Summer House Reunion Boils Over — Inside Us Weekly’s Can’t-Miss Stories
Us Weekly’s April 16 hot sheet promises Bravo fireworks as the Summer House season 10 reunion readies a showdown, with castmates set to grill Amanda Batula and West Wilson over the real timeline of their romance.
Three very different stories, one very messy news day: Bravo castmates gearing up to interrogate a new couple, a peek inside the mental game behind a Masters win, and a crowdfunding push to buy a spot on Hollywood sidewalk real estate. Let’s get into it.
Bravo is about to play timeline police on Summer House
File this under: reality TV will always find the most awkward conversation. The Summer House season 10 reunion films in late April, and the cast is apparently planning to press Amanda Batula and West Wilson about when, exactly, their relationship stopped being just-friends and started being a thing.
Us Weekly says the vibe in the room will be less 'congrats' and more 'put it on the record.' A source tells them the group wants the pair to say on camera when it started and how serious it is. For context: back in March, Amanda and West confirmed their friendship had 'evolved' into a relationship. So the big question at the reunion sounds simple, but on Bravo, it never is: what did you feel, and when did you feel it?
Rory McIlroy’s Masters win, and the texts that kept his head straight
Sports psychologist Dr. Bob Rotella went public with some of the messages he sent Rory McIlroy during McIlroy’s 2026 Masters win. If you watched the tournament, you know it wasn’t exactly smooth sailing: the 36-year-old saw a six-shot lead evaporate during his third round, then gathered himself and closed it out for back-to-back green jackets and the career grand slam.
'You have a steel will. You do not break.'
That was one of Rotella’s texts, per Us Weekly. It’s rare to see the nuts-and-bolts of that player-psych dynamic out in the open, and it makes Rory’s regroup after that wobble even more interesting.
Aaron Carter’s mom is crowdfunding a Hollywood Walk of Fame star
Jane Carter Schneck has launched a GoFundMe aiming to raise $85,000 to honor her late son, Aaron Carter, with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. As of April 16, the campaign had brought in $331. The clock is ticking too: the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce’s deadline to submit for the 2027 class is May 15.
The ask is steep, but that’s the number on the page. If the campaign hits its goal and a nomination lands in time, Aaron could be in the mix for a 2027 selection.