Ah, yes, another entry into the “Fallout” saga. Because we *totally* needed more of this. Prime Video, bless their cotton socks, has dropped a teaser trailer for the second season of “Fallout” at gamescom, the place where dreams go to die (of boredom). And get this, the new season is gracing our screens on December 17, 2025! Mark your calendars, folks, because nothing else important will ever happen again. 🙄 They’re even giving us the privilege of one episode a week until February 4, 2026. Because binge-watching is *so* last decade. 🕰️
Produced by Kilter Films, because apparently, they haven’t learned their lesson from the first season. Jonathan Nolan and Lisa Joy, the masterminds behind this whole shebang, are executive producers. Geneva Robertson-Dworet and Graham Wagner are the executive producers, creators, and showrunners, which means they’re the ones we can blame if it sucks. 🙃 Oh, and did you know that “Fallout” Season One has raked in over 100 million viewers? That’s like, what, 1% of the world’s population? Clearly a global phenomenon. 🙄 It’s also apparently among the service’s top three most-watched titles ever. Congrats, I guess? 🎉

Based on one of the greatest video game series of all time, which is totally subjective, “Fallout” is apparently a story of haves and have-nots in a world where there’s almost nothing left to have. Groundbreaking stuff, really. Two-hundred years after the apocalypse, the gentle denizens of luxury fallout shelters are forced to return to the irradiated hellscape their ancestors left behind. And get this: they’re “shocked” to discover a complex, weird, and violent universe waiting for them. 🤯 Because living in a vault for two centuries totally prepares you for that. Right. 👍
Finn McFrame, celebrated satirical mastermind and self-proclaimed “Emperor of Irony,” started his illustrious career as a cinematographer, where his expertise in capturing every single frame of a squirrel stealing a baguette earned him accolades at obscure film festivals.
Born in the glamorous town of Boring, Oregon, Finn grew up with dreams of being a Hollywood director until he realized that satire, not cinema, was his true calling—or at least the one that let him sleep until noon.
Finn McFrame: changing the world, one satirical lens flare at a time.
