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The 25 best documentaries streaming that capture memorable moments in time

February 21, 2026
The 25 best documentaries streaming that capture memorable moments in time

Everett (3)

Entertainment Weekly ‘Fire of Love’; Kathleen Hanna in ‘The Punk Singer’; Pepper LaBeija in 'Paris Is Burning' Everett (3)

What makes for a good documentary? Should the subject matter be unfamiliar, allowing us to learn more about a fascinating subculture? Should it both inform us and engage our emotions by capturing deeply human moments of triumph and tragedy? Should it remain as objective as possible, allowing us to make up our minds on the footage presented?

One of the great assets of thedocumentary genreis that it can take any form. From on-the-ground reporting to eye-opening archival footage, the world of documentary is vast, and, with so many produced every year, it's difficult to know what is worth your time to watch. To help you narrow things down, we atEntertainment Weeklyhave combed through various streaming services to select our picks for the best of the best.

Ahead, read our list of the 25 best documentaries streaming now, and on what platform you can find them.

All the Beauty and the Bloodshed(2022)

Nan Goldin in 'All the Beauty and the Bloodshed' Neon

This biographical documentary about photographer/activist Nan Goldin is epic in scope but intimate in its themes. The film focuses on Goldin's ongoing battle against the billionaire Sackler family and their role in the opioid epidemic through their pharmaceutical company, Purdue Pharma. Her protests and demonstrations are intercut with footage of Goldin's early career as a photographer with an interest in the LGBT+ community, most notably during the AIDS crisis of the '80s.All the Beauty and the Bloodshedis a moving testament to the power of advocacy and an unflinching portrait of an artist's role in society. —Kevin Jacobsen

Where to watchAll the Beauty and the Bloodshed: HBO Max

Director:Laura Poitras

Come See Me in the Good Light(2025)

Megan Falley and Andrea Gibson in 'Come See Me in the Good Light' Apple TV

This poignant documentary follows poet Andrea Gibson and their wife, Meghan Falley, as they face Gibson's terminal cancer diagnosis. While narrowing in on their enduring relationship with Falley, the film follows Gibson preparing to give what would be their final poetry reading. Aided by Gibson's strikingly beautiful compositions,Come See Me in the Good Lightis an honest, heartfelt exploration of grief and creative expression. —K.J.

Where to watchCome See Me in the Good Light: Apple TV

Director:Ryan White

Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father(2008)

Andrew Bagby in 'Dear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father' Everett

Kurt Kuenne'sdevastating documentaryabout grief and the Canadian legal system's failings revolves around the murder of his friend, Andrew Bagby, at the hands of his mysterious ex, Shirley Turner. What follows is an examination of Turner's baffling release from prison and the incredible sorrow that envelops the family after tragically losing a son and getting mired in a custody battle with the very person responsible. —Eric Farwell

Where to watchDear Zachary: A Letter to a Son About His Father: Amazon Prime Video

Director:Kurt Kuenne

Dick Johnson Is Dead(2020)

Dick Johnson in 'Dick Johnson Is Dead' John Wakayama Carey/Courtesy of Sundance Institute

John Wakayama Carey/Courtesy of Sundance Institute

There's no "right" way to deal with grief, or the anxious fear of waiting for something bad to happen that youknowwill come to pass. But Kirsten Johnson found a unique outlet inDick Johnson Is Dead, in which she deals with her father's dementia and the looming specter of his death by killing him on camera repeatedly (with his enthusiastic participation).

Watching father and daughter execute each fatal scenario gives us a remarkable glimpse into their relationship — and the catharsis that comes with the creative process itself. The film's intimate sense of joy is not a deflection against the truth of what the Johnsons are facing, but a self-conscious, honest expression of it. —Chris Bellamy

Where to watchDick Johnson Is Dead: Netflix

EW grade:A–

Director:Kirsten Johnson

Fire of Love(2022)

A still from 'Fire of Love' Courtesy of Sundance Institute

Courtesy of Sundance Institute

One of two movies about volcanologists Katherine and Maurice Krafft released in 2022 (the other,The Fire Within: A Requiem for Katia and Maurice Krafft, was directed byWerner Herzog),Fire of Loveis part self-portrait, part nature documentary, and part elegy. The pair died in the 1991 Mount Unzen eruption but left behind two decades of footage from which this documentary is compiled. This is a love story between two people and their shared obsession, one inseparable from the other. The film casts their lives as a testament to the power of science and paints discovery as the ultimate act ofself-discovery. —E.F.

Where to watchFire of Love: Hulu

EW grade:A–

Director:Sara Dosa

Free Solo(2018)

Alex Honnold in 'Free Solo' Everett

Oscar winner for Best Documentary Feature,Free Solois a gripping psychological profile almost by accident. Ostensibly, it's about Alex Honnold's attempt to complete the first free solo climb of Yosemite's El Capitan, but, in spending so much time documenting the pursuit, the film can't help but implicitly askwhy, or rather,what kind of person would be driven to do this?The mortality rate for free solo climbers is a fact Honnold casually accepts. Thus,Free Solois thrilling for its footage and what its subject tries to accomplish, but a sense of existential ambivalence comes with that morbid thrill. —C.B.

Where to watchFree Solo: Hulu

EW grade:A–

Directors:Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, Jimmy Chin

Gates of Heaven(1978)

Poster for 'Gates of Heaven' Everett

InErrol Morris' debut, viewers are introduced to the unique personalities that operate pet cemeteries in Napa Valley. Morris lets his subjects' personalities sparkle, weaving a wild farcical tale about the mundane that is believable butjustweird enough to stand out. Morris would later scale up to more serious and heady subjects, but he never had a more curious or fascinated eye than when documenting 450 dead animals being dug up for reburial at a different location. —E.F.

Where to watchGates of Heaven: AMC+

Director:Errol Morris

Grizzly Man(2005)

Timothy Treadwell in 'Grizzly Man' Lionsgate/Everett

Lionsgate/Everett

Werner Herzog has long been an important and divisive figure in documentary filmmaking, and this film is perhaps the best example of why. Following the life and death of bear obsessive Timothy Treadwell, Herzog tries to give audiences a jumping-off point for understanding his passion, succeeding only to the extent that it's possible to understand him at all. This is a complicated portrait of a person who believed in the good of wild animals and ultimately died as a result. But Herzog never judges or condescends to Treadwell, even if his involvement in documenting the fallout becomes increasingly complicated. —E.F.

Where to watchGrizzly Man: Amazon Prime Video

Director:Werner Herzog

Hoop Dreams(1994)

William Gates in 'Hoop Dreams' Fine Line Features/Everett

Fine Line Features/Everett

Hoop Dreamspossesses a lightning-in-a-bottle magic that documentaries rarely capture. Over five years, the film follows two young Black teenagers in Chicago who get recruited to play basketball at an upscale prep school. It's the late-1980s,Michael Jordanis ascending to god status, and the possibilities of discovering the next great superstar are infinite. Regardless of whether Arthur Agee and William Gates become the next Jordan — or even the next Isiah Thomas — their lives wind up far more interesting than potential glory, with unexpected developments achieving a profundity few scripts ever could have. —C.B.

Where to watchHoop Dreams: HBO Max

Director:Steve James

I Am Not Your Negro(2016)

A gathering of protestors near the Lincoln Memorial in 'I Am Not Your Negro' Magnolia Pictures

This thought-provoking examination of the systemic oppression against Black Americans is made all the more powerful by its central figure:James Baldwin. Our narrative anchor is the influential writer's perspective on racism being intrinsically linked to the soul of America, as evidenced during the tumultuous civil rights movement of the 1960s and beyond. The poetically assembled film delves into several facets of racism in the 20th century, from segregation to harmful portrayals in the media to the prison-industrial complex. "It's impossible not to think: The more things change, the more they stay the same,"EW's critic writes of the film. "It's enough to make you weep." —K.J.

Where to watchI Am Not Your Negro: Amazon Prime Video

EW grade:A–

Director:Raoul Peck

If God Is Willing and da Creek Don't Rise(2010)

A scene from 'If God Is Willing and da Creek Don't Rise' Everett

Spike Lee's two-part follow-up documentary to the equally excellentWhen the Levees Broke(which is also streaming on HBO Max) examines the effort to rebuild New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina and how the disaster changed the city. Lee is terrifically skilled at bringing disparate concepts together; here, he captures everything from police corruption and the loss of four housing projects to the New Orleans Saints and their Super Bowl XLIV victory, the latter serving as a vibrant pulse that amplifies the possibility of what the city is capable of. —E.F.

Where to watchIf God Is Willing and da Creek Don't Rise: HBO Max

Director:Spike Lee

Lost in La Mancha(2002)

Terry Gilliam and Johnny Depp in 'Lost in La Mancha' Everett

Terry Gilliamtried and failed to mount his vision ofThe Man Who Killed Don Quixotefor years before finally succeeding in 2018, 16 years after this documentary arrived. Despite every effort Gilliam and his production crew made, there was no way to save the initial attempt at making the movie, which may have contributed to Gilliam's diminished presence in the entertainment industry.

This film explores the many ways that art can be destroyed or inhibited, including a NATO practice base making too much noise, the destruction of sets, and personal injury. It's also a rare documentary where knowing the end result enhances the work rather than rendering it irrelevant, turning the entire project into an arc about the long road some dreams take. —C.B.

Where to watchLost in La Mancha: The Roku Channel

Directors:Keith Fulton, Louis Pepe

Marjoe(1972)

Marjoe Gortner (right) in 'Marjoe' LMPC via Getty

LMPC via Getty

This Oscar-winning documentary follows the fascinating life of Marjoe Gortner, a former child preacher who returned to the practice as a young adult solely for financial purposes. Influenced by rock stars like Mick Jagger, Gortner used his charisma to make a killing on the revivalist circuit, with the doc deftly exploring how for-profit religious figures use shady manipulation tactics. "Part of what makesMarjoesuch a knockout of a movie is not knowing exactly how to feel about it when its end credits come up,"writes EW's critic. "And when was the last time a movie made you feel something as complicated as that?" —K.J.

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Where to watchMarjoe: The Roku Channel

Directors:Howard Smith, Sarah Kernochan

Meru(2015)

Scene from 'Meru' Everett

Anyone who's ever said "It's not the destination, it's the journey" has never met the climbers inMeru. For them, the destination is everything as they scale Mount Meru in the Indian Himalayas via the treacherous Shark's Fin route with their eyes on the peak. Few documentaries have ever provided this kind of first-person access to true, gravity-defying danger — because most documentaries are not co-directed by one of the very people at risk. But Jimmy Chin is the exception, filming his climb, avalanches, injuries, and near-fatal setbacks that befall the voyage. What follows is remarkable, harrowing, and a marvel of documentary editing. —C.B.

Where to watchMeru: Netflix

Directors:Jimmy Chin, Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi

MLK/FBI(2020)

Martin Luther King Jr. in 'MLK/FBI' IFC Films

Sam Pollardhelms this keen examination of the FBI's role in the torment and death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. From early attempts to create division and dissent in his ranks to phone taps, the organization operated from a place of racist anxiety over the power of Black America and one leader who was leading a peaceful and righteous path to equity. Pollard's film is especially poignant in showing how short-sighted the country remains, even if the methods of dismantling progress have shifted from political entities to more public-facing groups. —E.F.

Where to watchMLK/FBI: AMC+

Director:Sam Pollard

Moonage Daydream(2022)

David Bowie in 'Moonage Daydream' Neon

Some films' attempts to honor a musician fall short of truly capturing their essence. Not so with this visually striking doc about the artistry ofDavid Bowie, with its kaleidoscopic imagery and a playfully experimental narrative.Moonage Daydreamcompellingly depicts Bowie's ever-changing desire to shape-shift as an artist, as well as the films, fashion, and music that influenced him throughout his career. Director Brett Morgen,EW's critic writes, "ends up articulating a point that's deeper and more sophisticated than mere biography, an insight that feels like a serious contribution to music criticism." —K.J.

Where to watchMoonage Daydream: Netflix

EW grade:A–

Director:Brett Morgen

Paris Is Burning(1990)

Pepper LaBeija in 'Paris Is Burning' Everett

To say Black, Hispanic, and LGBTQ+ cultures were largely ignored or erased by mainstream America in the 1980s (and beyond) is an understatement. That fact is one undercurrent ofJennie Livingston'sParis Is Burning, which documents Harlem ball culture of the mid-to-late-'80s and finds a host of endearing performers all too eager to bring us into their orbit.

The beauty and vibrancy of drag balls speak for themselves, but Livingston is also savvy enough to understand how those events intersect with the political and social realities of the time. This is a vital document that's both celebratory and sobering. —C.B.

Where to watchParis Is Burning: HBO Max

Director:Jennie Livingston

The Perfect Neighbor(2025)

Susan Lorincz in 'The Perfect Neighbor' Courtesy of Netflix

Courtesy of Netflix

This award-winning documentary proves that a sharp director can build a compelling story using nothing but surveillance and bodycam footage. Directed by Geeta Gandbhir,The Perfect Neighborfollows a 2023 incident in Ocaca, Fla., in which Susan Lorincz shot and killed her neighbor, Ajike Owens. Presenting recorded bodycam footage of the events leading up to the murder and the aftermath (including Lorincz frequently calling the police on her neighbors), the film provides a harrowing look at racial violence and systemic bias. —K.J.

Where to watchThe Perfect Neighbor: Netflix

Director:Geeta Gandbhir

The Punk Singer(2013)

Kathleen Hanna (center) in 'The Punk Singer' Everett

Kathleen Hannafronted punk greatsBikini Killand Le Tigre, two bands that existed at different times in the evolving (but still sexist) conversation about women and their place in culture, with the musicians often serving as paragons of feminist critique and anguish. This Sini Anderson documentary contextualizes Hanna within the progressive alternative rock scene that emerged in the 1980s and gained true steam in the '90s, before highlighting her struggle with Lyme disease and the way the messages in Hanna's music translate her personal battles. —E.F.

Where to watchThe Punk Singer: Pluto TV

Director:Sini Anderson

Samsara(2011)

A dance sequence from 'Samsara' Everett

Talking heads, voiceover, and archive footage have their place in documentary filmmaking — perhaps disproportionately so — but a movie like Ron Fricke'sSamsaraunlocks the capabilities of the form. It's far from the first non-narrative doc — for one, Fricke shot Godfrey Reggio's iconicKoyaanisqatsi(1982) and directedBaraka(1992) — but it may be the most gorgeous.

Samsarauses its spectacular, globetrotting 70mm footage to philosophize about life on Earth, forging connections across time, space, and place. Fricke's meditation on cycles of creation and destruction is free-associative yet thematically controlled, with the final result existing somewhere at the nexus of musical, essay, and poem. —C.B.

Where to watchSamsara: Tubi

EW grade:B–

Director:Ron Fricke

Stories We Tell(2012)

Iris Ng and Sarah Polley in 'Stories We Tell' Everett

Sarah Polley's films are gut punches that incorporate the mind as much as the heart, often exploring community, family, and truth. In this documentary about the affair that led to her birth, Polley incorporates home movie footage — some authentic, some staged — and interviews with different family members to plumb the depths of a woman who remains, even to those who knew her, something of an enigma.

While most documentaries, personal or political, tend to land on one specific version of events,Stories We Tellis wise enough to know the truth is in the eye of the beholder, the rememberer, and the storyteller. —E.F.

Where to watchStories We Tell: Tubi

EW grade:A–

Director:Sarah Polley

Sugarcane(2024)

Chief Willie Sellars of the Williams Lake First Nation in 'Sugarcane' National Geographic Documentary Films/Courtesy Everett Collection

National Geographic Documentary Films/Courtesy Everett Collection

The sins committed by colonialists against Indigenous populations are still being uncovered many years later, as this heavy, Oscar-nominated documentary details. Probing deep into the history of the Catholic-run Indian school system in Canada,Sugarcanereveals years of systemic abuse against Indigenous students, which left a fundamental impact on the community. Directors Julian Brave NoiseCat and Emily Kassie seamlessly weave together those traumas with the present-day residents of the local Sugarcane Reserve as they reckon with the past. —K.J.

Where to watchSugarcane: Disney+

Directors:Julian Brave NoiseCat, Emily Kassie

Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)(2021)

Nina Simone in 'Summer of Soul (...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised)' Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Courtesy of Searchlight Pictures

Ahmir Thompson (a.k.a.Questlove) painstakingly restored footage from the historic 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival, which saw the best acts of the era take the stage over six Sundays in the same summer as Woodstock. Words can't adequately capture how emotionally resonant it is to see Stevie Wonder, Mahalia Jackson, Nina Simone, B.B. King, and Sly and the Family Stone, as brilliant as they've ever been, perform for New Yorkers who needed a reason to unite and celebrate. This isn't just a movie about music but a musical experiment, a historical document with its own meticulously crafted beats and rhythms. —E.F.

Where to watchSummer of Soul(...Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised): Hulu

EW grade:B+

Director:Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson

The Thin Blue Line(1988)

Randall Dale Adams in 'The Thin Blue Line' Everett

Errol Morris is one of the most celebrated documentarians of his time. Here, he follows his curiosity to the shooting of Dallas police officer Robert W. Wood and the man convicted of the crime, Randall Adams. Investigating inconsistencies in the case, Morris utilizes testimonies from key figures to recreate pieces of the night in question in strange and striking detail.

Far from offering a traditional examination of a "wrong place, wrong time" miscarriage of justice, Morris turns his fixation into a shared obsession, with the director as the crafty detective and the audience as his second set of eyes. —E.F.

Where to watchThe Thin Blue Line: AMC+

Director:Errol Morris

The War Room(1993)

George Stephanopoulos and James Carville in 'The War Room' October Films/Everett

October Films/Everett

What goes into winning an election? This is the question explored inThe War Room, which examinesBill Clinton's presidential bid via the proxies ofJames Carvilleand George Stephanopoulos, who ran his campaign and engineered its success in an outsized way. The film considers the relationship between the media and politicians, and how savvy minds can spin news into something that makes or breaks the success of someone, no matter how dirty their hands are. —E.F.

Where to watchThe War Room: HBO Max

Directors:Chris Hegedus, D.A. Pennebaker

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

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Michael Imperioli Says 'a Lot’ of “The Sopranos” Characters Would've Been 'Trump Supporters' If Show Was Set in 2026

February 21, 2026
Michael Imperioli Says 'a Lot' of

Barry Wetcher/Hbo/Kobal/Shutterstock

People Michael Imperioli on 'The Sopranos' Barry Wetcher/Hbo/Kobal/Shutterstock 

NEED TO KNOW

  • Michael Imperioli thinks that "a lot" of The Sopranos characters would support Donald Trump

  • "The fact is that these characters are all immigrants, but I think a lot of them would probably be Trump supporters, oddly enough," he said in a recent interview

  • Imperioli's assertion about The Sopranos characters' political beliefs came as he contemplated what the show would be like if set in 2026

When it comes toThe Sopranoscharacters, starMichael Imperiolithinks more than a few would support PresidentDonald Trump.

While discussing what the beloved HBO show would look like if it were set in the current-day United States, Imperioli — who won an Emmy for his turn as Christopher Moltisanti in the series — emphasized that it was about more than just mobsters, but also a critique of modern-day capitalism.

The actor, 59, toldThe Independentthat despite being "immigrants," many of the fictional characters would "probably" support the 47th President of the United States.

"The show is about the American dream, especially through the eyes of immigrants," Imperioli told the outlet in an interview with costarSteve Schirripafor a story published Sunday, Feb. 15.

President Donald Trump Nathan Howard/Getty

Nathan Howard/Getty

"I think that would be one of the big themes if it was made today: the current climate in the U.S. and what they're doing to immigrants," the Emmy winner continued. "The fact is that these characters are all immigrants, but I think a lot of them would probably be Trump supporters, oddly enough."

The actor emphasized that the characters' hypothetical support of Trump, whose administration has beencarrying out an aggressive immigration crackdown, would be a bit ironic, as nearly all the main characters — from Tony Soprano, to Jennifer Melfi and Paulie 'Walnuts' Gualtieri — are of Italian descent.

"So how do they reconcile those things?" Imperioli questioned, adding, "When Italians came over – and people forget this, or they don't want to see it – a lot of them were undocumented."

The Sopranos, which ran for six seasons from 1999 to 2007, followed mob boss Tony Soprano (James Gandolfini) as he attempted to be a family man and keep his criminal life tucked away. The series also starredEdie Falco,Drea de Matteo, Steve Van Zandt, Vincent Pastore and more.

In theIndependentinterview, Imperioli and Schirripa — who played Bobby "Bacala" Baccalieri onThe Sopranos— also discussedtheir rewatch podcast,Talking Sopranos.

Recalling the early days of the podcast hosting duo, Schirripa, 68, told the outlet, "People thought we didn't like each other."

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Steve Schirripa and Michael Imperioli in 2019  Michael Loccisano/WireImage

Michael Loccisano/WireImage

"The first five episodes were a little rough, but then I think we did okay," added the actor. "You know, it was a tall order."

The pair also explained why they refrain from any bad-mouthing on the podcast, with Imperioli flat-out saying, "I never say anything bad about anybody."

"I mean, I could, but I won't," he added. "I'm sure people say bad things about me – I wouldn't be surprised – but we tried to keep it above the belt. No low blows. I find it not classy."

In a 2025 chat with PEOPLE, also alongside Schirripa, Imperioli revealed who thefunniestSopranoscast member was when the cameras weren't rolling.

Tony Sirico, who portrayed Paulie Walnuts, inspired the most laughter, Imperioli said, adding that the late actor "was a very specific, eccentric, human being, a great guy that we loved and was a good friend."

"He knew if he was being funny or not — he broke the mold," Imperioli added of Sirico. "He was one of a kind."

'Sopranos' stars Tony Sirico, Steve Van Zandt, James Gandolfini, Michael Imperioli and Vincent Pastore Getty

Elsewhere in the conversation, Schirripa said that the close-knit nature of theSopranoscast made it feel like a family, telling PEOPLE that he and his castmates "worked very hard, but you're doing scenes with 12, 13, 15 guys together. So there's a lot of joking around and playing and we've been together for so many years."

"You're with these people, they become, honestly, like a family. Marriages, babies, divorces, so you, you're all together," theBlue Bloodsactor added. "Though there was some heavy times, there also was a lot of fun times.The Sopranoshappens to be a very, very funny show."

Read the original article onPeople

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'Euphoria' creator Sam Levinson donates $27,000 to Eric Dane's GoFundMe

February 21, 2026
'Euphoria' creator Sam Levinson donates $27,000 to Eric Dane's GoFundMe

Eric Dane's friends have started aGoFundMe pageto support the actor's family after his death.

USA TODAY

The "Grey's Anatomy" actor died on Feb. 19 at age 53 after a public battle withamyotrophic lateral sclerosis(ALS), commonly known asLou Gehrig's disease.

"Euphoria' creatorSam Levinsonand his wife, Ashley Levinson, donated $27,000 to the page.

Levinson, who cast Dane as the troubled father, Cal Jaccobs, in the Emmy-winning HBO drama series, said he was "heartbroken by the loss of our dear friend Eric."

"Working with him was an honor. Being his friend was a gift," Levinson said ina statement shared with USA TODAY. "Eric's family is in our prayers. May his memory be for a blessing."

Sam Levinson and Eric Dane attend the premiere afterparty of HBO's Euphoria during the ATX Television Festival at the Paramount Theatre on May 6, 2019, in Austin, Texas.

Funds raised will go toward supporting Dane's wife, 54-year-old actress and modelRebecca Gayheart, andtheir daughtersBillie, 15, and Georgia, 14, according to the page's description.

"As his illness progressed far more quickly than anyone could have imagined, Eric's friends have come together to create this GoFundMe to support his girls and their future needs," the description reads. "Any contribution, no matter the size, will help provide stability during this incredibly difficult time and in the future for Eric's wonderful daughters."

<p style=Actor Eric Dane has died following a battle with ALS. He was 53. He leaves behind two daughters, Billie, 15, and Georgia, 14, and wife Rebecca Gayheart. Look back at the family through the years when they joined together in the public eye.

Actress Rebecca Gayheart and actor Eric Dane attend the Chrysalis 3rd annual Butterfly Ball at a private residence on April 17, 2004, in Beverly Hills, California.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rebecca Gayheart and husband Eric Dane attend the afterparty for the opening night of "Steel Magnolias" on Broadway on April 4, 2005, in New York City. The pair married in 2004.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eric Dane and Rebecca Gayheart arrive at the premiere of A&E original film "Wedding Wars" at the ArcLight Theater Dec. 4, 2006, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eric Dane and Rebecca Gayheart watch the show at the 6th annual General Motors TEN event at Paramount Studios on Feb. 20, 2007, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rebecca Gayheart and Eric Dane arrive at the premiere of New Line Cinema's "Valentine's Day" held at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Feb. 8, 2010, in Hollywood, California.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rebecca Gayheart, Eric Dane, Billie Beatrice Dane, Georgia Dane and guests attend the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Built To Amaze! show on March 21, 2013, in New York City.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Georgia Dane, Rebecca Gayheart, Eric Dane and Billie Beatrice Dane attend Disney Live! Mickey's Music Festival at Madison Square Garden on March 23, 2013, in New York City.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rebecca Gayheart, Eric Dane and their daughters attend the Huggies Snug & Dry and Baby2Baby Mother's Day Garden Party held on April 27, 2013, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=From left: Eric Dane, Rebecca Gayheart, Georgia Dane and Billie Beatrice Dane attend the 14th annual Chrysalis Butterfly Ball on June 6, 2015, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Rebecca Gayheart, Eric Dane and their family attend Amazon Video's Tumble Leaf Family Fun Day hosted by Au Fudge on Sept. 13, 2015, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=From left: Billie Beatrice Dane, Rebecca Gayheart, Georgia Dane and Eric Dane attend the 15th annual Chrysalis Butterfly Ball at a private residence on June 11, 2016, in Brentwood, California.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=From left: Rebecca Gayheart, Eric Dane, Billie Beatrice Dane and Georgia Dane attend the 16th annual Chrysalis Butterfly Ball on June 3, 2017, in Brentwood, California.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=From left: Eric White, Patricia Arquette, Rosetta Getty, June Getty, Balthazar Getty, Violet Getty, Eric Dane, Billie Beatrice Dane, Rebecca Gayheart and Georgia Dane at the 16th annual Chrysalis Butterfly Ball on June 3, 2017, in Los Angeles.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" /> <p style=Eric Dane and his daughters Billie Beatrice Dane and Georgia Dane attend the Los Angeles premiere of "Bad Boys: Ride or Die" at the TCL Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, California, on May 30, 2024.

" style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />

Eric Dane's family journey in photos

Actor Eric Dane has died following a battle with ALS. He was 53. He leaves behind two daughters, Billie, 15, and Georgia, 14, and wife Rebecca Gayheart. Look back at the family through the years when they joined together in the public eye.Actress Rebecca Gayheart and actorEric Daneattend the Chrysalis 3rd annual Butterfly Ball at a private residence on April 17, 2004, in Beverly Hills, California.

Eric Dane highlighted ALS in DC and Hollywood

The GoFundMe page encourages the public to support his family after "The Last Ship" actor spent his last year bringing as much attention to ALS, the rare degenerative disease that can kill nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord,according to the National Institutes of Health.

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"Following his diagnosis, Eric became a passionate spokesperson for the ALS community, using his voice and platform to advocate for fellow patients and to push for greater awareness. Even as his own health declined, he remained deeply committed to helping others facing the same devastating disease," the page reads.

Dane worked with the I Am ALS organization to be open about his battle. In September, he traveled to Washington DC meeting with Rep.Eric Swalwell, D-California, to discussthe condition.

"I want to ring every bell," he said. "I have two daughters at home. I want to see them graduate college, get married, maybe even have grandkids. You know I want to be there for all that so I'm going to fight until the last breath on this one."

He also returned to acting, playinga firefighter diagnosed with ALSon NBC's "Brilliant Minds."

At an I Am ALS-hosted panel in December, he said it was "imperative that I share my journey with as many people as I can because I don't feel like my life is about me anymore."

"I'm fairly limited in what I can do physically as an actor, but I still have my brain, and I still have my speech, so I'm willing to just do about anything. I'll take on any role," he said. "I'm grateful that I can still work in any capacity."

The GoFundMe page has raised more than $170,000 as of Saturday.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Eric Dane GoFundMe supports his kid; 'Euphoria' creator donates $27,000

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NASA's SLS rocket faces new helium issue, Artemis II launch delayed

February 21, 2026
NASA's SLS rocket faces new helium issue, Artemis II launch delayed

NASA had just announced a flawless wet dress rehearsal and possible early March liftoff of its long-awaitedArtemis II mission, but all that changed in less than 24 hours.

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A closer look at thegiant SLS moon rocketrevealed a new issue – one that will likelyfurther delay the launchand will now require NASA to roll the rocket back to the Vehicle Assembly Building.

An earlySaturday Feb. 21 NASA blog updatereported that overnight data showed an interruption in the flow of helium into theSLS's interim cryogenic propulsion stage.

"We will begin preparations for rollback, and this will take the March launch window out of consideration," NASA Administrator Jared Isaacmanwrote on X. The next launch opportunity opens on April 1.

Skywatching:A total lunar eclipse is happening in March. Here's how to view it.

The announcement came just a day after the four astronauts, who are set to fly around the moon, entered quarantine in Houston in preparation for an early March liftoff. The rocket had just seen what appeared to bea successful wet dress rehearsal test, which included running through launch day operations and fueling the rocket up to T-29 seconds. NASA stated this week's fueling test showed no evidence of leaks, after ahydrogen leakearlier this month caused the prelaunch wet dress test to be repeated.

A similar issue was also observed during preparation for Artemis I.

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"Potential faults could include the final filter between the ground and flight vehicle, located on the umbilical, though this seems least likely based on the failure signature," Isaacman wrote on X. "It could also be a failed QD umbilical interface, where similar issues have been observed. It could also be a failed check valve onboard the vehicle, which would be consistent with Artemis I, though corrective actions were taken to minimize reoccurrence on Artemis II."

All of these issues require the rocket to be rolled back to the VAB.

"I understand people are disappointed by this development. That disappointment is felt most by the team at NASA, who have been working tirelessly to prepare for this great endeavor," Isaacman wrote. "During the 1960s, when NASA achieved what most thought was impossible, and what has never been repeated since, there were many setbacks. One historic example is that Neil Armstrong spent less than 11 hours in space on Gemini 8 before his mission ended prematurely due to a technical issue. A little over three years later, he became the first man to walk on the Moon."

The last time an SLS rocket flew was during the Nov. 2022 uncrewed Artemis I mission.

The available April launch dates include the 1st through the 6th of the month.

This story has been updated with new information.

Brooke Edwards is a Space Reporter for Florida Today. Contact her atbedwards@floridatoday.comor on X:@brookeofstars.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:NASA's SLS rocket issue could delay Artemis II launch, cause rollback

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