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    Shaking Up The Hometown

    Danielle Bradbery's amazing Voice win hits home — and now League City wants a piece

    Joel Luks
    Jun 19, 2013 | 12:59 pm
    Danielle Bradbery's amazing Voice win hits home — and now League City wants a piece
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    It's not your usual day in Cypress. The Houston suburb typically makes small very local news for things like getting a new ice house, or seeing a high school basketball star sign with a mid major, or rejoicing in a bookworm with top grades landing on the Dean's List at Mercer University.

    Now, it's garnering major national — and even international — headlines courtesy of a perky blonde teen with big vocals.

    Voice champion Danielle Bradbery is certainly giving everyone, including judge/coach/country music star Blake Shelton, something to talk about.

    Yet amid all attention being heaped on Cypress and its 16-year-old hometown champ, there's another Houston suburb that deserves a little love. It turns out, Danielle Simone Bradbery was actually born in League City.

    Emerging as the winner of the fourth season of NBC's The Voice means Bradbery is $100,000 richer, for starters. Of course, the major record deal with University Music Group looms even more important.

    While the winning decision came out of a vote that's the collective sum of viewers phone calls, Internet polls, text messages and iTunes purchases, it's impossible to discount the impact of Shelton's repeated overwhelming endorsements of Bradbery. Shelton calling someone "the most important artist to ever walk across The Voice stage" resonates.

    After a winning performance that included a duet with cutie-pie Hunter Hayes in "I Want Crazy" and solo selections of Sara Evans' "Born to Fly" and Pam Tillis' "Maybe It Was Memphis" — the latter two reaching the Top 10 chart on iTunes — Shelton tells Entertainment Weekly that Bradbery may be the first person truly discovered on the show. Previous contestants had dabbled in show biz before they ever stepped on the TV stage.

    Bradbery says she'd never sung to a large crowd prior to the reality show. Instead, her mirror enjoyed most of her croons. (Which as you can see from the powerful video above was a shame.)

    The youngest winner ever rose above two much older finalists: Michelle Chamuel, 26, and the Swon Brothers, Colton, 24, and Zach, 27. That's no small win for Cypress. Or League City.

    Blake Shelton and Danielle Bradbery.

    The Voice Blake Shelton Danielle Brandbery
    Photo by Tyler Golden NBC
    Blake Shelton and Danielle Bradbery.
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    news/entertainment

    Movie Review

    Steven Spielberg captivates with new aliens drama Disclosure Day

    Alex Bentley
    Jun 11, 2026 | 2:37 pm
    Tommy Martinez, Emily Blunt, and Josh O'Connor in Disclosure Day
    Photo courtesy of Universal Pictures and Amblin Entertainment
    Tommy Martinez, Emily Blunt, and Josh O'Connor in Disclosure Day.

    With the release of Disclosure Day, Steven Spielberg has now directed 17 feature films over 26 years in the 21st century, the exact same number over the exact same period of time he did in the 20th century. The first half of his career was mostly defined by his blockbuster films, while the second half has seen him exploring a lot more serious material. Disclosure Day marries the two for an experience only he could deliver.

    The film starts in medias res, as Dr. Daniel Kellner (Josh O’Connor) is being pursued by Noah Scanlon (Colin Firth) and a team of henchmen for stealing intellectual property from Wardex, a government contractor for which he works. As the audience gradually discovers, Daniel is a cyber-security programmer who has discovered evidence of alien life in the company’s servers. He and others within the company, including Hugo Wakefield (Colman Domingo), are determined to release the information to the public.

    Concurrently, television meteorologist Margaret Fairchild (Emily Blunt) starts experiencing weird things, including the ability to speak multiple languages and read people’s minds. Without either of them actively trying to seek each other out, Daniel and Margaret are set on a path to meet, with Scanlon (with the help of a mysterious alien device) trying to track their every move.

    Directed by Spielberg and written by David Koepp, the film is an almost even mix between classic Spielberg wonder and a deep story about what it is to be human. By starting the film in the middle of the story, Spielberg immediately ramps up the excitement level. While the movie has relatively little action, that sequence and a few others deliver the type of propulsiveness for which Spielberg is revered, keeping the 145-minute film moving at a brisk pace.

    Of the different types of alien movies Spielberg has made over the years, this one is closer to Close Encounters of the Third Kind than E.T. The story ponders the ethical, religious, political, and sociological effects that revealing the existence of aliens could have on the world. The debates had by various characters purposefully take the film out of being a sheer popcorn flick, forcing the audience to grapple with issues that they may have never considered before.

    Unlike some other Spielberg films, he and Koepp don’t hold the audience’s collective hand throughout the story. There are a lot of times when viewers have to use context clues to understand exactly what is happening. That especially goes for an extremely important aspect of the world in which the story takes place that could pass you by if you’re only paying attention to the main characters’ dialogue. Spielberg’s using only subtle allusions for an element which would be the main focus of most other films is a fascinating choice.

    O’Connor (Wake Up Dead Man, Challengers) has that everyman quality that a story like this needs. It always feels like it's him against the world, and does a terrific job of exuding both confidence and fear. Blunt delivers a fantastic performance, switching between confusion and composure with ease. Firth makes for a solid villain, and the story is helped by great turns from Domingo and Eve Hewson.

    The idea that the nearly 80-year-old Steven Spielberg is still making blockbuster-style movies over 50 years after he made Jaws is astonishing, and the fact that he still knows how to make them work is even more impressive. Disclosure Day may not be the type of alien movie many were expecting, but it’s another high water mark in a career that has been full of them.

    ---

    Disclosure Day opens in theaters on June 12.

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