyball was picked to finish 13th in the 2025 NSIC Preseason Coaches’ Poll, and sophomore middle blocker Ava Athman was tabbed as the Beavers’ Preseason Player to Watch for the year. It will be Bemidji State’s first season under new head coach Erika Bute, who spent last year as an assistant for the […]

BSU women’s volleyball was picked to finish 13th in the 2025 NSIC Preseason Coaches’ Poll, and sophomore middle blocker Ava Athman was tabbed as the Beavers’ Preseason Player to Watch for the year.
It will be Bemidji State’s first season under new head coach Erika Bute, who spent last year as an assistant for the Beavs.
BSU women’s track and field will have 10 freshmen as part of this year’s incoming class, and two of them are from area schools. One is Naila Mikhael, a cross country and long distance track athlete from Staples-Motley who finished 11th in the 1600 meter at the Section 6A meet.
The other is Clearbrook-Gonvick’s Allison LaVine, who is a multi-event athlete and throws disc. In the latter event, she’s the reigning back-to-back Class A state champ.
Sports
Cincinnati Bearcats Unveil Fan-First Mobile App Powered by WMT, Ticketmaster and LAVA – University of Cincinnati Athletics
CINCINNATI – Cincinnati Athletics, in partnership with WMT, Ticketmaster and LAVA, today announced the launch of a new mobile app designed to unify the fan experience across ticketing, content, loyalty, and in-venue engagement, all in one connected platform. Cincinnati is the first college athletics program to integrate LAVA, the real-time engagement platform used by more […]

CINCINNATI – Cincinnati Athletics, in partnership with WMT, Ticketmaster and LAVA, today announced the launch of a new mobile app designed to unify the fan experience across ticketing, content, loyalty, and in-venue engagement, all in one connected platform.
Cincinnati is the first college athletics program to integrate LAVA, the real-time engagement platform used by more than 50 professional sports teams, across the NFL, NBA, NHL and beyond. This technology allows the app to respond dynamically to fan behavior, delivering personalized offers, exclusive content, and engagement-based rewards.
With Ticketmaster integrated directly into the platform, fans can also manage tickets, enter venues with ease, and access benefits like 10 percent off concessions for season ticket members via LAVA. More information will be e-mailed to season ticket members on how to access discounts through LAVA in the coming days.
“This upgraded mobile app and our partnerships with Ticketmaster and LAVA, as well as Fan Compass, are all about putting our fans first,” said Anthony DiFino, Cincinnati’s Deputy AD for External/Chief Revenue Officer. “From easier ticketing and fan contests to personalized content and exclusive game-day perks like discounted concessions, we’re committed to delivering a best-in-class fan experience every time you engage with Bearcats Athletics.”
The launch follows the recent redesign of GoBearcats.com, which debuted July 1 in partnership with WMT. Together, the website and app represent a full-scale upgrade to Cincinnati’s digital ecosystem, providing fans with a modern, interactive platform to stay engaged every day of the year.
“This project was about delivering a fully connected fan experience,” said Andres Focil, CEO of WMT. “By integrating content, ticketing, and loyalty into one seamless experience, we’ve helped Cincinnati deliver on its vision for next-generation fan engagement. They are setting a new standard for what’s possible in college athletics.”
The Cincinnati Bearcats app is available now in the App Store and Google Play. Search “Cincinnati Bearcats” to download.
WIN PRIZES THROUGH FAN COMPASS
The app will also feature contests through Fan Compass, UC’s official technology partner, giving all UC fans the chance to engage with the Bearcats, gain rewards and win prizes. This platform offers interactive experiences—from trivia and sweepstakes to unique features like Predict-It, where fans can guess the outcome of key moments.
Fans can explore contests at GoBearcats.com/Fan-Contests.
GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY
Led by All-Big 12 First Team Cincinnati natives Dontay Corleone and Joe Royer, the Cincinnati football team is poised for success under third-year head coach Scott Satterfield. The Bearcats will play seven games inside Historic Nippert Stadium. Season and single-game tickets are available for the fast-approaching season and can be purchased here.
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