Entertainment
Dallas Nuez and Kalani Faagata Go Instagram Official 10 Months After Asuelu Split on November 1, 2023 at 2:50 pm The Hollywood Gossip

At long last, Kalani Faagata is ready to divorce Asuelu Pulaa.
She had toyed with the idea before, even consulting an attorney on other 90 Day Fiance spinoffs. But on 90 Day: The Last Resort, which filmed in January, it was finally time.
Viewers have heard a lot about her “Hall Pass” boyfriend, Dallas Nuez.
Now, we know that they’re still together, all of these months later. And Kalani just posted him to Instagram.
After she unblocked her hall-pass-turned-boyfriend, Kalani Faagata spent the night away from the resort on 90 Day: The Last Resort. Good for her! (Image Credit: TLC)
On Monday’s episode of 90 Day: The Last Resort, Kalani Faagata and Asuelu Pulaa formally ended things.
The next day was Tuesday, October 31 — Halloween. But Kalani shared the opposite of a scare.
On Instagram, she shared a shirtless photo of Dallas Nuez emerging from the ocean water. Her caption reads: “I waited a year for this.” Get it, girl!
At the very end of October 2023, Kalani Faagata officially shared boyfriend Dallas Nuez on her Instagram Story. She had waited years to find this happiness. Good for her! (Image Credit: Instagram)
Obviously, fans knew that Kalani and Asuelu were having major issues for a long time. They confirmed nothing, but the signs were there.
It wasn’t until their time on camera in Florida that we learned about Asuelu’s cheating, Kalani’s hall pass, or how that one-time hookup became a relationship.
But, like we said, that was in January. Despite some hints, we couldn’t be sure that she and Dallas Nuez were still together. Until her Halloween post, that is.
On her Instagram profile photo in August 2023, Kalani Faagata appears in a selfie. She looks great … and that appears to be Dallas Nuez by her side. At least, that’s the fan theory. (Photo Credit: Instagram)
But there were, of course, strong hints that they were still together.
For one thing, many fans believed that Kalani’s Instagram profile photo featured Dallas. And there was an older pic that featured his arm.
The photo of Dallas in the ocean is not a sneaky cropped image, however. They’re basically Instagram Official.
As Kalani Faagata explains what happened, Asuelu Pulaa watches and listens. (Image Credit: TLC)
This came on the heels of the episode where we heard Kalani and Asuelu discuss their divorce. Kalani wants it ASAP.
“The sooner we get divorced, the better for the kids. There’s just nothing more that can be done. Like, I’ve given up,” Kalani told the confessional camera.
“I just hope that he can deal with everything and move forward with all of us,” she then expressed.
Speaking to the confessional camera, Kalani Faagata explains to 90 Day: The Last Resort viewers why her husband’s shifty behavior has her on edge. (TLC)
Dallas did not actually appear on the all-stars, faux-therapy spinoff. But he still made a splash.
He also visited. Dallas flew out to see Kalani, and she spent the night with him. Initially, she just meant to talk to him, but things went considerably further than that.
Kalani noted that Dallas actually makes her feel “wanted,” treating her with respect and dignity. This has been a longtime failing of notorious manchild Asuelu. He did make some changes … but they were too little and much too late.
On 90 Day: The Last Resort, Kalani Faagata and Asuelu Pulaa sat down for an emergency therapy session. (Image Credit: TLC)
“This is the hardest decision I’ve ever had to make,” Kalani reflected on screen. “But there’s just nothing more that can be done.”
She expressed: “So it’s hard because there’s like the heart part of me and then the strong part of me.”
It is the strong part, Kalani noted, “that’s like proud of myself for finally leaving.” We’re proud of her, too.
Kalani Faagata tears up as she says that her husband only began making an effort to become a good partner years too late. (Image Credit: TLC)
While reaping what he’d spent years sowing, Asuelu felt overwhelmed as he tried to process all of this.
The two opened up to their castmates about their divorce.
Some of their castmates expressed misplaced concern fro Asuelu. Big Ed, who might just see a bit of himself in every dirtbag, assured Asuelu that “it will get better.”
Asuelu Pulaa was not happy to hear that he’s getting a divorce. (Image Credit: TLC)
Naturally, Kalani and Asuelu did not undergo the planned recommitment ceremony.
Instead, they vowed to be better friends and to be good co-parents to their sons, Oliver and Kennedy.
Asuelu also apologized for the endless litany of things that he has done to hurt her. (It gets so much worse than cheating)
Kalani Faagata explains that husband Asuelu Pulaa became upset when she took the “hall pass” that he offered her in the first place. (Image Credit: TLC)
“I just hope that you forgive what I did,” Asuelu expressed. “And all the past that we have, I just want you to let it go and just make a new friendship.”
He claimed: “I just want us to love and respect each other and trust each other from here to the future.”
Kalani told him that she does forgive him. The two shared a hug in front of the rest of the cast.
In this moment from 90 Day: The Last Resort, Asuelu Pulaa displays a surprising amount of self-awareness. (TLC)
“I think I’m just feeling everything right now,” Kalani expressed to the confessional camera. “I’m feeling anger and sadness and relief and it’s just a lot. I’m numb.”
She noted: “I’ve numbed myself for years to be able to deal with everything he’s done to me. So even though it’s the right thing, it’s really hard to do.” Many people know how that feels.
“I just hope that my kids know that I did everything that I could, like, I really tried for years,” Kalani expressed. “But I know for my own sanity and for my health and for the health of my kids it needed to end.”
On Episode 8 of 90 Day: The Last Resort, Kalani Faagata opened up about how her husband cheated on her all along — while she was pregnant, before he came to live with her, and as recently as trying to cheat online the year before. (TLC)
“Me and Kalani is over and I don’t know what to do,” Asuelu said to the camera while in a state of despair.
“Knowing that we need to move forward just friends, it really hurt me,” he expressed. “It’s like, stab in my body.”
Asuelu explained: “She’s my wife. She’s the mother of my kids. But now, I lose it. I lose it. So it’s just, I don’t know how to process this.”
Dallas Nuez and Kalani Faagata Go Instagram Official 10 Months After Asuelu Split was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
At long last, Kalani Faagata is ready to divorce Asuelu Pulaa. She had toyed with the idea before, even consulting …
Dallas Nuez and Kalani Faagata Go Instagram Official 10 Months After Asuelu Split was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.
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Entertainment
How a 22-Person Film Crew Each Walked Away With $300,000

In the spring of 2020, with Hollywood shut down and most film workers suddenly out of a job, Zendaya made a movie in a single house with a crew of 22. The film was Malcolm & Marie. What happened to that crew afterward is the part worth paying attention to — and it’s quietly become a blueprint indie filmmakers are borrowing five years later.
Instead of paying everyone the standard flat day rate and sending them home, Zendaya structured the production so the crew owned a piece of it. They received “points” — a share of the film’s revenue.
When Malcolm & Marie sold to Netflix for roughly $30 million, those points turned into real money. Because one point typically equals 1%, a single point on that sale was worth around $300,000.
For a crew used to being paid by the day, that’s a life-changing number.
The Math That Makes It Click
The reason points are so powerful is that their value scales with the film, not with your hours on set:
- At $30 million in revenue, 1% equals $300,000
- At $50 million, 1% equals $500,000
- At $100 million, 1% equals $1 million
Now hold that against traditional indie crew pay, which runs roughly $300 to $800 per day. A 20-day shoot totals somewhere between $6,000 and $16,000 — full stop, no upside, no matter how well the film does. The points model flips the entire logic: you stop getting paid for time and start getting paid for success.
This Isn’t New — It’s Just Newly Accessible
Backend deals are how the biggest names in Hollywood get rich. Robert Downey Jr. reportedly earned tens of millions from his Avengers: Endgame backend; Keanu Reeves made a fortune off The Matrix through profit participation. The leverage to demand that kind of deal has always belonged to A-list stars.
What changed with Malcolm & Marie is who got a seat at the table. Zendaya didn’t reserve the points for herself and a couple of producers — she extended them to the crew, the people she described as laying the tracks and doing the heavy lifting. That’s the shift indie filmmakers are now studying: ownership as something you share down the call sheet, not hoard at the top.
Why Indie Filmmakers Should Care
Independent films usually run on budgets between $50,000 and $500,000, where labor can eat up 40% to 60% of total costs. That creates a permanent squeeze: how do you attract genuinely skilled people without torching the budget before you’ve shot a frame?
Equity is the pressure valve. Offering ownership instead of higher upfront pay lets you reduce immediate production costs, attract more experienced collaborators, and — maybe most importantly — build a team that actually wants the film to win.

How to Apply It to Your Own Project
You don’t need a $30 million Netflix sale for this to work. Say your budget is $250,000 and your revenue goal is $500,000, making 1% worth $5,000. Instead of stretching cash thin across every line item, you might offer 1% to a cinematographer, 1% to an editor, and 1–2% to a producer. You preserve cash during production and hand your key people a real reason to overdeliver.
Ownership Changes How People Show Up
A stake rewires behavior. People who own a piece of the outcome stay sharper on set, pitch in on marketing and promotion without being asked, and stay invested long after wrap. That last part matters more than it sounds — a crew that’s financially tied to the film becomes part of its distribution engine, not just its production.
Read the Fine Print
Equity is not a salary, and it’s honest to say so. Malcolm & Marie worked because it sold to Netflix at a high price — that’s the upside scenario, not a guarantee. If a project underperforms, points can be worth little or nothing. So if you use this model, do it cleanly: define revenue participation explicitly in contracts, spell out recoupment structures so everyone knows who gets paid and in what order, and offer partial upfront payment where you can to balance the risk. The whole thing runs on trust, and trust runs on transparency.
The Bigger Picture
What Zendaya pulled off with a 22-person crew in one house pointed to something larger about how creative work gets valued. In an industry where funding is the hardest wall to climb, ownership has become its own currency. You may not control access to millions in financing — but you fully control how value gets shared on your set. And that, more often than not, is the difference between a film that stalls in development and one that actually gets made.
Advice
Independent Film’s New Reality: 10 Brutal Truths You Have to Face in 2026

If you are still approaching independent film like it’s 2015, you are going to get crushed. The landscape that once rewarded a scrappy feature and a couple of festival laurels has become a crowded, algorithm‑driven marketplace where attention is the rarest currency. Recent industry analysis on “inflection points” for 2026 all say the same thing: the business model for independent film has changed, whether you like it or not.

1. You’re Competing With Everything
Your film is no longer just competing with other indie features. It is fighting for attention against TikTok clips, prestige series, and endless back catalog on every streaming platform. That means “pretty good” is invisible. You either have a sharp, specific audience and a clean logline, or you disappear into the scroll.
2. Festivals Are Not a Distribution Plan
A festival premiere and a few Q&As can help with credibility, but they are not a business strategy. Without a parallel plan—email list, community building, partnerships, and a clear path to paid viewers—you come home with a laurel and no deal. Even festival‑aligned organizations now frame their “don’t miss indies” coverage as part of a broader visibility and audience strategy, not a finish line.
3. The Middle Is Collapsing
Industry voices are blunt about it: micro‑budget genre films and clearly branded auteur work still find lanes, but the soft, mid‑budget drama with no hook is almost impossible to monetize. If your film cannot be pitched in one or two sentences to a specific audience, it will struggle regardless of how “good” it is.
4. You Are a Small Business, Not a Starving Artist
The indie filmmakers who will survive 2026 are treating their careers like businesses. Guides focused on creating a “film business turnaround” talk about lifetime value, repeat customers, multiple revenue streams, and audience retention—not just finishing one feature. Your filmography is a product line, not a lottery ticket.
5. SAG Is a Competitive Advantage
SAG actors and union rules are not your enemy; they are a way to level up. SAGindie and SAG‑AFTRA low‑budget agreements exist to help genuine independents hire professional talent and present themselves as serious, compliant productions. Understanding those tools gives you access to stronger cast, better reputations, and more credible pitches.
6. Streaming Is Not a Golden Ticket
Streaming is no longer the dream “one deal solves everything” outcome. The deals are leaner, the competition is brutal, and many filmmakers now make more by going direct‑to‑fan through TVOD, memberships, or niche platforms than by chasing a low‑MG all‑rights license. You need to know why you want a streamer—brand value, audience reach, or pure revenue—and plan accordingly.
7. Format Matters Less Than Relationship
Audiences care more about access than whether your project is a feature, series, or hybrid. If you give them a reason to show up repeatedly, they will follow you across formats. If you do not, a 90‑minute feature is just one more piece of content in an endless feed.elliotgrove.
8. Marketing Starts at Concept
Marketing is not something you “figure out later.” The most effective 2026 indies build their hook at the idea stage—title, poster, and logline are treated as core creative decisions, not afterthoughts. If you cannot imagine the trailer, one‑sheet, and social teaser while you are still outlining, that is a red flag.

9. Community Is Your Real Safety Net
Filmmakers who plug into networks, reading lists, and producer education hubs are adapting the fastest. They are not reinventing the wheel alone; they are leveraging shared knowledge, updated contracts, and peer feedback to make smarter decisions project by project.
10. Accepting Reality Is Your Edge
Here is the real brutal truth: if you can accept all of this, you gain an edge. Most of the field is still clinging to old myths about discovery, “overnight” success, and festival miracles. If you are willing to treat your indie career as a living, evolving business—grounded in current data and audience behavior—2026 might be the moment where “truly independent” stops meaning powerless and starts meaning in control.
Entertainment
Ozempic Era: Beauty, Lizard Venom, Big Pharma

The film industry is entering a new body era, and this time, the co-star is a syringe.
GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic, Wegovy, and Mounjaro have moved from diabetes clinics into casting conversations, red carpets, and agency strategy. In the United States, roughly 1 in 8 adults report having used a GLP-1 drug, with about 6 to 12 percent actively using one today. Globally, usage has surged from approximately 4 million people in 2020 to around 30 million by 2026.
This is no longer a niche health trend. It is a structural shift—one that is reshaping how bodies are constructed, perceived, and rewarded on screen.

At a clinical level, the appeal is clear. In major obesity trials, semaglutide has produced average weight loss of 15 to 17 percent of total body weight over 68 to 104 weeks, with some regimens approaching 19 to 21 percent for sustained users. In an industry built on transformation, those numbers carry real influence.
But rapid transformation leaves a visible trace. The phenomenon often called “Ozempic face”—hollowed cheeks, looser skin, a subtly aged appearance—reflects how quickly fat loss can outpace the skin’s ability to adjust.
For filmmakers, this is not just aesthetic—it is cinematic. Performance lives in the face. Micro-expressions, softness, and facial volume shape how emotion reads on camera. A performer may reach an “ideal” body while losing something less measurable but equally important on screen.
Beneath this cultural shift lies an origin story that feels almost written for film.
In the 1990s, researchers studying the Gila monster isolated a peptide in its venom called exendin-4, which mimicked a human hormone involved in blood sugar regulation but lasted significantly longer in the body. That discovery led to early GLP-1 drugs such as exenatide, used by millions of patients worldwide, and eventually to semaglutide.
By mid-2025, semaglutide-based drugs (including Ozempic and Wegovy) generated approximately $16 to $17 billion in just six months, making it one of the highest-grossing drug classes globally. Analysts project the broader incretin market could reach $200 billion annually by 2030.
Inside those numbers is a more complex human story.
The benefits are well documented: improved blood sugar control, significant weight loss, and reduced cardiovascular risk. But as use expands, so does scrutiny. Researchers and regulators are tracking side effects ranging from severe gastrointestinal issues and gastroparesis to gallbladder disease and pancreatitis, as well as rarer concerns such as vision complications and potential neurological signals.
At the same time, adoption continues to accelerate. J.P. Morgan projects roughly 10 million Americans on GLP-1 drugs by 2025, rising toward 25 to 30 million by 2030. At that scale, usage becomes ambient—part of everyday life across industries, including film and television.
And yet the marketing tells a different story. Pharmaceutical campaigns rely on cinematic language—aspirational visuals, controlled lighting, emotional transformation arcs—while legally required risk disclosures recede into fine print.
For independent filmmakers, this moment opens several narrative lanes.
There is the body: performers navigating an industry where a once-niche diabetes drug has become a quiet career tool.
There is the machine: a pharmaceutical ecosystem where a single drug category generates tens of billions annually, rivaling major entertainment sectors.
And there is the myth: a culture increasingly turning to a hormone-based intervention—derived from venom biology—rather than addressing systemic issues like food access, stress, and inequality.
Technology intensifies all of it. Ultra-high-resolution cameras and HDR workflows capture every detail—skin texture, volume shifts, micro-expressions. As more on-screen talent uses the same class of drugs, a new visual baseline begins to form, often without audiences realizing why.
There is also a clear economic divide. GLP-1 drugs can cost $800 to $1,000 or more per month without insurance in the United States, and coverage remains inconsistent. Rising demand has led to shortages and a parallel market of compounded or unregulated alternatives.

The gap between who can access consistent, medically supervised treatment and who cannot is becoming part of the story itself.
For cinema, the imagery is already there: the Sonoran desert, a Gila monster, laboratory research, pharmaceutical earnings calls, red carpets, and transformation narratives.
A compound derived from venom becomes a global product that reshapes not only bodies, but expectations.
Perhaps the most uncomfortable layer is the industry’s own role. Casting preferences, transformation culture, and unspoken aesthetic standards reinforce a pharmacological look without ever naming it.
No one explicitly instructs performers to take these drugs. The system simply rewards the results.
This is not a distant trend. It is a present-tense shift.
The numbers are rising. The images are changing. The influence is expanding.
The question is whether independent cinema will define this moment while it is still unfolding—or whether the story will once again be shaped by the industries profiting most from it.
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