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Bumble failed to protect user data in ShinyHunters hack, class action suit claims
Weeks ago, the hacker group ShinyHunters claimed to breach the likes of Panera Bread, Match Group, and the dating app Bumble. Now, a Texas woman is suing Bumble, claiming that the app failed to protect her and other users' personal information.
The complaint states that in January, ShinyHunters infiltrated Bumble's "inadequately protected network servers and accessed highly sensitive PII [personal identifiable information] which was being kept unprotected." In this case, PII could include full names, birth dates, addresses, home and cell phone numbers, Social Security numbers, and account numbers.
SEE ALSO: Epstein used major dating apps after sex offender status, files suggestShinyHunters claimed it stole 30GB of Bumble data, according to Cybernews. A Bumble spokesperson told Cybernews at the time, "Our InfoSec team quickly detected and eliminated the access, and the incident is contained. We have engaged external cybersecurity experts to investigate and have notified law enforcement. Importantly, there was no access to our member database, member accounts, the Bumble application, or member direct messages or profiles."
The suit, filed on Feb. 19 in the Western District of Texas (Bumble is headquarted in Austin), alleges that Bumble "disregarded the rights of" plaintiff Tyra Omirin and proposed class members by "intentionally, willfully, recklessly and/or negligently failing to take and implement adequate and reasonable measures to ensure that [their] PII was safeguarded, failing to take available steps to prevent an unauthorized disclosure of data, and failing to follow applicable, required and appropriate protocols, policies and procedures regarding the encryption of data, even for internal use."
As a result, the suit states, their personal data was compromised. Omirin had to spend time verifying the data breach, monitoring her credit and personal accounts, exploring identity theft insurance, and seeking legal counsel. Omirin paid Bumble under the belief that the app would protect her personal information, and the complaint states that she wouldn't have if she had known Bumble wouldn't "reasonably and adequately protect" this data.
SEE ALSO: Match Group responding to alleged hack of user dataShe has "suffered lost time, annoyance, interference and inconvenience as a result of the Data Breach and has anxiety and increased concerns for the loss of privacy, as well as anxiety over the impact of cybercriminals accessing, using and selling" her information, the suit states.
In addition to damages, Omirin is seeking relief requiring Bumble to protect all data, including by encrypting it, to delete her and class members' data unless Bumble can provide a "reasonable justification" for retaining it, to require third-party security audits, and to establish an information security program.
Mashable has reached out to Bumble for comment.
Trump celebrated the mens hockey gold. The women were the punchline.
The 2026 Winter Olympics should have been a golden moment for American hockey. Both the men's and women's teams won gold. The sport was already in the middle of a cultural surge, fueled in part by the massive fandom that had formed around Heated Rivalry, the breakout series that made hockey newly legible to audiences who had never cared much about it before. In the weeks before the Games, ice hockey was trending on Google. Women joked about going to the "boy aquarium," turning the rink into a kind of female-gaze spectacle.
And yet, as the men's hockey team celebrated its historic gold, besting Canada in an overtime nail-biter, a viral locker-room phone call with President Donald Trump fractured that afterglow.
What should have been a shared moment of national pride instead curdled into something more familiar. On speakerphone, with FBI Director Kash Patel holding the phone inside the locker room, Trump invited the team to the White House and joked that he would "probably be impeached" if he didn’t also invite the gold medal–winning women’s team, reducing their victory to a political aside. Players laughed. The video spread. And just like that, the most dominant force in American hockey — women — was repositioned not at the center of the story, but at its margins.
Online, the reaction was immediate. The clip moved quickly through the same feeds that had helped turn hockey into a cultural moment.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.American women's hockey has long been the standard-bearer for the sport internationally. Since women's hockey was introduced at the Olympics in 1998, the U.S. has won a medal in every Games, including multiple golds, and has consistently been one of the two defining powers alongside Canada. Their victory in Milan, where they also defeated Canada in overtime, wasn't a surprise. It was a continuation of nearly three decades of dominance — and part of a larger pattern at these Olympics, where women accounted for eight of Team USA's 12 gold medals.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Across the Games, women also shaped the emotional core of the Olympics. Figure skater Alysa Liu's joy on the ice felt almost contagious, her delight visible in every movement. When she stepped onto the podium, she celebrated alongside the silver and bronze medalists from Team Japan, smiling and pulling them into an embrace in a moment that felt inclusive rather than hierarchical, a reminder that victory doesn't have to come at someone else's expense.
It was the kind of victory that made the sport feel bigger, not smaller.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.But that spirit of inclusivity existed alongside a more complicated reality.
Tension had already been simmering throughout these Olympics. Several Team USA athletes, including figure skater Amber Glenn and freestyle skier Hunter Hess, had spoken openly about their discomfort representing the country amid the current political climate, particularly as immigration enforcement policies and ICE raids intensified back home. Hess, who became an unlikely lightning rod after criticizing the administration, put it bluntly at a press conference: "Just because I’m wearing the flag doesn’t mean I represent everything that’s going on in the U.S." In response, Trump called him a "real loser" on Truth Social, and Hess said he used the president's comments as motivation during his halfpipe qualifying round.
Meanwhile, the women's hockey team rejected Trump's insincere invite to the White House.
Trump's relationship with athletes, especially women, has long been fraught. He has publicly targeted prominent female athletes who criticized him and falsely questioned the legitimacy of Olympic women's competitors in the past. That history made his locker-room talk land differently. For many watching, it felt like part of a larger pattern of diminishing women, even in moments of undeniable achievement.
The same screens that welcomed women into hockey also showed them exactly where they still stand — just outside the glass.
The 2026 Toyota RAV4 Hybrid gives you more for your money
If you’re trying to keep fuel costs down without diving headfirst into full EV life, hybrids are where a lot of smart buyers are landing. EV momentum has cooled lately, while hybrids keep gaining ground, now making up about 22 percent of new vehicle sales in the U.S., according to federal data.
Verified LinkedIn users data is shared in shocking ways, report claims
Thinking of verifying your LinkedIn account so you can get that coveted blue checkmark badge?
You may want to hear this first.
One observant anonymous user is warning other LinkedIn users that the Microsoft-owned social network for professionals utilizes a third-party verification service that, in turn, shares users' data with other companies.
Inc highlighted a story posted on The Local Stack, a blog that covers "surveillance capitalism" from an individual who simply goes by the name "rogi."
According to the report by rogi, after going through the LinkedIn verification process to confirm his identity, he took a deeper look into the privacy policy and terms of service for the process, which is carried out by a third-party vendor called Persona.
Persona may sound familiar if you've been following the ongoing controversies around age and ID verification policy. For example, both Roblox and Discord also use Persona for their age verification process.
SEE ALSO: What would ethical age verification look like online?According to rogi, what concerned him was exactly what Persona could do with his data. Persona accessed rogi's full name, passport photo, selfie, facial biometric data, NFC chip data (or the info stored on the chip inside his passport), his nationality, sex, birthday, age, email, phone number, physical address, IP address, geolocation, device type, MAC address, browser, OS version, and language.
But that's not all. Persona also reportedly utilized "hesitation detection," which tracked just how long it took rogi to complete the process and where he paused, as well as copy and paste detection.
What's more, Rogi claimed that this data not only gets shared with LinkedIn and Persona, but also with Persona's “global network of data partners,” which includes further third-party vendors, also known as subprocessors. If requested, Persona may even hand over data to law enforcement, according to their terms of service. Persona's subprocessors include Amazon's AWS, Google Cloud Platform, and even a few AI companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic.
After rogi's The Local Stack post on LinkedIn and Persona went viral, the co-founder and CEO of Persona Rick Song addressed the report in a comment on LinkedIn.
"No personal data processed is used for AI/model training," Song said in a comment. "Data is exclusively used to confirm your identity."
SEE ALSO: Discord age verification: How it works, when it happensSong also said that all biometric data is deleted right after processing, and all other personal data is deleted within 30 days. Song also denied that AI companies such as OpenAI and Anthropic were subprocessors used to verify a user's identity, even though those companies are included on a Persona webpage that lists the company's subprocessors.
"The referenced subprocessor list is the superset of subprocessors used across all customers which is unfortunately misleading," Song said. "Our customers select which products are used which determines which subprocessors are used. We are adding a clarification to this list to make this clearer in the future."
In other words, just because a company is listed on this page, that doesn't necessarily mean that LinkedIn user data in particular will be shared with them.
Persona's growing usage among some of the internet's most popular platforms is certainly putting the company under a microscope. Another recent report on Persona from a security researcher claims that the company performs "269 individual verification checks" on Discord users.
Further causing concern for many privacy watchdog groups? Peter Thiel, the controversial co-founder of surveillance firm Palantir, is a major investor in Persona as well.
Mashable reached out to LinkedIn and Persona for comment, and we'll update this story if we receive a response.
You need a separate network to protect yourself from your smart devices
You've probably connected smart devices like fridges, toothbrushes, light bulbs, TVs, and internet-connected CCTV cameras to your home Wi-Fi without a second thought. But do you know what they're up to? Most of the time, they're just idly waiting for your command. Sometimes, they're up to no good.
Every smartwatch that works with the iPhone that isn’t an Apple Watch
It’s no secret that the Apple Watch is widely considered the best smartwatch for iPhone owners. That doesn’t mean it’s the right fit for everyone’s needs, nor is it the only game in town. Whether you’re after longer battery life, greater durability, or a lower price, you have options that aren’t an Apple Watch.
BBC under fire after man with Tourette syndrome yells racist slur at BAFTAs
The year’s BAFTAS, the British equivalent of the Oscars, will not be remembered for which movies won, but rather how the BBC handled a shocking moment. During the broadcast, an attendee with Tourette syndrome yelled a racial slur, which could be heard on the tape-delayed broadcast.
The first time the N-word was shouted by John Davidson, whose life was the basis for the BAFTA-nominated film I Swear, was at the beginning of the BBC’s broadcast, as Sinners stars Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo presented the first award. Both Jordan and Lindo are Black.
Update, Feb. 23, 3 p.m. ET: Davidson released a statement about the events at the BAFTAs, thanking the organizers for inviting him and explaining his tics to the audience. He also stated, "In addition to the announcement by Alan Cumming, the BBC and BAFTA, I can only add that I am, and always have been deeply mortified if anyone considers my involuntary tics to be intentional or to carry any meaning."
For his part, Lindo later told Vanity Fair that no one from the BAFTAs reached out to him after Davidson’s tic was shouted, and that he and Jordan did their best to carry on after hearing the word.
Davidson reportedly repeated the slur several times during the show, according to Sinners production designer Hannah Beachler.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Davidson left the ceremony partway through, the BBC reports.
BAFTAs host Alan Cumming addressed Davidson’s tics during the event, telling the audience, "Tourette's syndrome is a disability and the tics you have heard tonight are involuntary, which means the person who has Tourette syndrome has no control over their language. We apologize if you were offended."
However, Cumming’s last sentence left a lot to be desired from many.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed. This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Even though the show was broadcast with a two-hour delay, the slur was kept in the BBC’s broadcast and remained on the network’s streaming service, BBC iPlayer, until the entire show was pulled.
Representatives from the BBC apologized for the airing and stated the slurs "arose from involuntary verbal tics associated with Tourette syndrome, and as explained during the ceremony it was not intentional."
Robert Aramayo, the actor who portrayed Davidson in I Swear, told the BBC News after the awards show that, "[Tourette syndrome] is not shouting obscenities, it's not being abusive, it's Tourette's and they're tics."
The National Institute for Health describes the disease as "a neurological disorder that may cause sudden unwanted and uncontrolled rapid and repeated movements or vocal sounds called tics. TS is one of a group of disorders of the developing nervous system called tic disorders."
Not all people with Tourette syndrome have verbal tics that are expressed through obscenities or slurs, according to the Tourette Association of America.
SEE ALSO: The NAACP is fighting back against AI data centers"Coprolalia, the involuntary use of obscene language, affects approximately 10% of individuals with Tourette Syndrome (TS), though it is frequently exaggerated in media portrayals,” according to the TAA’s website. "Research indicates that coprolalia may be underreported due to stigma, suggesting that it could actually affect a higher percentage of individuals with TS than the commonly cited 10%.”
While most attendees of the BAFTAs acknowledged the slurs were unintentional, some expressed frustration at how the ordeal was handled.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.Don't bother with these "essential" Raspberry Pi upgrades—they're mostly useless
The world of Raspberry Pi accessories is vast and wonderful. Thanks to the Pi's form factor, the community (and businesses) have come up with add-ons that make these tiny computers so much more versatile than anyone could imagine.
This new audio format could replace MP3 and Opus
Even if you've never heard of the VP8, VP9, or AV1 video codecs, you've probably had a better video streaming experience because of them. The organization behind the AV1 project, the Alliance for Open Media, is now turning its attention to audio with plans for a revamped Opus codec.
SSDs killed the dual-actuator HDD: Why two mechanical arms couldn't save the hard drive
SSDs have gotten faster, but hard drives, for better or worse, haven't. There's a reason why they haven't, and that's mostly due to to the way they work. So any attempts to make hard drives faster would need to get around that.
How to watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge online for free
TL;DR: Live stream Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge in the Champions League for free on Virgin Media Player. Access this free live stream from anywhere in the world with ExpressVPN.
The Champions League playoff round has already produced some stunning moments. Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge was one of the most entertaining matchups in the first leg of this round. We got penalties, own goals, and last-minute equalizers. What more do you need?
The score is tied 3-3 going into the second leg. Atletico Madrid are pretty formidable at home, so most fans will expect the Spanish side to progress to the next round. Club Brugge will need to produce a stunning performance to upset the odds.
If you want to watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge in the Champions League for free from anywhere in the world, we have all the information you need.
When is Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge?Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge in the Champions League kicks off at 5:45 p.m. GMT on Feb. 24. This fixture takes place at the Metropolitano Stadium.
How to watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge for freeAtletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge is available to live stream for free on Virgin Media Player.
Virgin Media Player is geo-restricted to Ireland, but anyone can access this free streaming platform with a VPN. These tools can hide your real IP address (digital location) and connect you to a secure server in Ireland, meaning you can unblock Virgin Media Player to stream the Champions League for free from anywhere in the world.
Live stream Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge for free by following these simple steps:
Subscribe to a streaming-friendly VPN (like ExpressVPN)
Download the app to your device of choice (the best VPNs have apps for Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Linux, and more)
Open up the app and connect to a server in Ireland
Visit Virgin Media Player
Watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge for free from anywhere in the world
The best VPNs for streaming are not free, but most do offer free-trials or money-back guarantees. By leveraging these offers, you can watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge without committing with your cash. This isn't a long-term solution, but it does give you enough time to stream select Champions League fixtures before recovering your investment.
What is the best VPN for Virgin Media Player?ExpressVPN is the best choice for bypassing geo-restrictions to stream live sport on Virgin Media Player, for a number of reasons:
Servers in 105 countries including Ireland
Easy-to-use app available on all major devices including iPhone, Android, Windows, Mac, and more
Strict no-logging policy so your data is secure
Fast connection speeds free from throttling
Up to 10 simultaneous connections
30-day money-back guarantee
A two-year subscription to ExpressVPN is on sale for $68.40 and includes an extra four months for free — 81% off for a limited time. This plan includes a year of free unlimited cloud backup and a generous 30-day money-back guarantee. Alternatively, you can get a one-month plan for just $12.99 (with money-back guarantee).
Watch Atletico Madrid vs. Club Brugge in the Champions League for free with ExpressVPN.
Open earbuds fans: The Bose Ultra Open earbuds are on sale for their lowest price ever
Save $119.01: The Bose Ultra Open earbuds are available for just $179.99 from Woot as of Feb. 23. At full price, these earbuds cost $299, so this deal saves you 40% — and marks the lowest price we've ever seen them at.
Opens in a new window Credit: Bose Bose Ultra Open earbuds $180.02 at Woot$299 Save $118.98 Get Deal
The best open earbuds can sound rich, robust, and clear, despite their design.
Considering that open earbuds sit outside the ear canal, it's not the easiest feat. It's one of the reason the Bose Ultra Open earbuds stood out to me when I tested them. It's also one of the reasons the earbuds are priced the way they are, at $299.
Though the price point is steep, it's much more manageable if you can grab them on sale. And as of Feb. 23, the Bose Ultra Open earbuds aren't just on sale — they're available for their lowest price ever, at $179.99. You'll find the deal at Woot, a retailer that typically sells refurbished and new products. For these Bose earbuds, you can grab them in an unopened box in the black, lunar blue, and white smoke colorway.
At the time of writing, the Bose buds are available at Amazon for full price — on sale, we've seen them drop as low as $199 at the retailer, but never lower.
So what makes the Bose open earbuds worth the hefty price tag? At their best, open earbuds walk the line between keeping you aware of the world around you while also letting you enjoy your listening experience. The Bose Ultra Open earbuds have a clip design, which hooks around the ear — in my testing, I found them to be one of the most comfortable pairs of open earbuds available. Mashable contributor RJ Andersen also wrote the buds were "hands down the most comfortable earbuds I've ever tried," in her review. In addition, they truly are one of the best sounding open earbuds money can buy.
Their main drawbacks are their more limited battery life (which tops out at four hours with immersive audio on, and seven with it off) and high price point. At least with this deal, one of those points is taken care of.
Microsoft's 3 best apps aren't even included with Windows 11
Did you know that Microsoft makes a lot of apps that they don’t include pre-installed with Windows? I know, it’s hard to believe, especially with how bloated Windows 11 has become. Here are the three apps that I wish Microsoft would include with Windows 11.
Former Xbox President Sarah Bond breaks silence after surprise exit
Former Xbox president Sarah Bond has broken her silence following last week’s stunning leadership shakeup at Microsoft Gaming.
In a heartfelt LinkedIn post, Bond published the note she sent to her team, writing that she is "incredibly proud of what we’ve built together over the past eight-plus years." The post followed the news that both Bond and longtime Xbox chief Phil Spencer were stepping down.
She pointed to Xbox’s growth in PC and cloud gaming, development of its next console, and efforts to create "a more open gaming platform that spans devices."
"With that, I’ve decided this is the right time for me to take my next step, both personally and professionally," Bond wrote, adding that she will remain on as a special advisor to incoming Xbox head Asha Sharma during the transition.
The post marked Bond’s first public comments since the "huge shakeup" at Xbox, which saw Spencer retire and Asha Sharma elevated to Executive Vice President and CEO of Microsoft Gaming. At the time, Bond was widely viewed as Spencer’s heir apparent and had recently spoken publicly about the next generation of Xbox hardware.
SEE ALSO: President of Xbox Sarah Bond talks Ally X, next-gen console, and recent price increasesBond joined Xbox in 2017 after stints at McKinsey and T-Mobile and went on to play a key role in Microsoft’s $69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard. She also positioned herself as a visible advocate for accessibility and platform openness in gaming.
In her farewell note, Bond thanked Spencer for his "mentorship and friendship" and Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella for his support.
Xbox now enters a new chapter under Sharma, a CoreAI executive with limited gaming experience. For Bond, meanwhile, the next move remains unclear — though her note said she would "remain on as a Special Advisor to Asha" during the transition.
Conduent data breach already one of largest in U.S. history and keeps getting worse
Things keep getting worse the more we learn about the Conduent data breach.
At least 25 million people were affected by the breach — and that's just in two states. A reported 15 million people were affected in Texas. That's roughly half the state's population. In Oregon, meanwhile, its Department of Justice reported more than 10 million people were affected.
Conduent is a company that handles data for corporations, healthcare providers, and state agencies. Its clients include Humana, Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Texas, reported NJ.com. The breached data may include users' names, Social Security numbers, medical information, and health insurance information, according to a notice from the company.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton said his office was investigating the breach.
“The Conduent data breach was likely the largest breach in U.S. history. If any insurance giant cut corners or has information that could help us prevent breaches like this in the future, I will work to uncover it,” Paxton said in a statement this month.
SEE ALSO: How hackers are stealing millions from ATMs, FBI warnsConduent told NJ.com that it looked forward to "working cooperatively with the Texas Attorney General’s Office" and that it would provide "the relevant information, consistent with our longstanding practice of constructive engagement with regulators."
The breach affected millions of people across several states. The company reportedly plans to send out all notices by mid-April.
How to check if you're affected and what to doConduent plans to mail out notices to affected consumers, which, obviously, will let you know if your data has been breached. You can also check your information on Have I Been Pwned, a reliable source for data breaches.
SEE ALSO: Here’s what to do if you give your information to a scammerIf you have been affected, it might be a good idea to monitor your credit and to ensure 2FA is installed wherever possible. You can also place a credit freeze should you want to take a more drastic measure.
Tired of Amazon Prime? Best Buys annual membership is on sale for just $25
Save 50%: As of Feb. 23, My Best Buy Plus annual memberships are on sale for $24.99. Compared to their $49.99 full price, you'll save $25 total. You have to pay in full up-front, but cost-wise, this deal brings the membership down to a cost of just $2.08 per month.
Opens in a new window Credit: Best Buy My Best Buy Plus membership $24.99 at Best Buy$49.99 Save $25.00 Get Deal
Amazon Prime may be one the most popular shopping memberships, but it's not your only worthwhile option — especially when other ones go on sale.
Case in point: as of Feb. 23, My Best Buy Plus annual memberships are on sale for just $24.99 , bringing their cost down to just $2.08 per month — though you will have to pay in full upfront. Typically, the annual cost would run you $49.99 (or $4.16 per month).
For comparison, Prime will run you $14.99 per month, or $139 up front for the year (which calculates out to about $11.58 per month). While Amazon's service does come with plenty of perks like Prime Video and GrubHub savings, if you're looking for strictly shopping benefits, Best Buy may be the more cost effective route for you.
So what exactly do you get with a Best Buy Plus membership? In addition to free two-day shipping, Plus members enjoy early access to sales, an extended 60-day return window on most of Best Buy's catalog, and exclusive sale pricing on regular items and Best Buy Drops. For instance, at the time of writing, both the 15-inch Apple MacBook Air and Shokz OpenRun Pro 2 earbuds have exclusive Plus member-only markdowns.
Best Buy does offer a free membership option that gives shoppers access to free shipping. They also offer a more premium membership tier, My Best Buy Total, which for $179.99 gives customers access to more round-the-clock tech support and repair services.
The cheapest hybrid compact SUV in 2026 is more reliable than a RAV4
Hybrid SUVs are supposed to deliver the best of both worlds—lower fuel costs and long-term dependability, but affordability often comes with compromises. In 2026, however, the cheapest hybrid compact SUV on the market is challenging that assumption. The Kia Sportage Hybrid undercuts many rivals on price while posting reliability scores that rival, and in some cases surpass, the long-trusted Toyota RAV4 Hybrid.
Paradise Season 2: Who is Alex?
Paradise Season 2 introduces a whole new host of post-apocalyptic survivors, those who didn't have access to the Colorado bunker during Season 1's volcano-tsunami mass extinction event. Among them are Link (Thomas Doherty) and Geiger (Michael McGrady), two leaders of a group heading across the United States to get to the bunker.
SEE ALSO: 'Paradise' Season 2 review: Great things lie beyond the bunkerWhen we meet them in episode 1, they're making a pit stop at Elvis Presley's Graceland mansion, where tour guide Annie (Shailene Woodley) has been hiding out for the past three years. Before the group moves on, Annie overhears Link and Geiger talking about their next steps.
"We've got to get to the bunker, we've got to get inside, and we've got to kill Alex," Geiger tells Link.
Sounds like a plan, guys! I just have one teeny question: Who the heck is Alex? No Season 1 character had that name, especially none of the major power players in the bunker.
Thankfully, Paradise Season 2 does reveal who Alex is in its third episode. Unthankfully, the reveal raises more questions than answers. Let's get into it.
We've already met Alex in Paradise.In the flashback portions of episode 3, Samantha "Sinatra" Redmond (Julianne Nicholson) hires Billy Pace (Jon Beavers) to take out professor Henry Miller (Patrick Fischler). He's the owner of Vestige Quantum and developer of a technology that she desperately needs for a secret project tied to the bunker. In refusing to sign it over, he signed his own death warrant.
Billy goes to Henry's house, where he finds him caring for his bed-ridden wife (Gwen Holloway), who has Huntington's disease. Her name? Alex.
Not only does the name match up to Link's target, but Alex also knew Link. He was her husband's ace student-turned-business partner, and the closest thing to a son the couple had.
SEE ALSO: Wait, is 'Paradise' Season 2 doing time travel?Case cracked, right? Not so fast. Knowing he's about to die when Billy shows up, Henry euthanizes Alex, telling her he'll be seeing her again soon. That means Alex is long dead by the time Link and Geiger head to the bunker. However, there's no such thing as a coincidence in Paradise. There has to be some tie between the late Alex and the Alex whom Link is determined to kill.
My guess? We're looking at some sort of time travel or multiversal shenanigans. That could explain why Link kept getting nosebleeds at the mention of Alex in episode 1 — maybe she's an anomaly in our reality.
Alex is involved in Sinatra's secret project. Julianne Nicholson and Sarah Shahi in "Paradise." Credit: Disney / Ser BaffoEpisode 3 reveals that there's even more to the Alex puzzle than meets the eye. During a conversation with her housekeeper (and apparent co-conspirator) Carmen (Maria-Elena Laas), Sinatra asks, "How is Alex?"
"Alex is well," Carmen responds.
The following conversation is extra cryptic, all concerning Sinatra's secret project, which is big enough that it requires her to siphon power from the bunker.
"Any other messages? Do they have an estimate?" Sinatra asks.
"No messages," Carmen says.
"Any estimate?"
"It's too unpredictable," Carmen replies. "But she is getting closer."
What are the messages? Who are "they," and what are they estimating? And what is Alex getting closer to?
More importantly, is Alex even a person? Could "Alex" be a code name for the Henry's technology that Sinatra co-opted? And if so, why would Link want to destroy — or "kill" — it if Sinatra is so sure it can save the world?
Paradise hasn't given us any of those answers yet, but it did give me a nosebleed just thinking about all of it.
Paradise is now streaming on Hulu, with new episodes every Monday.
Wait, is Paradise Season 2 doing time travel?
Something strange is afoot in Paradise Season 2.
Everyone's getting nosebleeds. Xavier Collins (Sterling K. Brown) keeps seeing visions of a man he's never met. And Samantha "Sinatra" Redmond (Julianne Nicholson) is working on a project that's somehow even more secret and important than the apocalypse bunker. I don't know about you, but I smell a twist coming, and it could be one of two things: time travel or multiversal shenanigans. Maybe it's even some combination of the two. After all, Paradise ended its very first episode with the earth-shattering reveal that it was taking place in an underground city. If you want to follow that up, you've got to go big or go home — and both time travel or the multiverse would count as going big.
Here are all the clues from Paradise Season 2's three-episode premiere that point to time travel.
SEE ALSO: 'Paradise' Season 2 review: Great things lie beyond the bunker The one thing Sinatra doesn't have is time. Julianne Nicholson and Sarah Shahi in "Paradise." Credit: Disney / Ser BaffoIn a flashback in episode 3, Sinatra has a disheartening talk with Dr. Louge (Geoffrey Arend), who is convinced a supervolcano-megatsunami combo will destroy the world. (And wouldn't you know it, he winds up being right!)
Dr. Louge tells Sinatra that even if people did somehow manage to survive the initial disaster and rapid cooling that would follow, the trapped greenhouse gases would soon heat Earth back up to an unlivable temperature. Anyone still around would die due to the heat or crushing pressure. Basically, Sinatra's bunker would only buy people a few more years.
"There's only one thing that can fix this, and it's the one thing even you can't buy," Dr. Louge tells Sinatra.
"And what is that?" she replies.
"Time."
Dr. Louge may intend that statement to be a hard truth, but Sinatra likely takes it as a challenge. Have we ever known Sinatra to back down from a challenge? Absolutely not. This is the woman who built a whole underground city to weather the apocalypse. If someone tells her she doesn't have time, she is going to find a way to make more time. And how do you make more time? Perhaps with the help of a time machine. Speaking of...
Sinatra has a secret project.Episode 3 reveals that in addition to building the bunker, Sinatra has been working on another project this whole time, one that's so big she needs to siphon power from the bunker to keep it running. Paradise has yet to reveal what the project is, but based on how anxious Sinatra is about it, it seems like she's banking on this project to solve her pesky time problem. Could she actually be building a time machine? Seems like it, but I'm not ruling out multiversal shenanigans quite yet.
SEE ALSO: 'Paradise's apocalypse episode is absolutely unforgettable Let's talk about "Advanced Wave Functions, Superposition, and Quantum Entanglement."In order to kickstart her project, Sinatra needs to buy a company owned by professor Henry Miller (Patrick Fischler). We don't learn what his company does, but we do learn its name, Vestige Quantum, as well as the name of the class he teaches for grad students: Advanced Wave Functions, Superposition, and Quantum Entanglement.
Now, I'm no quantum physicist. I'm not even a regular physicist. But I have seen too many Marvel movies, so even just looking at those words makes me think of the multiverse. That thought only persists when you dig into the actual definitions of the terms.
In quantum mechanics, superposition means that systems can exist in multiple states at once — at least, until we observe them. The Schrödinger's cat thought experiment is the classic example of this. Let's say you put a cat in a box along with a Geiger counter, a minuscule amount of radioactive substance, and a mechanism that will shatter a vial of poison should the radioactive atoms decay. If you leave this box alone and have no knowledge of whether the atoms have decayed or not, then the cat is theoretically both alive and fatally poisoned until you open the box.
Elsewhere, according to NASA, quantum entanglement is "the idea that particles of the same origin, which were once connected, always stay connected... If something happens to one particle, it affects all the others with which it’s entangled."
SEE ALSO: 'Love Story: John F. Kennedy Jr. and Carolyn Bessette' review: A romance and horror story, all in oneThat's all heady stuff, but in the world of Paradise, perhaps it means that Henry was trying to find a solution to our dying planet through quantum physics. Is there a state in which Earth is simultaneously destroyed and not, and if so, how do we make the "not" option a reality? Or could he be trying to find another version of Earth that's entangled with ours?
These theories are more multiverse-focused than time travel-focused, but one element of the Henry's involvement brings me all the way back to the time travel element. Right before Billy Pace (Jon Beavers) assassinates him, Henry says, "Today, I am choosing to believe that it all worked. That you are supposed to be here."
Sir, what is "it"? What are you working on that might have worked and led Billy to you on purpose? Is it some experiment that will only occur in the future and reverberate through the past? My head hurts.
What's going on with Paradise's nosebleeds? Thomas Doherty in "Paradise." Credit: Disney / Ser BaffoYou know who else's heads hurt? Everyone who's getting nosebleeds and disorienting headaches, that's who. Link (Thomas Doherty) gets two nosebleeds in the first episode: both times when he and Geiger (Michael McGrady) are discussing heading to the Colorado bunker and killing Alex (which is its whole own thing). We also learn that Link was Henry's protégé, so if anyone is able to understand whatever quantum shenanigans are going on here, it would be him.
In episode 2, Xavier gets a nosebleed while flying his plane through an unusual storm that makes him crash. He gets one again while experiencing a vision of him and Link walking together through a white hallway. In episode 3, Billy also gets a nosebleed after meeting Link and sparing his life. Somehow, Henry anticipated this was coming and handed Billy a tissue before he died. Did he know the meeting was coming because the meeting was pre-ordained and he'd witnessed it through time travel? Whatever the answer, something about Link and his relationship to the bunker is causing nosebleeds left and right, and somehow it will impact the fate of the world.
(Again, how do we really know this? Has someone traveled to the apocalyptic future and learned all the events that led to it?)
How did Xavier and Link meet?Xavier's strange visions of him and Link might also point to time travel. As of yet, we don't know if these two characters have ever met in the past, although it seems unlikely. That means they might meet in the future, in which case, why and how is Xavier seeing this? It has to be time travel, right? Or a dream of some other universe where they've teamed up? Please, Paradise, I'm begging for answers. My yarn wall can only get so big.
Paradise is now streaming on Hulu, with new episodes every Monday.
Its never been this cheap to upgrade to the 75-inch Hisense U7 LED 4K TV — save $398 at Amazon
SAVE $398: The 75-inch Hisense U7 LED 4K TV is on sale at Amazon for $899.99, down from the list price of $1,297.99. That's a 31% discount and the lowest price we've ever spotted at Amazon.
Opens in a new window Credit: Hisense 75-inch Hisense U7 LED 4K TV $899.99 at Amazon$1,297.99 Save $398 Get Deal
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SEE ALSO: The Hisense 75-inch QD7 TV is down to its lowest-ever price at Amazon — save over $100For those who want to game on a new TV, the Hisense U7 has a 165Hz refresh rate and it's equipped with AMD FreeSync Premium Pro.
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