Entertainment
Troy and Gabriella Are in ‘Couples Therapy,’ According to ‘HSMTMTS’ on August 9, 2023 at 1:32 pm Us Weekly

Zac Efron Vanessa Hudgens. Fred Hayes/The Disney Channel/Kobal/Shutterstock
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series season 4 didn’t include any cameos from Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens and Ashley Tisdale but Troy, Gabriella and Sharpay weren’t completely excluded from the narrative.
During the show’s final season, which started streaming on Wednesday, August 9, several cast members from the original High School musical series including Lucas Grabeel, Kaycee Stroh, Corbin Bleu, Monique Coleman, Alyson Reed and Bart Johnson reunited to film footage for a fictional fourth film.
In character as Coach Bolton in one scene, Johnson asked Stroh — playing her fictional character Martha — whether she’s seen Troy, Gabriella and Sharpay.
“Not yet, Coach. They have been silent in the group chat.,” Stroh replied.
Later in the season, Bleu, and Coleman reveal plot details about the fictional fourth High School Musical film to the students at East High School. According to Coleman, Troy and Gabriella are in “couples therapy.
Zac Efron Vanessa Hudgens. Fred Hayes/The Disney Channel/Kobal/Shutterstock
The original High School Musical franchise followed Troy and Gabriella, two teenagers from completely different cliques, who bond over their love of music. Their love story, followed in three films from 2006 to 2008, is the backdrop for the film as their various friends take part in the school musical.
Tisdale’s character, Sharpay, also appeared in 2011 spinoff film Sharpay’s Fabulous Adventure.
Before season 4 of HSMTMTS — which serves as a sequel to the film franchise — debuted, Efron sparked speculation he might appear on the Disney+ show when he surprised fans when he visited High School Musical’s East High. “Don’t you… Forget about me ,” he wrote alongside a July 2022 Instagram photo of him posing in front of the school where the movies were filmed.
One month earlier, Efron’s ex-girlfriend Hudgens documented her own trip to East High, captioning an Instagram video, “Do you remember in kindergarten how you’d meet a kid and know nothing about them, then 10 seconds later you’re playing like you’re best friends because you didn’t have to be anything but yourself?”
HSMTMTS creator, Tim Federle, confirmed he reached out to Efron, Hudgens and Tisdale but a potential cameo didn’t work out.
“Ashley called me personally and was so lovely. She’s very busy launching brands and it just wasn’t the right timing,” Federle told Trib Total Media on Friday, August 4. “And I got the feeling with Zac and Vanessa, who I don’t know personally but I’m a fan, reading the tea leaves, that by the time you get into negotiating what this would take, we’re gonna wrap and the show will be over.”
Disney+/Craig Sjodin
During an exclusive chat with Us Weekly, Federle revealed that director Kenny Ortega was another OG he hoped to appear.
“It was so great to get the originals back because it launched their careers in such explosive ways. [That is] the same way I think some of the cast members of my show are getting launched into the world,” Federle exclusively shared with Us. “I loved seeing how humble and grateful and just cool they are now — as young adults — Corbin and Monique and Lucas. I really wanted to get Kenny Ortega back.”
He added: “I called Kenny. He was super busy on a project. He could not have been more gracious. I said, ‘Do you want to come back and play Kenny?’ And he was like, ‘It’s the coolest idea. I can’t.’ He was editing a documentary. Kenny’s on my bucket list. [I’ve] got to collaborate with Kenny someday. But I’m really satisfied with how we wrapped up the whole show.”
The fourth and final season of High School Musical: The Musical: The Series is streaming on Disney+.
High School Musical: The Musical: The Series season 4 didn’t include any cameos from Zac Efron, Vanessa Hudgens and Ashley Tisdale but Troy, Gabriella and Sharpay weren’t completely excluded from the narrative. During the show’s final season, which started streaming on Wednesday, August 9, several cast members from the original High School musical series including
Us Weekly Read More
Entertainment
Mariah Carey’s One Holiday Hit Pays her $3.3 Million a Year

Mariah Carey did not just land a Christmas hit; she locked in a seasonal paycheck for life. Every year, All I Want for Christmas Is You is estimated to pull in somewhere between 2.5 and 3.3 million dollars in royalties, from streaming, radio, licensing, and all those store playlists that flip her on the second the Halloween decorations come down. Over three decades, that adds up to tens of millions tied to a single song, turning one holiday anthem into a textbook example of how a perfectly timed pop track can become a retirement plan in glitter.

What keeps it so sticky is how audiences respond to it emotionally. Fans describe the song as an instant mood-lifter: the kind of track that makes people abandon their carts in Target, sing in the dairy aisle, or scream the chorus in the car like a full-blown music video moment.
People love the mix of old-school Motown-style production, sleigh bells, and Mariah’s big, joyful vocals—it feels nostalgic without sounding dated, and romantic without being corny to most listeners.
For a lot of millennials and Gen Z, hearing that opening piano riff is the unofficial signal that the holidays have “officially started.”
Of course, the obsession is loud enough that the backlash is, too—but even the complaints prove its impact. Some listeners say they are tired of hearing it everywhere, from October onward, but that is partly because it dominates every Christmas playlist, radio rotation, and TikTok trend. Whether people are passionately belting it out or dramatically rolling their eyes, the engagement keeps the streams flowing—and the royalties stacking. Love it or hate it, All I Want for Christmas Is You has become the soundtrack to December, and Mariah collects a festive multimillion-dollar “thank you” every single year.
Entertainment
How The Grinch Became The Richest Christmas Movie Ever

The Grinch didn’t just steal Christmas—he stole the box office. The 2018 animated film The Grinch turned holiday chaos into serious cash, grossing around $540 million worldwide on a modest $75 million budget, making it the highest‑grossing Christmas movie of all time. That is more than seven times its production cost, which is the kind of holiday return every studio dreams about.

Meanwhile, the 2000 live‑action How the Grinch Stole Christmas with Jim Carrey laid the groundwork for this green empire. That version pulled in roughly $345–347 million worldwide on a $123 million budget, turning a prickly Dr. Seuss villain into a perennial box‑office player and a meme‑ready holiday icon. The nostalgia around Carrey’s performance is a big part of why audiences were ready to show up again almost two decades later.
The Money Behind The Mayhem
The 2018 film did not just earn big—it earned smart.
It opened to more than $$67 million domestically in its first weekend and kept playing steadily through November and December, ultimately pulling in about $272 million in the U.S. and roughly $267 million internationally.
Then there is the profit. Trade estimates peg the film’s net profit in the neighborhood of nearly $185 million once theatrical revenue, home entertainment, and TV/streaming deals are baked in. That is before counting years of reruns, licensing, and holiday programming packages—every December, the Grinch gets another quiet deposit while everyone else is wrapping gifts.
Grinch vs. Everyone: Who’s Really On Top?
Here is how the Grinch stacks up against other Christmas heavyweights by worldwide box office:
| Film | Year | Worldwide Gross (approx.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Grinch (animated) | 2018 | $510–540 million | Highest‑grossing Christmas movie ever |
| Home Alone | 1990 | ~$476 million | Longtime champ, now second place |
| How the Grinch Stole Christmas (live‑action) | 2000 | ~$345–347 million | Built the modern Grinch brand |
| The Polar Express | 2004 | ~$315 million | Holiday staple, trails both Grinch movies |
Different sources list slightly different totals, but they all agree: the 2018 Grinch sits at the top of the Christmas money mountain.
Why The Grinch Keeps Printing Money
The secret sauce is that the Grinch is more than a movie—he is a business model. Every version of this character hits a different emotional lane: Jim Carrey’s 2000 Grinch is pure chaotic energy and quotable nostalgia, while the 2018 Grinch is softer, cuter, and perfectly engineered for modern families and global audiences. Together, they keep the character relevant across generations, which is exactly what studios want from an evergreen holiday IP.
On top of box office and home sales, the character feeds theme‑park attractions, holiday events, branded specials, apparel, toys, and seasonal marketing campaigns. The Grinch went from “I hate Christmas” to “I own Christmas,” quietly turning grouchiness into one of the most profitable holiday brands on the planet.
Entertainment
Ariana & Cynthia Say They’re in a ‘Non‑Demi Curious, Semi‑Binary’ Relationship… WTF Does That Even Mean?

If you’ve scrolled TikTok, X, or Theatre Kid Instagram in the last week, you’ve probably tripped over the phrase “non‑Demi curious, semi‑binary relationship” and immediately asked the only logical question: what on earth are they talking about? The term, now attached to Wicked co‑stars Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo, has gone from niche in‑joke to headline bait in record time. It sounds like a grad‑school thesis on gender studies, but it’s being used to describe two actors who may or may not just be very affectionate coworkers.

Here’s the spoiler: this isn’t a real, recognized relationship label. It’s a chaotic mash‑up of actual identity language and internet humor that landed on a fandom already obsessed with reading between the lines of every glance, grip, and giggle between these two.
What “non‑Demi curious, semi‑binary” is trying to do
At its core, the phrase is performance. It borrows real terms like “demi,” “curious,” and “binary,” then stacks them into something that sounds hyper‑specific while ultimately saying… almost nothing. It’s the situationship era dressed in queer‑coded academic cosplay. In plain English, the vibe is:
“We’re extremely close, we flirt with the idea of more, but we’re not calling it dating.”
For some fans, that ambiguity is the point. It mirrors the way a lot of modern relationships operate—emotionally intense, physically affectionate, publicly visible, but deliberately undefined. For everyone else, especially outside theatre and fandom spaces, it reads as theatre‑kid word salad.
The internet reacts: “Explain it like I’m five”
The audience reaction has been swift and brutal in the funniest way. Timelines are full of people essentially saying, “I looked this up and not even the internet knows what it means.” One user joked that they needed “a PowerPoint, a flowchart, and a glossary” just to keep up, while another quipped, “So y’all are in a relationship that’s 100% vibes and 0% clarity—just say that.”
On the lighter side, the phrase has already mutated into a meme template. People are using “non‑Demi curious, semi‑binary” to describe everything from their toxic situationships to that one friend they cuddled with all college but “never dated.” It’s becoming shorthand for any connection that is way too complicated to explain at brunch.

Could this be a PR stunt?
Is this whole thing organic chaos, or a carefully placed PR glitter bomb? The truth is likely somewhere in the messy middle. Wicked’s promo cycle was always going to be big, but a confusing, highly meme‑able “relationship label” is the kind of accidental lightning most marketing teams can only dream of. Whether the original wording came from a joke, a satire post, or a tongue‑in‑cheek comment, the effect is the same: everyone is talking about Ariana and Cynthia.
From a media strategy standpoint, it works. A bizarre label cuts through crowded feeds faster than another polished soundbite about “sisterhood” and “creative collaboration.” It also conveniently shifts the conversation away from heavier discourse around Ariana’s personal life by giving the internet a shiny new toy: a label to clown, remix, and recontextualize. Even if no one sat in a boardroom and said, “Let’s go with semi‑binary,” the attention it’s generating is pure PR gold.
Is this just normal theatre‑kid energy?
For anyone who grew up around performing arts programs, none of this feels that shocking. Theatre kids have a long tradition of giving their dynamics dramatic names: “stage spouse,” “art soulmate,” “rehearsal wife,” “creative twin.” Their friendships tend to be physically affectionate, emotionally intense, and described in language that sounds one step away from a fanfic title.
For the rest of the world—especially casual moviegoers who don’t speak fluent Fandom—this reads as completely unhinged. Half the internet is laughing, the other half is squinting, and both halves are still sharing the clips. That’s the sweet spot where modern celebrity lives: just confusing enough to go viral, just emotional enough to feel “real,” and just unserious enough to shrug off when the next headline hits.
So WTF does it mean?
Practically speaking, “non‑Demi curious, semi‑binary relationship” means three things:
- Ariana and Cynthia are extremely close and comfortable performing that closeness in public.
- The internet is hungry for labels, even if those labels are nonsense.
- Whether it started as a joke, a misquote, or a moment of theatre‑kid improv, it’s doing exactly what the industry runs on: keeping their names in your mouth and on your timeline.
Until someone sits down and gives a clear, sober definition (don’t hold your breath), the phrase will keep living where it was born—in memes, stan jokes, and group chats where everyone is asking the same question you are:
“Love that for them, I guess… but seriously, WTF does that even mean?”
Entertainment4 days agoWicked Sequel Disappoints Fans: Audience Verdict on For Good
Entertainment3 weeks agoAfter Party: Festival Winner for Best Romantic Short
News3 weeks agoCamp Wackapoo – Rise of Glog Takes Center Stage
Entertainment3 weeks agoFrancisco Ramos Takes Top Mockumentary Award at Houston Comedy Film Festival
News2 weeks agoYolanda Adams Questions Traditional Views on God’s Gender, Audience Reacts
Politics3 weeks agoTrump’s $2,000 Tariff Dividend Plan: Who Gets Paid?
Politics4 weeks agoMamdani’s Victory Triggers Nationwide Concern Over New York’s Future
Film Production3 weeks agoWhy China’s 2-Minute Micro Dramas Are Poised To Take Over The U.S.



















