Andy Cosferent is explaining why he seemingly disappeared from Cheer‘s second season about partway through.
12.01.2022 - 16:01 / usmagazine.com
Cheer season 2 didn’t shy away from Jerry Harris or the sexual misconduct allegations made against the former reality show fan favorite.
“I can’t even wrap my head around how I should feel. This has been a tough year,” head coach Monica Aldama began in the season 2 premiere, which started streaming on Netflix on Wednesday, January 12. “But then there are moments that are so wonderful. These little moments of success that keep you coming back, just the little things that add up. … I keep putting one foot in front of the other, every single day. I don’t have a choice.”
The first four episodes of the second installment of Cheer followed the 2019-2020 Navarro and Trinity Valley Community College teams as they prepared for the NCA & NDA Collegiate Cheer & Dance Championship. Filmed months before he was taken into custody in September 2020, Jerry is still part of the team.
“I wasn’t a big fan of where I was at, so I decided to get in contact with Monica, see if there are any openings and now, I’m back for my third year,” he explained in the first episode. “My favorite thing from the past two weeks was getting to work the red carpet and interview celebrities. … I guess I have a career now.”
In the second episode, Jerry is shown joking with his costars and friends about being “America’s sweetheart” as fans approach him to do “mat talk,” which he was known for after season 1.
“Now I have, like, an agent booking me all different types of opportunities and just so many doors opening for me,” he said before recording Cameos for fans.
He continued his season 1 role in the group as the optimistic one on the team.
“I bring a positive attitude to, like, everything I do,” he said in episode three. “That’s something we’ve been lacking a little
Andy Cosferent is explaining why he seemingly disappeared from Cheer‘s second season about partway through.
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“Cheer” is hitting the road.
The cast of the Netflix docu-series Cheer is going on tour this summer and you can see them in a city near you very soon!
Cheer is back!
Chris Noth, 67, and his wife Tara Wilson, 39, had a short meeting on Tuesday January 25, when the actor met with his wife in Southern California to pick up their kids in new photos, which you can see here, via Daily Mail. This was the first time that Chris and Tara had been seen out and about together since multiple women have come forward with sexual misconduct allegations against the Sex And The City Star in December 2021.
report was published in The Guardian which saw 20 women accuse Clarke of sexual harassment and misconduct.The actor, who denied the claims, was suspended by BAFTA following the allegations. The organisation, however, faced scrutiny after the original report claimed BAFTA had been aware of the allegations before it handed Clarke the award.The awards body stated it had received “anonymous emails and reports of allegations via intermediaries”, but said “no evidence was provided” that would enable an investigation to take place.After launching a review into the processes governing the awards last year, involving “extensive industry consultations”, BAFTA announced there’ll be no special recognition awards at the film and game awards in 2022 to allow enough time to implement changes on how recipients are chosen.
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Chris Noth‘s former The Equalizer costar Queen Latifah is speaking out after he was fired late last month.
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There’s big money in Netflix‘s biggest hits… but not always for the stars!
Nothing to cheer about. Despite the massive success of Netflix’s Cheer, Navarro College isn’t exactly rolling in dough.
Jennifer Maas TV Business WriterRival Texas schools Navarro College and Trinity Valley Community College each were paid $30,000 for their participation in the second season of Netflix’s “Cheer,” a price that was set in the initial location fee agreement between Navarro and the show’s production company before “Cheer” became a smash-hit streaming sensation.As first reported by Variety‘s sister site Sportico, “In 2018, Navarro signed a deal with a production company in which the school agreed to be paid $30,000 for the rights to film a season of a then-untitled cheerleading documentary, according to a copy of the rights agreement obtained by Sportico.”The pact has a built-in exclusive option for “Cheer” producers to renew at the same $30,000 fee each year for five additional academic years, giving the production company “exclusive rights to film and exploit the Cheerleading Athletics as part of the Series” during the contract’s term period. “Everybody thinks we made a million dollars off of the show, and as you can see from the contract, we did not,” Stacie Sipes, Navarro’s director of marketing and public information, told Sportico.Sipes says that Navarro hasn’t seen its student body increase based on the popularity of Netflix’s Emmy-winning “Cheer,” which launched just before the pandemic and features Navarro’s head cheer coach, Monica Aldama, and her team.“We have had declining enrollment,” Sipes told Sportico.
The “Cheer” squad are back and better than ever.
NEW YORK -- When we last saw the cheerleading team from Navarro Community College on Netflix, it was in the final episode of the docuseries “ Cheer. ” They had just won the NCA National Championships in the junior college division and celebrated with a tradition where the champions run into the ocean.Then came the fame. The main cast, including coach Monica Aldama, became overnight celebrities outside of the cheer community, where some of them were already known.
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