Le Journal

Wonder Man Review: A Harmless Hollywood Diversion for Marvel
This Wonder Man review contains no spoilers. It’s been two years since Marvel Studios released its first TV series under the Marvel Spotlight banner, with head of streaming Brad Winderbaum hailing it as a platform to create more “grounded, character-driven stories” that didn’t require as much MCU knowledge to enjoy. That first Marvel Spotlight series, […] The post Wonder Man Review: A Harmless Hollywood Diversion for Marvel appeared first on Den of Geek.

Masters of the Universe Trailer Looks Like the Barbie Movie for Gen X Boys
Boys of the 1980s were taught that the world of grown-ups was one filled with paramilitary organizations who shot lasers at terrorists, cars that were actually robots in disguise, and humanoid cats that gave you confusing feelings. Turns out, real life is a lot more boring. At least, that’s the assumption made by the first […] The post Masters of the Universe Trailer Looks Like the Barbie Movie for Gen X Boys appeared first on Den of Geek.

The WWE Turned Actors, Ranked
For decades, WWE superstars have made the jump from the ring to the screen, often carrying their larger-than-life personas with them. Some leaned entirely on charisma, others surprised audiences by actually learning how to act once the punches stopped being choreographed. While plenty of wrestlers have appeared in movies, only a handful managed to build […] The post The WWE Turned Actors, Ranked appeared first on Den of Geek.

10 Times Movies Got the Car Choice All Wrong
Movies love a great car almost as much as they love a great hero. The right vehicle can instantly define a character, a mood, or an entire era. But sometimes Hollywood gets it spectacularly wrong. Whether it’s a car that makes no sense for the character driving it, a model that clashes with the setting, […] The post 10 Times Movies Got the Car Choice All Wrong appeared first on Den of Geek.

Sentimental Value Is the Quiet Best Picture Nom That Deserves Your Attention

Seahawks playoffs 2026: Will Rashid Shaheed continue to be a Rams-killer?

Seahawks general manager John Schneider wins Executive of the Year

Jaxon Smith-Njigba, Mike Macdonald among 4 Seahawks named NFL Honors finalists

Behind Seahawks enemy lines, NFC Championship preview: The keys to Seattle beating the Rams again
The Seahawks arrive at the NFC Championship riding their most complete performance of the season. The Divisional Round tape against the San Francisco 49ers showed a defense capable of controlling games through structure, discipline, and communication, paired with an offense that dictated terms early and finished drives. But there is an important and uncomfortable reminder attached to this matchup. The only moment all season where the Seahawks defense was “dominated” on tape came against the Rams second matchup. Early in that game, Los Angeles displaced Seattle’s front, consistently won at the point of attack with their 13 Personnel, stressed second-level fits, and forced the defense out of its preferred structure. It wasn’t until Mike Macdonald adjusted fronts, gap responsibilities, and coverage spacing that Seattle stabilized and clawed its way back into control. That context is precisely why this game is dangerous. This NFC Championship is not about discovering new weaknesses. It’s about whether Seattle can sustain those adjustments from the opening snap against an opponent that has already shown it knows exactly where to apply pressure. The stress points are clear, and the margins are thin. Containing chaos: Keeping Matthew Stafford on script When the rush does not close, the coverage unit is forced to hold longer than the structure allows. This dynamic consistently punished good coverage with extended-play completions.— (@alexcastrofilho.bsky.social) 2026-01-19T17:53:55.520Z The most critical defensive lesson from the Divisional Round was not about pressure generation, but about finishing plays within structure. Against Brock Purdy, Seattle consistently collapsed the pocket but allowed too many off-script extensions. Against Matthew Stafford, that same issue becomes exponentially more dangerous and is important to note that Mike Macdonald not sacked Stafford yet. Stafford does not need to scramble to beat defenses. He wins by subtly moving within the pocket, resetting his base, and throwing into windows created by late leverage breakdowns. The Rams’ offense is built to stress second-level defenders through condensed formations, pre-snap motion, and layered route concepts that force linebackers and safeties into constant conflict. If Seattle’s rush lanes collapse unevenly, Stafford will step up and deliver the ball before coverage can fully transition into scramble rules. Edge rushers must prioritize depth control over pure upfield wins, while interior defenders become the true key to disrupting timing. When Seattle compresses the pocket from the inside out, Stafford’s efficiency drops, particularly against disguised post-snap rotations. Play-action discipline is equally critical. The Rams marry run and pass better than almost anyone in the league, forcing linebackers to trigger downhill just long enough to open throwing lanes behind them. The Divisional tape already showed moments where Seattle’s aggressiveness against the run created brief windows. Against Los Angeles, those windows will be attacked relentlessly. Early-down success becomes the defensive lifeline. When Seattle wins first down and forces longer-yardage situations, McVay’s offense becomes more predictable, and Stafford is forced to hold the football. That’s where Seattle’s coverage depth and post-snap rotation can finally flip the script. Dictating terms: Tempo, leverage, and constraint The Divisional Round confirmed how dangerous Seattle’s offense can be when Klint Kubiak controls tempo and sequencing. That approach becomes even more important against a Rams defense that thrives on late movement, simulated pressure, and post-snap confusion. Los Angeles consistently challenges protection rules with creepers and five-man looks designed to arrive late rather than fast. The answer for Seattle is clarity, not caution. Protection calls must be clean, route spacing must punish vacated zones, and the offense must stay on schedule to limit the Rams’ full…

Where were current Seahawks players the last time Seattle made the NFC Championship Game?

Pre-Snap Reads 1/22: How do the Seahawks really feel about the Rams?

