The Latest: Pope Leo brings messages of peace and Christian unity on trip to Turkey and Lebanon

Pope Leo XIV visits Turkey and Lebanon onhis first foreign trip, a visit that fulfills the late Pope Francis' plans to mark an important Orthodox anniversary and bring a message of peace to the region at a crucial time for efforts to end the war in Ukraine and ease Mideast tensions.

In Ankara, Leo will meet with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and then travel to Istanbul for three days of ecumenical and interfaith meetings that will be followed by the Lebanese leg of his Nov. 27-Dec. 2 trip.

Leo's main reason for traveling to Turkey is to mark the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea, Christianity's first ecumenical council. In 325 AD, that council hashed out the first version of the Nicene Creed, a statement of faith that millions of Christians still recite each Sunday.

For the Vatican, Lebanon and its tradition of religious tolerance in the Middle East is a bulwark for Christians in the region, even more so after years of conflict and war that have shrunk Christian communities that date from the time of the Apostles.

Here's the latest:

Leo boards flight to Turkey

Pope Leo XVI has boarded the ITA charter flight that is taking him on his first trip as pope.

The Airbus A320 neo is heading first to Ankara, Turkey, where Leo will meet with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and deliver his first speech. The papal delegation, with some 80 international journalists in tow, then flies onto Istanbul for three days of ecumenical and interfaith activities.

The American pope heads to Lebanon on Sunday for the second and final leg of the trip.

Thursday is Thanksgiving in the United States and at least two journalists have brought pumpkin pies on board the flight to Ankara hoping to share them with the pope.

The Latest: Pope Leo brings messages of peace and Christian unity on trip to Turkey and Lebanon

Pope Leo XIV visits Turkey and Lebanon onhis first foreign trip, a visit that fulfills the late Pope Francis' plans t...
Former AP photographer's vintage images of Ireland capture a world before it disappeared

BERLIN (AP) — Rare photographs of Ireland from 1963 show a world about to disappear, a country before it took its first steps toward modernity.

Black and white images captured by a young German photographer, Diether Endlicher — who later spent four decades covering the Olympics and major global events for The Associated Press — are being shown at the Irish embassy in Berlin, where Endlicher, now 85, was honored last weekend for his role in documenting moments of Irish life from another era.

The photos feature boatmen, fishermen, workmen, herders taking their animals to markets, women transporting milk by donkey cart, a funeral, devout worshippers praying to relics in stone-walled fields, ruined abbeys, dramatic landscapes, children looking at TVs through a shop window, an evocation of a time before modern conveniences arrived to convert all.

The pictures lay unseen and forgotten in Endlicher's attic until recently, when he rediscovered them after deciding to go through his archive. He scanned the now 62-year-old negatives and contacted the embassy to see if there was any interest. There was.

Maeve Collins, the Irish ambassador to Germany, praised the photographs' "beautiful detail" and historical importance.

"They bring a vivid expression to the lived experience of people on the west coast of Ireland in the early 1960s," she said.

Photos are record of a road trip

Endlicher was 22 when he traveled with a friend from Germany to the west coast of Ireland in a tiny Fiat 500, a two-door bubble car known as the "Bambino" that was not designed for road trips. He carried a Leica M2 and three lenses to places where few had seen cameras before.

Once they got to Ireland's west coast, they found a man transporting turf to Inishmaan, one of the Aran Islands in Galway Bay, in a large sailing vessel with no motor. They decided to go with him and Endlicher took photos as they went.

"I thought we'd never arrive there because the wind was not so strong. The boat traveled very slow," Endlicher told the AP. "It was an interesting trip there and then when we landed on Inishmaan, that was a different world."

He saw fishermen at work, and peasants threshing barley by beating stalks on stones. Their clothes were home-spun from tweed. Electricity hadn't reached the island. Turf from the mainland was used for heating and cooking.

Many of the locals made clear they didn't want their photos taken. The Aran Islands are still part of the Gaeltacht, the Irish-speaking area, and on Inishmaan at the time, most did not speak any English.

"Inishmaan was a different world, even from the mainland," Endlicher said. "Europe was very different then and so the difference between Ireland and Europe, mainland European countries was not so big. The agriculture was about the same. Farmers worked with horses. The only thing that was different in Ireland was donkeys. There were many donkeys at the time."

Return to work for the AP

Endlicher returned to Ireland in 1984 to cover U.S. President Roland Reagan's visit for the AP. He worked for the news agency from 1965 to 2007.

"I covered 29 Olympics altogether, Winter and Summer Olympics. I covered many Winter Olympics. As a Bavarian, I almost grew up on skis," said Endlicher, who would ski the slopes before big races to find the best positions for photos.

Endlicher was at the 1972 Olympics in Munich where11 Israeli athletes and coaches were killedafter being targeted by the Palestinian group Black September.

He traveled to Israel for news assignments in the 1980s and 90s and did several stints in Gaza, where he saw the first intifada, a Palestinian uprising against Israel's military occupation of the West Bank and Gaza.

He remembers Israeli soldiers forcing him to hand over his film after he took photos of them beating a child who had been running with a Palestinian flag in Khan Younis, in Gaza.

"I had no chance, I had to give them the film," he said.

Endlicher covered the changes unleashed by the fall of the Berlin Wall and the breakup of the Soviet Union, as well as uprisings in Georgia and Armenia.

"I remember in Moscow, there was this uprising when the communists tried to occupy the parliament, that was after (former Russian President Boris) Yeltsin, there were a lot of shootings in Moscow," he said. "I was undercover, under a truck, and next to me was a TV cameraman in a telephone cell, and they shot at the telephone cell and he was wounded."

Endlicher was also embedded with American troops during the Gulf War in 1991, and had been in Prague, Czechoslovakia for the Soviet invasion in 1968, when he relied on a taxi driver driving to and from Vienna, Austria to get his films out to be processed and transmitted.

"He must have had some deal with the border police or the Russian army," he said.

Job presents dangers

Reflecting on the dangers he faced over a 42-year career with the AP — Endlicher also previously worked for German news agency DPA – he said he believes there is a necessity to take pictures, to bear witness.

"It's necessary that some people are willing to take the risk. LikeAnja Niedringhaus, she paid with her life," he said of his former AP colleague who was killed in Afghanistan in 2014. "The thing is you have to be independent, I think. If you're married and have kids, it's a different story. If you are single and have no obligations ... It's also difficult to keep up friendships. I had also a time when the job was the most important thing to me. And I neglected some of my family life. It's a conflict."

Endlicher's son, Matthias, accompanied him to the embassy's tribute on Saturday, and they were joined by his wife, Andrea, at the ambassador's residence for dinner that evening.

"I'm very happy that they saw the value of these pictures," he said.

Former AP photographer's vintage images of Ireland capture a world before it disappeared

BERLIN (AP) — Rare photographs of Ireland from 1963 show a world about to disappear, a country before it took its first s...
Political prisoners released in Myanmar mass amnesty

BANGKOK (AP) — Excited families greeted relatives released from Myanmar's Insein Prison on Thursday as part ofa mass amnestygranted by the country's military rulers ahead of next month's election.

At least eight buses carrying prisoners were welcomed outside the gate of the Yangon prison at 11:30 a.m. by relatives and friends who had been waiting since early morning.

The military administration granted amnesty to more than 3,000 people locked up for opposing army rule and dropped charges against more than 5,500 others, state-run broadcaster MRTV reported Wednesday. The amnesty was intended to ensure eligible voters could participate inthe Dec. 28 elections, it said.

An official from Insein Prison, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he is not authorized to release information, confirmed prisoners would be released starting Thursday but did not say how many or who they were. In past amnesties, releases have taken several days.

There was no sign that the prisoner release would include former leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who led the National League for Democracy government ousted in the military takeover in 2021 and who has been held virtually incommunicado since then.

Among those freed were Kyi Toe, a member of NLD's central information committee, and freelance journalist Zaw Lin Htut, also known as Phoe Thar. Both were arrested in 2021.

"I am determined to work with Aunty until I am 90 years old," Kyi Toe told journalists as he arrived outside the prison gate. Aunty is a common expression of respect for Suu Kyi among senior NLD members.

He added that other senior NLD members still remain in prison.

Critics have assertedMyanmar's electionwill be neither free nor fair because there is no free media and most of the leaders of the dissolved NLD have been arrested.

MRTV said the National Defense and Security council, a constitutional administrative government body controlled by the military, granted amnesties covering 3,085 prisoners convicted under the part of the penal code known as the incitement law, which makes it a crime to spread comments that create public unrest or fear, or spread false news. It has been widely used to arrest critics of the government or military and is punishable by up to three years in prison.

Conditional release was granted to 724 prisoners, who would have to serve the rest of their old sentence if they commit a new offense, and 5,580 people who are either being prosecuted or are in hiding, will receive amnesty and have their incitement cases closed.

Some 22,708 political detainees, including Suu Kyi, were in detention as of Wednesday, according to the Assistance Association for Political Prisoners, an independent organization that keeps detailed tallies of arrests.

The 80-year-old Suu Kyi is serving a 27-year sentence after being convicted in what supporters have called politically tinged prosecutions.

The army takeover in 2021 was met with massive nonviolent resistance, which has since becomea widespread armed struggle.

Political prisoners released in Myanmar mass amnesty

BANGKOK (AP) — Excited families greeted relatives released from Myanmar's Insein Prison on Thursday as part ofa mass ...
'Stranger Things 5' Spoiler Interview: Duffer Brothers Explain Shocking Volume 1 Ending, Revelations About Will and Max and the Return of [SPOILER]

SPOILER ALERT:This story contains spoilers from Season 5, Volume 1 of "Stranger Things."

In the battle that concludes Volume 1 of "Stranger Things 5" — in "Sorcerer," written and directed by Matt and Ross Duffer — it appears at first that all is lost. The murderous creatures of the Upside Down have breached the military zone, and begin a mass slaughter of the soldiers, who've underestimated their foes. Elsewhere, Robin (Maya Hawke) and Murray (Brett Gelman) try to bring some of the endangered school children of Hawkins to safety in a truck, as they're chased by Demogorgons. Meanwhile, the good guys' biggest assets, Eleven (Millie Bobby Brown) and Hopper (David Harbour), are in the base in the Upside Down, where they've made an important discovery: Eight (Linnea Berthelsen), one of the other telekinetic kids from the Hawkins Lab experiments, with whom Eleven bonded in Season 2, is alive and being held there.

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During a lull in the battle, Vecna (Jamie Campbell Bower) steps through the membrane of the Upside Down to survey his quarry, where Joyce (Winona Ryder), Mike (Finn Wolfhard) and his original prey, Will (Noah Schnapp) — along with the remaining military officers and soldiers — seem to be no match for him. Vecna effortlessly extends his arms to turn their weapons against them, pushing fire back on the soldiers and pulling a pin on a grenade. He then levitates Will, and brings him to him, face to face. "Can you see them, William? Can you see the children?" he asks. "Do you know why I chose them to reshape the world? It's because they are weak. Weak in body and mind." He says this as the Demogorgons drag the kids Will and his friends had been trying to save into the Upside Down, where he's already taken Holly Wheeler (Nell Fisher). Lucas (Caleb McLaughlin) helplessly watches from the escape tunnel as one child is sucked into the Upside Down through a wall, and Robin sees that all the kids in the truck are gone.

Vecna, taunting, calls the children "perfect vessels," as he touches Will's face almost gently. "And you, Will, you were the first," he says. "And you broke so easily. You showed me what was possible, what I could achieve. Some minds, it turns out, simply do not belong in this world. They belong in mine." He lets Will drop, and strides back into the Upside Down, confident that the Demogorgons will finish the job. But just as the massacre is set to recommence, Will remembers what Robin — to whom he's felt bonded since realizing that she, too, is queer — had said to him earlier: that she'd always had all the answers within her, and she just needed to stop being scared of who she was Home movies begin to play in his mind. He remembers the first time he met Mike, who asked if he wanted to be friends; he remembers drawing things with crayons and showing them to a loving Joyce; he remembers building Castle Byers with Jonathan in woods near their home.

It's then that Will accesses the powers he (and we!) didn't know he has, stopping each Demogorgon in place before they kill Mike, Lucas and Robin. Will can see through their eyes, he realizes, and — as indicated through arm gestures — he snaps the Demos' limbs, killing all of them. The final image of Volume 1 is Will raising his head, and wiping his nosebleed with his sleeve, as we've seen Eleven do a thousand times on "Stranger Things" — as he stares with purpose into the distance.

In a longinterview with the Duffer brothers forVariety's Oct. 15 cover story, Ross Duffer said, "We've been talking about Will having powers for as long as I can really remember."

Below, the Duffers delve into what those powers are, the season's opening flashback sequence, why the climax of "Sorcerer" (and that oner!) was "logistically the most difficult thing we ever did," how they deployed Max, the return of Eight, the attack on the Wheeler house — and much, much more.

Ross Duffer:It's different in that he's able to channel Vecna's powers. But they're all related. Vecna and Eleven, their powers are similar. The powers aren't within him. He's able to channel these powers from Vecna and use it, sort of puppeteering.

Matt Duffer:He taps into the hive mind, and then he can manipulate anything within the hive. You'll see how far he can take it as you continue to watch. But that's how he's able to manipulate the monster. So he can't open a door, because the door is not part of the hive mind.

Matt Duffer:He got it because he got hooked into the hive mind.

Ross Duffer:If he's not close to the hive mind, he's not able to access or tap it.

Matt Duffer:It's proximity based.

Matt Duffer:Never would've happened. So it's very different from Eleven in that regard.

Ross Duffer:We've been talking about Will having powers for as long as I can really remember.

Matt Duffer:He had a dark version of it in Season 2 — he was connected to Vecna. He could see what he saw, but he didn't realize that at the time he was able to tap into it in a way and use it against Vecna. That's something he doesn't learn till this season. It took us a while to build there, but it was something we always intended to do. The details of it were a little rough until we started working on it.

Ross Duffer:We knew we wanted him to access these powers this season. Then we began talking about why now, and why is he able to do it now. Some of it is mythology-based in terms of the hive mind's closer than it's ever been for him. But most of what we were talking about was how has Will changed. Throughout the seasons, he's been a little more fearful than the others. He hasn't been a leader. He hasn't accepted himself in the way that some of our characters have. So I think it was really talking about if he really is able to at least start to accept himself for who he is, will that give him the kind of strength that he needs in order to access these powers? That's really where Episode 4 — and really the arc of the first four episodes — led for him.

Matt Duffer:You'll see as it goes on, but he completely underestimates Will. He perceives him in the way that so many others have in his life, which is as weak, as nothing, as incapable of achieving anything great. So he completely underestimates him in that moment. Whether that's going to happen again, you'll have to watch Volume 2.

Ross Duffer:The original draft of Chapter 4 did not have the flashback footage in it. When we read it through, it's the same exact storyline with Robin, but because it's such an internal shift for Will, we needed to be able to show that visually. That's when we came up with the idea of Robin mentioning that she'd found these old tapes. So that was the only different thing that we changed about her monologue, but it allowed us to visually represent what was going through Will's mind. Once we did that, we felt like the ending finally had the emotional kick that we wanted.

Matt Duffer:I know we were really scared about whether we were going to be able to find someone or not. I mean, initially, obviously there were conversations about, Do we do face replacement? Do we do what we did with Will at the beginning of the season? Budgetarily, it was impossible. It's just very expensive.

Ross Duffer:The beginning scene he's referencing, we were able to model it after Noah at that age, but this is even a younger age. So you start to get into uncanny valley world. It would've been extremely expensive, and also look creepy.

Matt Duffer:It was really fun, too, to film that with those kids.

Matt Duffer:We're so proud of it. That's all Weta. We've never worked with Weta before, but Betsy [Patterson], our visual effects supervisor, when she brought them on, she was confident that they would be able to do it. Usually when we're writing this stuff, we don't worry too much, sometimes to our detriment, about how we're going to pull certain things off. It just felt absolutely right to start with a flashback of Will, and then you just turn to Betsy and then ultimately Weta to do it.

We did take a lot of learnings from the Eleven stuff last year, but this was more challenging, because we've all seen Will or Noah at this exact age before. We sawthis scene, the very beginning of it, in Season 1. So it was very important that it was hyper-real. It's the first visual effects work that was done on the show. They just did incredibly detailed work and then just kept honing and honing and honing. Sometimes you can't figure out what's wrong. You're just like, "That's not quite…" — usually it's the lighting — and just work on every shot to death.

Ross Duffer:That's an idea we've had for a while. I can't remember exactly when, but when we first had that thought, immediately we started talking about Season 5: "That's where we have to start. We have to bring it back full circle." It sets up the season the way we want it to, which is everything is going back to Season 1, and everything is coming full circle. We thought there wasn't really a better way to do that than to go back and see what Will had experienced.

Matt Duffer:Well, he was the closest to Eddie. So the two who are most impacted by the events of Season 4 would be him and Lucas. But at least Lucas is trying, desperately, to keep hope alive [about Max], because it hasn't been extinguished at this point, although he's sort of losing it when we see him at the top of Episode 1. But Dustin has lost Eddie, so he's struggling to remain optimistic because of their friendship and because of what he feels is a need to continue carrying that torch. It felt like the most interesting way to explore grief was through him.

Ross Duffer:When we talked about it with the writers, even in Season 1 when Mike and Lucas get in a fight, Dustin's the one that pulls everything together. He in a lot of ways is the heart of that group. So it immediately puts all of our characters on edge, and the audience hopefully, too.

Matt Duffer:That was a new idea. We did not know until we started working on Season 5, probably pretty early in the process.

Ross Duffer:I don't even think it was in the pandemic. Because we had so long [of a break] that we had time to not only finish [writing] Season 4, but pitch a version of Season 5. I don't think she was even in that. That was the big breakthrough, having shot Season 4, coming back and realizing the drive of these kids getting taken. Once we realized that, we got really excited about making Holly the focus of that new group of kids.

Ross Duffer:If you watch the previous seasons, Holly barely talks at all. So we didn't really have much of a character there. She was just a little kid. Even Season 1, when we're filming her, it was basically whatever one of the young twins would do, we would just try to capture it in real time. So we didn't really have a voice for her.In the initial scripts, Holly was a little shyer and a little more withdrawn. And then as we found Nell, who's such a character…

Matt Duffer:And more of an extrovert.

Ross Duffer:…we started infusing Nell's personality into Holly.

Matt Duffer:We were really nervous about it. It is not like she had to look identical to the twins who were playing Holly in the past, but she had to resemble them enough that you weren't totally confused. But more important than that, they have to be an incredible actor.

I remember seeing the "Evil Dead Rise" trailer and seeing her. I had not seen the movie. I just saw her in the trailer and I was like, "That's Holly." But then I didn't remember that. [Our casting director] Carmen [Cuba] found her, brought her to us, and I was like, "I knew this like six months ago." That would've saved us a lot of time.

Ross Duffer:Carmen's going to get annoyed you're taking credit for this.

Matt Duffer:She always thinks I take too much credit for the casting.

Matt Duffer:Oblivious! One of the early ideas was we finally had to bring them into the fold. It was easy, because we could bringanybodyin the fold. It was the final season. Karen would've moved them out of Hawkins, had she learned any of this earlier. Finally, none of that mattered.

We've always wanted an attack on the Wheeler house, and to give Karen a killer badass moment, have her face down one of these monsters. Cara and Nell bonded. They got really close, and we just had an incredibly fun time shooting what is a very violent sequence. And yeah, Karen's tough. She miraculously survives.

Matt Duffer:We knew we wanted to keep her out of it for the first couple episodes, and we knew she was going to end an episode. At some point, we thought Episode 3 felt like the right time.

Ross Duffer:From the end of Season 4 when we kept her in the coma, we knew she was trapped in Vecna's mindscape, and we knew that was going to be part of her journey, at least for Season 5. But it finally clicked when we realized that Holly could be there as well, and then the other kids. That's when her storyline really came to life.

Matt Duffer:I can't tell you how many hours are spent in the writers' room discussing the movie "The Cell," the Jennifer Lopez/Tarsem movie. It's such a great concept, because they enter the mind of a serial killer. It was the closest thing we could think of that parallels what we were doing. Our serial killer mindscape ends up being pretty different, but it's probably why we ended up having a desert in there. A lot of desert sequences in "The Cell."

Ross Duffer:Yeah. Holly's nicknamed it Camazotz.

Matt Duffer:The boys are always referencing Dungeons & Dragons, and Holly doesn't play Dungeons & Dragons, so we thought it'd be interesting if she's referencing something she's into.

Matt Duffer:You find out pretty much everything, is what I'll say.I mean, there are still some mysteries. We don't explain everything, but the wall, certainly, you understand.

Ross Duffer:Yeah, that's two-fold. We want when someone watches through the entire show, it doesn't feel like we dropped a storyline or a thread. That it all connects. You see how everything fits together. And that was definitely a loose plot strand.

But also, we really like Linnea and we felt that that episode [in Season 2] just didn't give her a chance to do what we know she's capable of doing. So part of it was to put her back in and give her a moment. But we didn't want to just do it to do it. As we were breaking the season, we realized that bringing her back really helped us with the Eleven storyline and how we wanted to wrap her story up. So there was a real reason to do it beyond just to not leave this dangling plot thread.

Matt Duffer:We were shooting Season 2 really, really fast, because we were trying to hit this Halloween deadline. And the first script we wrote just flat out didn't work, and then we had one week left to rewrite. I just don't think we ever nailed it, obviously. I always felt bad that we didn't figure that out for Linnea. But we felt we had something special with Linnea, so we wanted to bring her back. I think she's awesome in the season, so I'm pretty excited about that.

Matt Duffer:Forever. It wasn't originally written that way. We wanted it to feel very immersive, like you were in the middle of it. Ross and I hadn't done anything like that before. The finale's insane, but that sequence was logistically the most difficult thing we ever did.

Matt Duffer:The whole battle, but specifically that oner, because it involved obviously a lot of stunts and visual effects and actors, but then also children. It is stitched together [from several shots]. I don't want people to get mad at us when we call it a "oner," because it's at night and you're working with children and stunts. We could only shoot about two hours a night. So we divided it up into, I think, four chunks, and we thought we could accomplish within the time that we had one chunk per night.

Ross Duffer:It was definitely the hardest thing we've ever done ever in terms of filmmaking.

Ross Duffer:Once we decided we knew we wanted to do the Will power stuff this season, we knew that that's how we had to end Volume 1. So there's the low point of all the kids being taken, but the high point of Will has these powers. That was always the discussion. Vecna taking these children was the low point we needed for the end of Volume 1.

Matt Duffer:I've said this before: The show is not "Game of Thrones." I'm hoping it surprises people. But there's no Red Wedding, if that's what you're asking. That would be depressing.

Ross Duffer:Do we answer this?

Matt Duffer:I think this is OK.

Ross Duffer:Yes. That's where Holly is at the present moment.

Ross Duffer:That's one way to put it!

Matt Duffer:Yeah, there's a backstory to all of that that is actually never revealed in the show. The idea of it was based a little bit on the original "Hellraiser," although it's different than that. But yeah, he retreated to lick his wounds. Nancy blew holes all through his body, so he more or less rebuilt his body into something stronger and hopefully cooler. But it was a challenge because we also wanted his new design to reflect the fact that he had been injured. That's why we ultimately had to go full CG on his body was because you see holes throughout his body. It was figuring out that balance took a long time.

Matt Duffer:He was just in a leotard, basically. But the important thing is they match his movement. And his face is completely him in makeup. We don't touch that at all. That's fully Jamie.

Ross Duffer:No.

Matt Duffer:Nothing good.

Matt Duffer:Right. What does that mean?

Matt Duffer:I mean, depends on your perspective, you know?

Matt Duffer:Yes, that's what we call our new Russia storyline, because it's very few characters. They're kind of isolated off on their own, Max and Holly. We're very happy with how it integrates with the other storylines.

Ross Duffer:The forest is real.

Matt Duffer:And the desert's real. We went out to New Mexico to shoot any of the desert sequences. You'll see more of them. The inside of the interior of the cave is a set build. That main outside of the cave is a set build right outside the forest. And the forest is the summertime set. That's why we had to shoot some finale there when the leaves were green.

Matt Duffer:Yeah. When we were working on the play with Kate Trefry, we had Henry's backstory worked out. There was always a balance that we had to find in terms of how much we were going to put in the play. [The director] Stephen [Daldry] and [the produce] Sonia [Friedman] were always pushing for more and we were pushing back and saying, "Well, we have to wait to reveal that in the show." You'll see, especially as you reach the final episode, there's more overlap with the play.

Ross Duffer:And, like, Max finds that "Oklahoma" poster, which people who haven't seen the play are maybe like, "Why is Henry in 'Oklahoma'?" But I think it's nice for us to start to tie those two together.

Matt Duffer:But you absolutely do not have to have seen the play to understand. They're Easter eggs more than anything.

Matt Duffer:You're asking a question that will be answered in the final episode. The next spoiler talk we do, I'll address it.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

•Linda Hamiltonon Being Millie Bobby Brown's 'Biggest Fan'•Shawn Levyon 'Sticking the Landing' for Season 5•David Harbouron How 'Stranger Things' Has Changed Him•The Cast of 'Stranger Things'on the Show's Final Days•The Duffer Brotherson the 'Stranger Things' Spinoff

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‘Stranger Things 5’ Spoiler Interview: Duffer Brothers Explain Shocking Volume 1 Ending, Revelations About Will and Max and the Return of [SPOILER]

SPOILER ALERT:This story contains spoilers from Season 5, Volume 1 of "Stranger Things." In the battle...
Tom Brady/Instagram Tom Brady and his son Jack

Tom Brady/Instagram

NEED TO KNOW

  • Tom Brady is spending time on the basketball court with his oldest son, Jack

  • The father-son duo shot hoops with New York Knicks player Karl-Anthony Towns

  • Brady shares the teen with his ex-girlfriend, Bridget Moynahan

Tom Brady's eldest sonJackmight be trading the gridiron for the basketball court.

On Tuesday, Nov. 25, the retired NFL quarterback, 48, and New York Knicks playerKarl-Anthony Townsbrought their two sports together in anInstagram postthat also featured Jack, 18.

"Next time we're running routes?" Towns, 30, captioned the upload, tagging the seven-time Super Bowl champion.

View this post on Instagram

The cover image showed the trio standing on a basketball court, smiling as they faced the camera.

In the second photo, Towns, who has been datingJordyn Woodssince 2020, was seen having a discussion with Brady on the hardwood while each athlete held basketballs.

Other pictures included Jack dribbling as Brady and Towns watched. The post ended with the teen dunking his basketball into the hoop.

Jack was born in August 2007, shortly after Brady and his ex-girlfriendBridget Moynahansplit in 2006. His full name is John Edward Thomas Moynahan.

The former New England Patriots player was already dating supermodelGisele Bündchen, and he admitted toHoward Sternin 2020 thatMoynahan's pregnancy was a shock.

"Next thing you know, I found out that Bridget was pregnant with our son," he said. "So that was a very unique time … and it challenged me in a lot of ways, again, to grow up in a different way. It was very hard for my wife to think she fell in love with this guy, and then now this guy's ex-girlfriend's pregnant."

"And it was very challenging for my son's mom, you know, because she didn't envision that either," he added.

Before their 2022 divorce, Brady and Bündchen welcomed sonBenjamin Rein, 15, and daughterVivian Lake, 12.

As Jack grew, he showed an interest in following in his father's footsteps on the field. When he was just 13 years old, Brady said Jack already had his first league job as aball boy for the Buccaneers.

Tom Brady/Instagram Tom Brady and his three children

Tom Brady/Instagram

His mother later said the teen was exploring other sports as well.

"I think right now he wants to be a professional soccer player," the formerBlue Bloodsstar, 54, said onLive with Kellyin 2017. "Though after the Olympics, he's like, 'I think I'm going to win a gold in swimming.' Then it wasMichael Phelps. So I think he just likes awards."

Brady echoed her sentiments the following year.

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"I think [the kids are] into watching [football] because of their dad, but … My oldest son Jack really loves soccer. Hewants to be an Olympics soccer goalie," Brady told PEOPLE.

No matter what he chooses, his parents have shown their support.

"I really think that he's kind of like that normal kid who doesn't really know what he wants to do yet and I think that's okay," Moynahan said during a June 2023 appearance onLive with Kelly and Mark. "I certainlydon't want to put any pressure on himto do what I do or what his father does."

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