See the first trailer for Netflix's return to the “Little House on the Prairie”

It's officially time to move back to the prairie.

Entertainment Weekly Netflix's 'Little House on the Prairie'Credit: Netflix

Netflix has released the first trailer forLittle House on the Prairie, the reboot of the iconic NBC series and the latest adaptation of the Laura Ingalls Wilder book series.

"Every day and every night was an adventure," the young, strong-willed Laura Ingalls (played by Alice Halsey) says in the new look. "And even though they were alone, and very small against the sky and the stars, they were happy, because they were a family and they were together."

Here's the official logline: "Part hopeful family drama, part epic survival tale, and part origin story of the American West, this fresh adaptation of Laura Ingalls Wilder’s iconic semi-autobiographical Little House books offers a kaleidoscopic view of the struggles and triumphs of those who shaped the frontier."

The latest Ingalls family is rounded out by Skywalker Hughes (Joe Pickett) as older sister Mary, Luke Bracey (Point Break) as patriarch Charles Ingalls, and Crosby Fitzgerald (Palm Royale) as matriarch Caroline Ingalls.

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Wilder'sLittle House on the Prairiechildren's books were originally released in the 1930s, before eventually being developed into NBC's western series, which ran from 1974 to 1983. Melissa Gilbert, who originally starred as Laura, previously voiced her support for Netflix's reboot.

"I think there's room in theLittle Houseuniverse for all different kinds of stories to be told — just like there was always room in theLittle Womenuniverse to keep retelling that story,"she toldEntertainment Weekly. "These are classic stories, and no one's done it where they hewed to the books completely.

All episodes of theLittle House on the Prairiepremiere on July 9. Watch the trailer above.

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See the first trailer for Netflix's return to the “Little House on the Prairie”

It's officially time to move back to the prairie. Netflix has released the first trailer forLittle House on the Prairie, the ...
Prince William & Kate Middleton's 'Disappearing Act' Explained by Insider

Prince WilliamandKate Middletonare preparing to temporarily step away from public engagements, with insiders describing the move not as a retreat, but as a deliberate choice to focus on family. The Prince and Princess of Wales have just wrapped an intense stretch of official duties.

Prince William and Kate Middleton will reportedly take a temporary break from public life, claims insider

Their recent schedule included high-profile appearances such as the Commonwealth Day service at Westminster Abbey, a Nigerian state visit, and multiple engagements across London and other parts of the UK. Middleton also marked St. Patrick’s Day publicly and carried out a visit to Leicester. At the same time, William undertook solo trips to the Mercian Regiment and Cornwall.

Their children, Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis, are now on school break from March 27 to April 22. Meanwhile, the couple plans to pause official commitments to spend uninterrupted time together. According to asource, this is far from a casual decision. “For William and Kate, this isn’t simply a case of taking time off,” the insider said. “It’s a conscious, values-driven decision about the kind of parents they want to be. They place enormous importance on these windows when the children are out of school, seeing them as rare opportunities to spend uninterrupted, meaningful time together.”

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While some have framed their absence as a “disappearing act,” those close to the couple say the reality is much more intentional. “They are intentionally stepping back from public life to be fully present at home,” the source explained. “For them, it’s about creating a sense of stability and connection for their children, which they view as far more valuable than maintaining constant visibility.”

The Prince and Princess of Wales are expected to spend this period at Anmer Hall. It’s their countryside home on the Sandringham estate, which they often use as a private retreat from royal duties. The quieter setting allows them to focus on daily family life away from the pressures of public appearances.

The postPrince William & Kate Middleton’s ‘Disappearing Act’ Explained by Insiderappeared first onReality Tea.

Prince William & Kate Middleton’s ‘Disappearing Act’ Explained by Insider

Prince WilliamandKate Middletonare preparing to temporarily step away from public engagements, with insiders describing the move not as a r...
Reba McEntire debuts song 'One Night in Tulsa' at Oklahoma bar

Inside Reba's Place on April 9, the country music icon with blazing red locks stood an arm's length from fans in the front row.

USA TODAY

"We have some new music we want to spring on y'all,"Reba McEntiresaid.

The excited crowd hooted and hollered. Some had driven all night for the chance to sit in the crowd of roughly 200 people. Some who lived in the same small town as the bar, Atoka, Oklahoma, dropped in to enter a lottery for a ticket to see the hometown queen. Other overflow guests received texts just moments before doors opened. The spontaneous additions grabbed standing-room-only spots on the second floor. Even more fans gathered outside on the nearby green space, listening through a simulcast. McEntire's wait staff lined the bar to watch.

"Since we are doing a show 'One Night in Atoka,' why don't we do a song that's called 'One Night in Tulsa'?" McEntire, 71, said.

As the violin cried and the piano pulsed, her mezzo-soprano cut through the opening line: "Well the thing about leaving / is that somebody stays / And the problem with goodbye / is it only goes one way."

Reba McEntire sings at her restaurant in Atoka, Okla. to fans.

Fans drove all night to meet the Queen of Country Music

In late March, the restaurant announced free tickets to watch McEntire sing. More than 35,000 entries poured in from four eligible states: Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas and Kansas. A little over 100 lucky patrons were chosen.

Nine-year-old Mikayla Hoult and her father, Mike, drove more than 10 hours overnight from Illinois. They didn't have tickets, yet were still hoping to meet the famous singer.

"Because we weren't in any of the four states, I asked, 'Hey, this is probably a really good chance, Mikayla, for you to finally meet Reba. Do you want to go?' And she's like, 'Yes, I want to go.' So we got here this morning."

The risk paid off. When McEntire's gray-blue bus pulled up behind the restaurant, Mikayla held a sign that read, "Hi Reba! Could you sign me and my sister's fiddles, please?"

"She did not hesitate to sign," Mike said.

"It was amazing to meet her," Mikayla added.

Mikayla Hoult, 9, holds up the sign she made for Reba McEntire. The country singer signed Hoult's violin outside of "Reba's Place" in Atoka, Oklahoma. April 9, 2026.

Amy Shelby drove two hours from Tuttle, Oklahoma, pulling her daughter out of school for the chance to see the "Fancy" singer face-to-face.

"She just loves Reba and I knew this is something that she'd never forget," Shelby said. They did not have tickets either, but happened to be at the right place, right time.

Both families entered the lottery to get tickets to the show drawn at 5 p.m.

The highway town of Atoka

Atoka sits about 50 miles northeast of the Texas-Oklahoma border. Up until McEntire put it on the map as a tourist destination with her restaurant, the small town of 3,000 was a place to pass through, not a place to visit. On a typical weekday, about 30,000 cars move along U.S. Highway 69. On holiday weekends, that number can climb to 80,000.

For years, drivers kept going. Now, a towering blue sign reading"Reba's Place"rises above the road, backed by billboards stretching in both directions. With only capacity to serve and seat 200, on some weekends a little luck and a prayer is the only way to get through the door.

"I've been on Highway 69 all my life, so coming back home is a lot of good memories," McEntire said. "I was born and raised right here on 69 Highway from McAlester, went to school at Kiowa, lived at Chockie on land at Limestone Gap, and then to live in Stringtown, have the restaurant here in Atoka, and then I went to college at Durant."

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She opened the restaurant in 2022, converting a restored century-old Masonic Temple.

"This restaurant is three years and four months old,” McEntire said from the stage. "It's been rough. A learning experience for me."

She pointed to the details that make the space hers, from the antique bar to four antique Coliseum seats displayed along the brick wall. Her albums, photos and magazine covers line the walls. She also mentioned that the banana pudding and strawberry cake are her favorite desserts, crediting Chef Kurtess Mortensen and his team.

"Thank God for Chef Kurtess," she said. "It takes a strong leader like that to make something this successful."

So how many tourists come a year? The only estimate from Johnson was hundreds of thousands of visitors. Across the street at theAtoka Cola Soda Shop, store owner Cory Richards said he had a pinboard map where visitors would mark where they came from. Over two years, every state filled in. He added international flags each time a non-American visited, totaling 53.

"We all know God made the moon, but Reba hung it," Richards said.

He grew up knowing McEntire's family. He remembers the work ethic and the sense of humor passed down from her parents before they died. Richards loves to tell the story about McEntire signing cassettes in 1977 at the local Walmart right after she made her first record. He recalled the time that McEntire's mom, Jackie, asked him to help fill up farm ponds with water for the cattle. McEntire's dad, Clark, delivered one of Richards' favorite jokes: "Our wells are so dry the fish have lice."

These days, fans — hoping to get lottery tickets to see the McEntire daughter herself — stop into Richards' candy store for dirty sodas and chocolate truffle balls to pass the time.

Inspiring the next generation of country music singers

Opening actJordan Rainerworked midnight shifts in high school at Daylight Donuts. She saved all her tip money in a jar labeled, "Nashville or bust." Once it reached $1,000, she packed up her car and headed to Music City. Although she grew up knowing all about McEntire, Rainer didn't meet her until she auditioned for The Voice in 2023. McEntire hadn't been announced as a coach, so it was an organic surprise when Rainer belted out the song "Fancy," turning all four chairs.

Jordan Rainer poses in The Voice chair on display in Reba's Place, the restaurant owned by Reba McEntire. Rainer was a contestant on the NBC show in 2023. April 9, 2026.

"Reba is the perfect example of it can be done, not just as an Atoka woman, but as a woman in country music which has been male-dominated for a long time," Rainer said. "Reba was one of the trailblazers that made it easier for people like me to come along."

While the town gathers to celebrate a once-in-a-lifetime voice, McEntire has no plans of opening other eateries. She said that, although she's had offers, there won't be a Broadway honky tonk with her name on it, or another "Reba's Place," any time soon.

"It makes me feel really good that it's just down the street from where we all grew up and mom and daddy lived in Atoka County all their lives," she said. "So it's almost a heritage thing."

Any free time McEntire has is spent gearing up for the third season of the sitcom"Happy's Place,"or with her fiancé and co-star Rex Linn. Linn had a commitment in Oklahoma City preventing him from joining her one night concert in Atoka, but the singer's siblings sat in the booths at the far end of the room.

Some of the fans who had waited hours for a chance to get inside finally made it in. Mikayla Hoult and her father were among those who won seats in the 25-ticket lottery. That mix of near misses and once-in-a-lifetime moments carried into the night's musical debut. McEntire said she discovered "One Night in Tulsa" after hearing a young songwriter's demo and immediately felt a connection to it as an Oklahoma native.

Her voice settled over the crowd for the final lines, inspiring a standing ovation: "I'd spend a month in the desert / just to be together / For one night in Tulsa / One night in Tulsa."

Bryan West is a music reporter at The Tennessean, part of the USA TODAY Network. Follow him onInstagram,TikTokandX as @BryanWestTV.

This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean:Reba McEntire performs new song 'One Night in Tulsa' at Oklahoma bar

Reba McEntire debuts song 'One Night in Tulsa' at Oklahoma bar

Inside Reba's Place on April 9, the country music icon with blazing red locks stood an arm's length from fans in the front row....
Steven Spielberg says Christopher Nolan made a much better “Interstellar” than he would have

For many movie fans, it's an interesting "what if" to wonder whatSteven Spielberg'sInterstellarwould have looked like. But, for the legendary filmmaker, there's no question that his replacement surpassed his own vision.

Entertainment Weekly Steven Spielberg; Matthew McConaughey in 'Interstellar'Credit: Maya Dehlin Spach/Getty; Melinda Sue Gordon/Paramount

Spielberg began developing what becameInterstellarin 2006, working on the sci-fi film for a year, and spending time speaking to scientists and aerospace engineers. He even went as far as hiring screenwriterJonathan Nolan, who was fresh off ofBatman Begins. And while Spielberg "became fascinated" with the project, he eventually bowed out, paving the way for Jonathan Nolan's brother andBatmancollaborator,Christopher Nolan.

“I actually hired Chris Nolan’s brother to write the first and second draft for me, but it didn’t stick,”Spielberg recently toldEmpiremagazine. “He actually said, ‘If there comes a point where you decide not to make this movie, I can tell you who’s gonna grab it. He’s already bugging me about it. And that’s my brother Chris.’ He was absolutely right. The second I decided not to make it, Chris jumped on board, probably the next day. "

Christopher and Jonathan NolanCredit: Michael Buckner/Getty

The Nolans went on to co-write the final version of the script together. Released in 2014,Interstellartook place in a dystopian future where Earth is suffering from world-ending famine, prompting a group of astronauts — led by former NASA test pilot Coop (Matthew McConaughey) — to go in search of a new home for humanity. The film grossed nearly $800 million, and has developed a fervent following within the Nolan fan base — and Spielberg is right there with them.

"Interstellarwas a much better movie in Chris Nolan’s hands than it would have been in mine," theJurassic Parkdirector declared.

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Christopher Nolan recently shared his side of theInterstellarhandover in a conversation withTimothée Chalamet, who, in one of his first film roles, starred as Coop's son, Tom.

“Steven went off to do another film, so it became available,"he explained. “I had a lot of conversations with Jonathan over the years, and what he was doing and what his ambition was. I was excited by it. I was incredibly struck by his first act. I had been working on a time travel idea… things looking at time. I had half-baked projects that I hadn’t committed to. When it became available, it was a case of me saying to Jonathan, ‘How would you feel if I took this and tried to combine it with some of my ideas and change a bit with what it was?’ He was fine with it. He could tell the spirit of what I was trying to do was to get to what he was initially excited about it.”

Both Spielberg and Christopher Nolan have new projects set to arrive on the big screen this summer: Spielberg returns to the sci-fi genre withDisclosure Day, while Nolan is taking on Homer's Greek epicThe Odyssey.

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Steven Spielberg says Christopher Nolan made a much better “Interstellar” than he would have

For many movie fans, it's an interesting "what if" to wonder whatSteven Spielberg'sInterstellarwould have looked like...
Suspected militants kill police officer assigned to guard polio team as nationwide campaign begins

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Suspected militants opened fire on a vehicle carryingpolice officers assigned to protect polio workersin northwestern Pakistan on Tuesday, killing one of them and wounding four others before fleeing the scene, police said. Two attackers were killed when police returned fire.

Associated Press A health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child at a school in Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) Health workers walk through an ally to administrate polio vaccine among children at a neighbourhood in Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) A health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child in Lahore, in Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) A health worker administers a polio vaccine to a child in Lahore, in Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary) A health worker marks a child's finger after administering a polio vaccine in Lahore, in Lahore, Pakistan, Monday, April 13, 2026. (AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary)

APTOPIX Pakistan Polio

The shooting occurred in Hangu, a district in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province bordering Afghanistan, shortly after Pakistan launched its second nationwide anti-polio campaign of the year, according to local police official Mahmood Alam.

No group immediately claimed responsibility, but suspicion is likely to fall on the Pakistani Taliban and local militant groups, which often carry out similar attacks in the region and elsewhere.Pakistan and neighboring Afghanistanremain the only countries where polio has not been eradicated, according to the World Health Organization.

First lady Aseefa Bhutto Zardari urged families to ensure their children are vaccinated during the weeklong drive, which aims to reach more than 45 million children under 5 across all provinces and regions. She said the campaign will be conducted in coordination with Afghanistan, reflecting a shared commitment to interrupt cross-border transmission and close remaining gaps.

Aseefa is the daughter of President Asif Ali Zardari and former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who was killed in a 2007 gun and bomb attack by militants, and who had personally overseen initiatives aimed at eliminating polio during her tenure. In a statement, she said “Pakistan stands at a crucial moment in the fight against polio.” She said while the country is closer than ever to eradication, “the final stretch remains the most challenging.”

Highlighting recent gains, she said31 polio cases were reported nationwide in 2025, while only one case has so far been recorded so far this year, but warned against complacency.

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While Pakistan primarily uses door-to-door vaccination teams to reach children at their homes, Afghanistan generally relies on fixed vaccination sites and health facilities, where parents are asked to bring their children for immunization.

In Kabul, Sharafat Zaman, spokesperson for the Ministry of Public Health, said the first national polio vaccination campaign of the year has begun in Afghanistan in coordination with international partners, aiming to vaccinate around 12.6 million children under the age of 5 across the country. He said the campaign has been delayed in some areas due to cold weather.

Zaman urged parents, religious scholars and community leaders to ensure maximum participation in the campaign, stressing that polio can only be prevented through vaccination.

Pakistan’s polio eradication program has been running anti-polio campaigns for years, though health workers and the police assigned to protect them are often targeted by militants who falsely claim the vaccination campaigns are a Western conspiracy to sterilize children.

Authorities havedeployed thousands of police officers to protect workersfollowing intelligence warnings of possible attacks. More than 200 polio workers and the police assigned to guard them have been killed in Pakistan since the 1990s, according to officials.

Afghan reported from Kabul. Riaz Khan and Rasool Dawar contributed to this story from Peshawar, Pakistan.

Suspected militants kill police officer assigned to guard polio team as nationwide campaign begins

ISLAMABAD (AP) — Suspected militants opened fire on a vehicle carryingpolice officers assigned to protect polio workersin northwestern ...

 

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