No. 22 St. John's clashes with Iona as Rick Pitino faces former team

Before he raised expectations for St. John's and delivered the best season for the Red Storm in 40 years, Rick Pitino returned to college basketball by coaching Iona for three seasons, going 64-22 while reaching a pair of NCAA Tournaments.

Pitino is eight games into his third season with St. John's, and the 22nd-ranked Red Storm play host to Iona on Saturday afternoon after delivering one of their best defensive performances of the season while also struggling significantly on offense.

"I have tremendous affection for Iona, and I told them: 'I'd love to play you.' I'm hoping that the crowd is amazing so we can make it like a holiday game every year," Pitino said Thursday.

St. John's (5-3) was ranked No. 5 in the AP Top 25 preseason poll, but losses to Alabama, Iowa State and Auburn caused a dip in the poll. The Red Storm struggled on defense in the defeats while scoring plenty of points, though the trend reversed with their 63-58 win over Ole Miss on Dec. 6.

In their third of four games against Southeastern Conference opponents, the Red Storm limited the Rebels to 36.4% shooting after allowing Auburn to shoot 54.7% in an 85-74 loss in Las Vegas on Nov. 26. Before Dec. 6, St. John's had given up at least 80 points in each game against a power conference opponent.

Zuby Ejiofor was the Red Storm's only double-figure scorer vs. the Rebels, finishing with 15 points, the sixth time he was held under 20 this season. Ejiofor also anchored the defense by blocking eight shots, joining Tariq Owens, Sir'Dominic Pointer and Chris Obekpa as the fourth player in school history with at least eight blocks in a contest.

"We're getting better," Pitino said. "There's been about five or six guys that have become very good defensive players. (The win over Ole Miss) was two teams playing great defense, but that was by far our best defensive performance of the season."

St. John's survived shooting 34% and its starting lineup of Ejiofor, Bryce Hopkins, Oziyah Sellers, Dylan Darling and Joson Sanon were a combined 10-for-30 from the field, including 2-for-13 from 3-point range.

"This is not how we really wanted to start off, but it's a work in progress," Ejiofor said. "We're not going to look too far ahead. We're not going to think about the past losses or anything like that. All we could control is the now and moving forward. We have pretty high expectations, every single one of us, but we're just going to stay steady-minded."

Pitino plans to alter the starting lineup on Saturday, moving Ian Jackson into the first five in place of Darling. Jackson, who shot 2 of 11 and scored seven points against the Rebels, is averaging 11.4 points. After starting the season opener, he came off the bench for the past seven games.

"I think he deserves to have a chance to start as well, because starting to me is not meaningful, but starting to them is very meaningful and he deserves that opportunity," Pitino said.

Iona (8-3) leads the MAAC in scoring at 81.7 points per game, but its previous game was similar to what happened to St. John's a week ago.

The Gaels earned their second straight win on Wednesday, beating visiting Bryant 69-63 while shooting 41% and allowed the Bulldogs to shoot 39.3% while forcing 17 turnovers.

"I just think it's something we're just working on every day," Iona guard CJ Anthony said of the defense, which allowed its fewest points of the season to Bryant. "... As long as we just keep going at it and keep believing in each other, where every play's the next play and not let one thing hold us back, I feel like the sky's the limit for us where we could take this thing."

Anthony, a Cincinnati transfer who scored 18 points last week against the Bulldogs, is the third-leading scorer in the MAAC at 16 points per game. Toby Harris, who also scored 18 vs. Bryant, is among four Gaels averaging double figures at 11.5 ppg, along with Lamin Sabally (12.9 points) and Kosy Akametu (10.3).

--Field Level Media

No. 22 St. John's clashes with Iona as Rick Pitino faces former team

Before he raised expectations for St. John's and delivered the best season for the Red Storm in 40 years, Rick Pit...
No. 6 Purdue eyes better start in Marquette matchup

Sixth-ranked Purdue will be looking to build on a decisive bounce-back victory when it hosts Marquette in a nonconference game on Saturday in West Lafayette, Ind.

Purdue (9-1) defeated visiting Minnesota 85-57 on Wednesday, led by a dominant second half after holding a 35-32 edge at the break. The Boilermakers were coming off their first loss of the season, 81-58 to then-No. 10 Iowa State on Dec. 6, a result that dropped them out of the top spot in the poll.

"I didn't walk away from the Iowa State game and say, 'Well, we're not No. 1 anymore,'" Painter said following the Minnesota game. "I walked away from the Iowa State game saying we got our ass kicked and how could I have stopped that?"

Purdue opened the second half against Minnesota with a decisive 21-0 run, the Boilermakers' third run of 20-0 or longer this season.

"Obviously you can't go on runs like that unless you get stops," Painter said. "And so, I thought our attention to detail defensively was pretty good."

Purdue's Braden Smith, Trey Kaufman-Renn and Oscar Cluff each finished with a double-double.

Smith had 15 points with 12 assists, six rebounds, five steals and two blocks. Kaufman-Renn recorded his fifth double-double this season with 14 points and 10 rebounds, and Cluff had his third double-double of the season with 14 points and 11 rebounds.

Purdue averages 85.2 points per game while allowing 67.9. The Boilermakers have been dominant on the glass, outrebounding opponents by 10.4 per game.

Fletcher Loyer averages a team-high 14.0 points per game for the Boilermakers, while Kaufman-Renn adds 13.9 points and 10.6 boards. Cluff averages 11.4 points and 9.1 rebounds, and Smith contributes 13.3 points and 8.8 assists -- the latter figure ranking second in the nation.

Marquette (5-5) has been inconsistent in losing four of its past six games. The Golden Gophers are coming off a 96-76 nonconference road loss against in-state rival Wisconsin on Dec. 6.

The Golden Eagles hit just one of their first 13 shots against Wisconsin and one of their first 12 3-point attempts. In their previous game, a 75-72 overtime home win over Valparaiso, Marquette started 1 of 13 from beyond the arc.

Marquette scored eight of its 10 points in overtime from the free-throw line to beat the Beacons. Against the Badgers, the Golden Eagles made just 9 of 19 shots from the stripe.

The Golden Eagles average 80.9 points while giving up 76.4, but they are shooting just 42.5% on the season, including 31.1% from 3-point range.

Marquette shot 42% against Wisconsin after shooting just 35% against Valparaiso. In three of their losses, the Golden Eagles shot 38.5% or less.

"I thought we got a lot of good shots that did not go in," Marquette coach Shaka Smart said following the Wisconsin game. "So far the story of our season. So we've got to get better at making those, and we will."

Chase Ross averages 19.5 points per game, freshman Nigel James Jr. adds 12.2 points and Ben Gold chips in with 9.5 points and team-best 7.2 rebounds.

Marquette defeated Purdue 76-58 last season in Milwaukee behind a triple-double by Kam Jones.

"We have been blessed and fortunate to have some really good teams of late, and this team's behind those teams right now," Smart said. "That's a fact. And we need to get better and we will."

--Field Level Media

No. 6 Purdue eyes better start in Marquette matchup

Sixth-ranked Purdue will be looking to build on a decisive bounce-back victory when it hosts Marquette in a nonconfere...
The wild story behind Deion Sanders' new coaching hire at Colorado

Coloradofootball coachDeion Sandersventured outside his usual comfort zone to make arguably the most important hire of his coaching career. He hired somebody he didn't personally know who didn'tplay or coach in the NFLand didn't come directly from another major college program.

His name isBrennan Marion, Colorado's new offensive coordinator. And his unconventional Go-Go offense is just part of why he's such a compelling pickup for Sanders.

This is a coach who overcame homelessness in college, whoidolized Sanders as a kidand whose mom taught him the value of hard work by selling roses at nightclubs and bars.

Marion's hiring was announced by Colorado Dec. 5. USA TODAY Sports spoke with his mom, brother and uncle to get a better sense of his story. Here are 10 things to know about him:

1. He was homeless in college

Marion, 38, was raised by a single mom in Greensburg, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh. He went off to play junior college football in California, where the state's abundance of junior college players often attracts the attention of major college recruiters. But he didn't have the means to pay for his own apartment near DeAnza College in Cupertino, home of Apple, one of the world's richest companies. So he lived in the team's locker room or press box for a while eating electrolyte pillsuntil a coach took him in. He later was recruited to Tulsa by assistant coachesGus MalzahnandMike Norvell, now the offensive coordinator and head coach at Florida State.

"This guy is fearless," said Rich Gillcrese, Marion's uncle. "I mean, nothing in front of him is unachievable."

2. His mom sold roses to help pay the bills

His mom, Richelle Gillcrese-Hines, taught him the value of hard work at an early age when she would take him and his older brother with her while she sold roses at nightclubs and bars.

"I was showing them how to make money" instead of selling drugs, his mother said. Her children came along, she said, because they didn't want a babysitter.

Marion's brother D. Brandon Gillcrese is about six years older than Marion and remembers cutting the flowers and selling them during the wee hours of the morning.

"We'd try to sell the whole bucket, and that used to be a good night," D. Brandon Gillcrese said. "Then we'd go to a diner and have breakfast at like 4 in the morning."

3. He's been sober for more than three years

This is according to apost from Marion on social mediain July that alluded to his youth.

"3 years no alcohol, wine, beer nothing!" he wrote on social media site X. "I grew up in a bar I didn't want to die in one! Just gotta go 1-0 everyday!"

Asked what he does in social settings instead, he said he drinks Shirley Temples, water and cranberry juice.

"I try to DJ & make sure everyone is having fun," hesaid on X. "Stop thinking or worrying about the drinking.

4. He runs the Go-Go offense

Wide receivers coach Mike London Jr. (L) and offensive coordinator Brennan Marion of the Howard Bison gesture to players during their game at Sam Boyd Stadium on September 2, 2017 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Howard won 43-40.

It's an uptempo and creative run-heavytriple-option-style schemewith a vertical passing game. In 2025, his Sacramento State team ran the ball 71.9% of the time and finished 7-5, one year after finishing 3-9 before Marion's arrival.

Marion has been running versions of it since he coached high school football and beyond, including stops at Howard University and UNLV. His system helps give lesser talented or undersized rosters a better chance.

"He had to find a way to maximize the talent and kind of create a new way to be deceptive in his playcalling," said Rich Gillcrese, Marion's uncle.

For example, as offensive coordinator at Howard, he led amassive upset against 45-point favorite UNLV in 2017, when the Bison won, 43-40. Sanders wants him to use it to revive a team that finished 3-9 in 2025.

5. He's a cowboy

He wears cowboy hats and likes country music, according to his older brother. His time as a player at Tulsa and as an assistant coach at Oklahoma Baptist (2016) and Texas (2022) played an influence in this regard.

"He's always loved country music, and he's been all over the place in his football journey," his brother said.

6. Deion Sanders is his childhood idol

He had Sanders' trademark gloves, jersey and durag,according to his mom. She said his birthday cake at age 8 said "Neon Brennan" in honor of "Neon Deion."

He played defensive back and wide receiver like Sanders did, too. Hedidn't know him before recently, but now he's working for him.

7. His mom came up with $25 for him to start football

She said she was making $4.35 an hour when Marion started his youth football career around age 7. She could barely afford the $25 fee for him to join a team. She paid it anyway, saying she threw the money on the floor and warned they might not have enough money for electricity and food.

But it was worth it. She said he scored five touchdowns in his first game.

"They kept saying Brennan Marion touchdown, Brennan Marion on the stop," she recalled. "They did that five times."

Brennan Marion of the Miami Dolphins poses for his 2009 NFL headshot at photo day in Miami, Florida.

8. A knee injury derailed his NFL aspirations

It came in his final college game at Tulsa in 2008, all but ending a career that includes setting theall-time single-season record for yards per catch in 2007 with 31.9. He didn't get drafted into the NFL but signed with the Miami Dolphins as an undrafted free agent before more knee trouble doomed his NFL chances.

Marion, who couldn't be reached for comment, soon moved on to coaching at multiple levels, including high school and smaller colleges.

9. Video games influenced him

Playing football video games in his youth played a role in his development, too, according to his uncle, whose only about five years older than his nephew. He remembers one year "you could create your own formations and plays."

"And I don't think I ever saw him play the game other than that way after that," Rich Gillcrese said.

It led him to figure out that he could "do his own thing."

"When he started coaching, I was the least surprised person in the family," Gillcrese said.

10. His brother is a basketball coach

Marion has one brother, who now lives in Los Angeles. He is a chef and a basketball coach of the California Storm women's youth basketball team.

Both have come a long way from those humble beginnings near Pittsburgh with their mom selling roses.

"That's what fed us," D. Brandon Gillcrese said. "We saw the streets from a different lens. We saw a lot of things, but I think it shaped us."

Follow reporter Brent Schrotenboer@Schrotenboer. Email: bschrotenb@usatoday.com

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:The wild story behind Deion Sanders' new coaching hire at Colorado

The wild story behind Deion Sanders' new coaching hire at Colorado

Coloradofootball coachDeion Sandersventured outside his usual comfort zone to make arguably the most important hire of hi...
Our 9 Biggest Takeaways From Taylor Swift's 'The End of an Era' Episodes 1 and 2

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."

THE RUNDOWN

  • The first two episodes of Taylor Swift's The End of an Era docuseries gave a behind-the-scenes at the singer during her August 2024 London shows.

  • Travis Kelce made a phone cameo appearance, while Ed Sheeran and Florence Welch joined Swift and spoke about their preparation for their Eras Tour performances.

  • The singer also revealed her private struggle after the thwarted Vienna terrorist attack and the Southport, U.K. stabbing, where three children in a Taylor Swift dancing class were killed.

The first two episodes of Taylor Swift'sThe End of an Eradocuseries arenow streaming on Disney+, detailing just how much hard work went into preparing the Eras Tour—and how Swift privately dealt with the nonstop performances.

The series' first two episodes show the European leg of her tour in the summer of 2024 with a focus on her August shows at London's Wembley Stadium. While her fiancé,Travis Kelce, has a more limited presence in just the first episode (we only hear his voice in two phone calls), Eras Tour guests Ed Sheeran and Florence Welch make extended appearances, offering an inside look into their friendships with the singer.

In the episodes' most vulnerable moments, Swift grieves the three childrenwho were killed in an attackat a Taylor Swift dancing class in Southport, U.K. She also shared how she was deeply affected bythe thwarted Vienna terrorist attackthat led to her canceling her August shows there. She said she carries a deep fear of any harm happening to her fans.

The contrast between Swift the person and Swift the pop star is laid bare in the docuseries, and there's a lot for Swifties to take in. Here, the key takeaways from the first two episodes.

Swift did indeed enter the stadium in a cleaning cart.

Swift has long been rumored to travel in unconventional ways to get into places without being seen. In the docuseries, she confirmed that she traveled to the Eras Tour stage in a cleaning cart as crew members rolled her in. At one point, a camera showed her inside the cart, mentally preparing to begin a show.

Travis Kelce makes a cameo over the phone.

The teaser for the Eras Tour docuseries showed a glimpse of Swift on the phone with Kelce. In the first episode, the call's exact timing was revealed. Swift was talking to Kelce ahead of her first London show, which would mark her first performance since she canceled her Vienna concerts.

Swift and Kelce compared their careers and respective teams, with Swift quipping that he has coach Andy Reid, and she has her mother, Andrea Swift. "I love you," she told him before touching on how rejuvenating the calls with him are: "Some people get a vitamin drip; I get this." Kelce expressed how much he wished he could've been there, and Swift jokingly lamented if only he didn't have the NFL and its commitments. (Kelcehad joined her onstageduring a London show in June.)

She called Kelce again after she finished her first London concert, saying it went incredibly well and the optimism of the crowd helped her get through the first performance. It was just what she needed. "We're back!" she said.

We see how Swift was affected by terrorist attacks targeting her fans.

Swift revealed the docuseries crew was supposed to begin filming her in Vienna, but the shows were canceled due to an attempted terrorist attack. She was shaken by what happened and, in a teary confessional interview, detailed how she felt the need to be publicly composed and a source of hope for her fans. She also broke down in tears discussing the young children who died in the Southport, U.K. stabbings last summer. She shared that she met with the victims' families before her shows in London. Cameras weren't rolling during those private meetings, but footage showed Swift sobbing afterwards and then having to prepare herself to get onstage.

She spoke about how she couldn't allow herself to cry in front of fans; she had to get it all out backstage so that the concert could provide a safe space for her audiences. Still, she appeared more nervous than usual before getting in front of the crowd. She's seen listening to a meditation and talking to her mother about feeling "shaky."

The segment gave a raw look at Swift's most human side and private struggles, even if she appeared composed in public.

She got a choreographer recommendation from Emma Stone.

Swift worked with Mandy Moore on the Eras Tour and revealed her longtime friend Emma Stone, who worked with Moore onLa La Land, gave her the recommendation.

Moore's background was primarily in film. While working on a tour for a pop star was relatively new territory for her, the choreographer admitted that the more she got into Swift's discography, the more she saw the cinematic links between each track. "Her songs are mini movies," Moore says in episode 2.

Dancer Amanda Balen, who also appears inLa La Land(she's the woman in the yellow dress during the traffic scene), worked on the Eras Tour with Moore too. In addition to appearing onstage, she assisted Moore with choreography and acted as a stand-in for Swift during rehearsals. She said it was always her dream to tour with a pop star. (She has previously danced with artists like Janet Jackson and Lady Gaga.

Ed Sheeran stopped by for a guest appearance.

Sheeranjoined Swift for her first London show, a performance she was nervous about doing after the thwarted Vienna terrorist attack. They were filmed practicing their duet backstage (a medley of their collabs "Everything Has Changed," "End Game," and Sheeran's song "Thinking Out Loud"), with Swift having a candid conversation about how she was feeling.

The scene showed how quickly Sheeran's surprise appearance came together. When he met Swift backstage, they practiced harmonies, he taught her guitar chords, and she talked through how she would introduce him onstage. Their rehearsal is followed by real concert footage of them performing together.

She and her dancers rehearsed Florence Welch's surprise appearance in secret.

Swift invited Welch to join her for the first live performance of"Florida!!!"during one of her London shows. The docuseries detailed the amount of effort that went into the choreography, which had to be done in secret, even though they were in an open-air stadium. The solution was playing the tracks for dancers on smaller, limited speakers so they could practice quietly. Welch, who was eager to learn choreography for the surprise set, practiced and performed barefoot. We see her learning the moves alongside Swift and using a lift for the first time to get onstage.

The series also gave a moving look at their friendship. Welch spoke about how Swift is a "huge" star but a "soft" woman, much like herself. She recalled how moving it was to watch the show and witness the energy among the fans, which evoked "so much joy and femininity"—a true celebration of girlhood.

Taylor hand-wrote all the letters for bonus day.

The documentary team shot Swift writing thank you notes by hand for every crew member of the show, from her dancers to truck drivers. She revealed that bonus day was one of her favorites, and her mother Andrea marveled over the fact that she applied a wax seal to each letter herself. Outletspreviously reportedthat Swift gave her crew bonuses worth $100,000. In the doc, she explained that if the tour grosses more, then the crew makes more too.

Dancer Kameron Saunders shared a sweet moment with his mom.

The series makes a point to highlight members of Swift's team, including one of her dancers, Kameron Saunders. In an interview, he discussed his dance career and recalled how past instructors or directors would criticize his weight. Dancing for Swift, however, was reaffirming and made him feel accepted, like there was still a space for him to dance.

He recalled being broke when he first heard about the audition (though he didn't know which artist it was for) and his supportive brother, NFL player Khalen Saunders, helped him out. Looking at his and his brother's parallel successes, Kameron said in the doc, "This feels like my Super Bowl." The second episode also includes an emotional conversation between him and his mother, as he thanks her for the sacrifices she made so he and his brother could achieve their dreams. On a more lighthearted note, we even get to see his mom dancing in the stands.

Swift added in theTortured Poetsset in between her tour dates in Asia and Europe.

In the second episode, Swift detailed how she and her team spent the two-month break between her Asian and European shows reworking the entire show to fit in herThe Tortured Poets Departmentset. (She recorded the new album during the tour, too.) The group worked in a "top-secret rehearsal facility;" sometimes they couldn't even play the tracks during practice because the songs weren't released yet.

By incorporating theTortured Poetstracks into the set list, Swift said they were essentially "relearning the entire show," with new blocking, choreography, and arrangements. Though she was excited, she admitted that if fans said online that they preferred the original show better, she would be so aghast, given all the work they put in.

She spoke about how she could do the original version of the show "in her sleep." While at first the idea of adding an entirely new set was a huge challenge, the team ultimately embraced the opportunity to push themselves.

Read our full episode watch guide forThe End of an Erahere.

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Our 9 Biggest Takeaways From Taylor Swift’s 'The End of an Era' Episodes 1 and 2

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." THE RUN...
Andreas Rentz/TAS24/Getty Taylor Swift performs during her Eras Tour in July 2024

Andreas Rentz/TAS24/Getty

Taylor Swiftcouldn't help but get emotional while reflecting onthe failed terrorist plotthat targeted one of her Eras Tour concerts in her new Disney+ docuseries,The End of an Era.

The 14-time Grammy winner teared up in the first episode as she discussed feeling like she was "skating on thin ice" amid "very violent, scary things happening to the tour," including the plot, which prompted her team and local concert promoters to cancel all of her tour dates in Vienna, Austria, last August.

"We dodged a mass slaughter," Swift said in a clip of her ahead of her five London concerts in 2024, which were her first shows following the foiled attack.

Kevin Mazur/TAS24/Getty Taylor Swift performs in Paris in May 2024

Kevin Mazur/TAS24/Getty

On Aug. 7, 2024, just one day before her scheduled Vienna dates, Swift's Taylor Nation and concert promoterBarracuda Musicannounced in a joint statement that the shows had been canceled following "confirmation from government officials of a planned terrorist attack at Ernst Happel Stadium."

That same month, CIA Deputy Director David S. Cohen stated that the terrorists were "plotting to kill a huge number, tens of thousands of people" at Swift's Vienna concert,The New York Timesreported.

"The Austrians were able to make those arrests because the agency and our partners in the intelligence community provided them information about what this ISIS-connected group was planning to do," he said at the time.

Authorities arrested two suspects in connection to the plot at the time, including a 19-year-old who was listed as the main suspect.

A 16-year-old Syrian teenager living in Germany, identified as Mohammad A., was convicted in August 2025 of "preparing a serious act of violence and supporting a terrorist act of violence abroad,"CBS Newsreported. He was given a suspended 18-month sentence.

Get your daily dose of entertainment news, celebrity updates, and what to watch with ourEW Dispatch newsletter.

Swiftaddressed the plot in an August 2024 Instagram post following the conclusion of the European leg of her Eras Tour, saying it was "devastating" to cancel the Vienna dates but that the safety of her fans comes first.

"The reason for the cancellations filled me with a new sense of fear, and a tremendous amount of guilt, because so many people had planned on coming to those shows," Swift wrote. "But I was also so grateful to the authorities, because thanks to them, we were grieving concerts and not lives."

Taylor Swift attends the 'Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour' concert movie premiere in Los Angeles in October 2023

While discussing the plot in her new docuseries, Swift also addressedthe knife attack at a Swift-themed dance and yoga class that killed three children and injured 10 morein Southport, U.K., just one week earlier in July 2024.

As she began to cry, Swift explained that she was getting all of her emotions out so that she'd be able to greet the families of the late children with a smile when meeting them before her London concerts.

A scene later in the docuseries' first episode shows Swift walking away from one of the family meet-and-greets in tears. Her mom, Andrea Swift, can be seen handing her a tissue as Swift hangs her head and sobs.

Following the knife attack, an 18-year-old named Axel Rudakubana pleaded guilty in January 2025 to three counts of murder, 10 counts of attempted murder, one count of producing the poison ricin, and another for possessing an Al Qaeda training manual, which is an offense under the U.K.'s Terrorism Act, theBBCreported. He was sentenced to a minimum of 52 years in prison that same month.

The first two episodes of Swift's new docuseries,The End of an Era,are streaming now on Disney+.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Taylor Swift tears up over foiled Vienna terror plot in Eras Tour docuseries: 'We dodged a mass slaughter'

Andreas Rentz/TAS24/Getty Taylor Swiftcouldn't help but get emotional while reflecting onthe failed terrorist plotthat targeted one of...
Taylor Swift 'End of an Era' docuseries biggest and best moments

Taylor Swiftsits on a couch backstage and sobs.

She's wearing her show-opening sequined jacket and leotard, an outfit familiar to the millions of fans who watched her on The Eras Tour, about to dazzle London's Wembley Stadium for the first of five sold-out shows.

But she has just come from meeting privately with the families of young people who werestabbed to death or injuredweeks before at a dance class themed to her music in Southport, England.

As Swift covers her face to gather her tears, her mother, Andrea, tries to comfort her. Swift knows the show must go on and will compartmentalize her emotions for the next 3½ hours of her marathon concert.

It's one of numerous strikingly unfiltered moments in"The End of an Era,"Swift's six-part docuseries on Disney+. The first two episodes,screened by a small group of mediaearlier in the week in New York, arrive Dec. 12, withtwo more landingeach Friday until Dec. 26.

Swift'srecord-breaking tour– which she planned two yearsbefore its launchin March 2023 in Glendale, Arizona – was a movement, a cultural touchstone, a seismic event that altered economies of countries, spurred tourism and sparked friendships among her disciples.

The Eras Tour is not likely to be replicated anytime soon, even by Swift, whoachieved billionaire statusfrom her indefatigable focus and physical endurance, all stemming from her desire to "overserve the fans."

Her worldwide romp deserves this interior analysis. As intimate as it is to see Swift run a bath and smear off her makeup in a hotel suite after the show as herbeloved cat Benjamin Buttonpeeks into the tub, it's equally rewarding to learn about the ancillary players – the dancers, production team, band members, choreographers, background singers – as well as the enormous mission of setting up and tearing down a small city149 times over 18 months.

"A lot of magic and mystery has to happen when something goes as well as this did," Swift said at the preview screening.

Here are some highlights from the first two episodes of Swift's magical, mystical accomplishment.

More:Taylor Swift ups her game again on playful 'Life of a Showgirl'

Taylor Swift is joined by her Eras Tour dancers at a New York screening of her documentary

Is Travis Kelce inTaylor Swift's 'End of an Era' documentary?

Fans of theengaged couplescouring the film for signs of thetowering tight endwill see him at some point, as evidenced in "The End of an Era" trailer. But early on, only a few sweet phone conversations are shared, with Swift answering one call from her beau with an excited, "Baby!"

As she tells him about her day, the pair summarize the parallels of their respective jobs.

"I've got songs to remember, you have plays to remember. You have (Kansas City Chiefs) Coach (Andy) Reid, I have my mom," Swift says with a laugh. As Kelce praises and encourages Swift, she jokes, "Some people get a vitamin drip – I get this conversation."

More:Is Taylor Swift writing a book? Fans speculate after singer talks audiobooks on Colbert

Taylor Swift didn't hide her fear after a thwarted terrorist attack in Vienna

In August 2024, Swift canceled her three concerts at Ernst-Happel-Stadion after local authorities uncovereda plot to mass-murder concert attendees.

The shows, which would have been her first time performing in Austria, were the penultimate dates of a European leg that would end a week later in London.

Swift is clearly – understandably – rattled as she lays barefoot on a couch backstage before the first show at Wembley, which will mark her return to the stage after the near-tragedy in Vienna.

She is worried about her fans and whether her concern will affect her performance.

Swift's face is clouded with anxiety as she crouches on the hydraulic lift that will momentarily boost her from under the safety of the stage into the sight lines of 90,000 people.

Three and a half hours later, she walks offstage yelling to everyone within earshot, "We're back!" before she slumps into a waiting SUV, exhausted and sweaty, to immediately call Kelce.

More:Taylor Swift talks Eras tour, mentors and her favorite songs on Stephen Colbert

Taylor Swift commands the stage at Wembley Stadium in London on June 21, 2024.

'Tortured Poets Department' segment was akin to creating a new tour

Swift does nothing halfway, and when she dropped a new album in the midst of The Eras Tour, she knew she had to modify the stage show to include"The Tortured Poets Department."

During a supposed break between March and May 2024, Swift and her crew worked at a secret rehearsal facility to craft new staging, dance moves, costumes and vocal arrangements – the complete opposite of any rest.

Filmed in Vancouver, a new concert film coming to Disney+ captures the final show of Taylor Swift's hugely successful Eras Tour.

At Swift's closing show in London in August 2024, three months after unveiling the new sequence, she invited her"Florida!!!" partner Florence Welchto perform the song with her at Wembley Stadium.

Again, a new set piece and choreography were designed, with Welch a game – and hilarious – participant in learning dance moves and experiencing her first hydraulic lift.

Taylor Swift loved 'bonus day'

Not many bosses would take the kind of delight Swift did in presenting every member of her teamwith bonus checks.

The approach: If the tour grosses more money, those who were part of the journey would receive bonuses.

But with typical Swiftian flair, she presented the group with handwritten notes finished with a wax seal. Though the amount of the bonus was bleeped out, the facial expressions, tears and hugs suggestedSwift's rumored generosityis very, very real.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Taylor Swift 'End of an Era' docuseries biggest moments

Taylor Swift 'End of an Era' docuseries biggest and best moments

Taylor Swiftsits on a couch backstage and sobs. She's wearing her show-opening sequined jacket and leotard, ...
Poole returns with 22 as Pelicans top short-handed Blazers 143-120 to halt losing streak

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jordan Poole scored 22 points in his return from a left quadriceps injury that sidelined him for 18 games, and the New Orleans Pelicans snapped a seven-game losing streak with a 143-120 victory over the short-handed Portland Trail Blazers on Thursday night.

Trey Murphy III had 24 points and Bryce McGowens hit all five 3-pointers he took on his way to tying a career high with 23 points on 8-of-11 shooting for New Orleans.

The Pelicans won for just the second time since James Borrego took over as coach after Willie Green was fired on Nov. 15.

Shaedon Sharpe scored 21 points for Portland, which had just 10 players available and lost for the sixth time in seven games.

Six players scored 15 or more points for the Pelicans, including rookies Jeremiah Fears (19) and Derik Queen (17). New Orleans also set a franchise record with 86 points in the paint.

Sidy Cissoko scored 20 points for the Blazers, while Jerami Grant and Deni Avdija each had 16.

BUCKS 116, CELTICS 101

MILWAUKEE (AP) — Kyle Kuzma scored a season-high 31 points and Bobby Portis added 27 points and 10 rebounds as Milwaukee rallied in the second half to defeat Boston without injured star Giannis Antetokounmpo.

Portis hit a pair of 3-pointers from the left corner as Milwaukee opened the fourth quarter with an 8-2 run to go in front 95-82. Another 3 by Portis put the Bucks up 106-89 with 6:49 remaining.

Portis hit 11 of 13 shots, including 5 of 6 beyond the arc, in 26 minutes. Kevin Porter Jr. had 18 points, 10 rebounds and 13 assists.

Jaylen Brown scored 30 points and Jordan Walsh added 20 for the Celtics, whose five-game winning streak ended.

ROCKETS 115, CLIPPERS 113

HOUSTON (AP) — Amen Thompson's three-point play with 17.2 seconds left helped Houston to a win over Los Angeles.

Thompson tipped in Alperen Sengun's miss to break a 110-110 tie, was fouled by Kris Dunn and hit the and-1 free throw. The putback came off Houston's third offensive rebound of the possession and 21st of the night.

Thompson made 8 of 12 from the field and finished with 20 points, nine rebounds, and eight assists.

The Rockets (16-6) outrebounded the Clippers 51-28 and avoided losing back-to-back games for the first time since October 24.

Los Angeles had two possessions with a chance to tie the game, but Kawhi Leonard was called for an offensive foul, and Nicolas Batum committed a violation on an inbounds pass.

NUGGETS 136, KINGS 105

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Nikola Jokic had 36 points, 12 rebounds and eight assists as Denver cruised to a victory over Sacramento for their fourth straight victory.

Peyton Watson scored 21 points on 7-of-10 shooting for the Nuggets (18-6). Cameron Johnson added 16 and Jonas Valanciunas had 15 points and six rebounds off the bench.

Jokic made 14 of 16 shots from the field, including both his 3-pointers, and went 6 for 8 at the free-throw line. He did not play in the fourth quarter.

Jamal Murray and Tim Hardaway Jr. had 11 points apiece for Denver.

Poole returns with 22 as Pelicans top short-handed Blazers 143-120 to halt losing streak

NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Jordan Poole scored 22 points in his return from a left quadriceps injury that sidelined him for 18 ga...

 

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