TV News
Simone Ashley has spoken out against the body-shaming comments directed at her “Bridgerton” co-star Nicola Coughlan.
During a press conference at the Monte-Carlo Television Festival on June 15, Ashley defended Coughlan, who plays Penelope Featherington, against the online criticism she has received over her appearance in the third season of “Bridgerton.”
“Yeah, the haters are going to hate, and I think we can all relate to that, but I really don’t think that she’s allowing that to bother her,” Ashley, who portrays Kate Bridgerton in the hit Netflix series, said of Coughlan (via People). “She has a strong and...
During a press conference at the Monte-Carlo Television Festival on June 15, Ashley defended Coughlan, who plays Penelope Featherington, against the online criticism she has received over her appearance in the third season of “Bridgerton.”
“Yeah, the haters are going to hate, and I think we can all relate to that, but I really don’t think that she’s allowing that to bother her,” Ashley, who portrays Kate Bridgerton in the hit Netflix series, said of Coughlan (via People). “She has a strong and...
- 6/24/2024
- by Michaela Zee
- Variety - TV News
For seven glorious seasons, Jon Hamm graced our television screens as chain-smoking, booze-guzzling, frequent-philandering ad-man Don Draper in the AMC series “Mad Men.” He was a part of a golden era of anti-hero television, running next-to or alongside other hit shows like “The Sopranos” and “Breaking Bad,” all of which have fans who continue to greatly misconstrue the lessons provided by these great narrative works. In a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Hamm is opening up about the complicated relationship he shares with his most famous character.
“Jimmy Gandolfini, whom I knew a little bit, had a similar relationship to Tony Soprano, and Bryan Cranston had it with Walter White. The character got celebrated for the wrong reasons,” said Hamm. “People thought that Don was this paragon of masculinity or whatever. There were so many think-pieces, and you go, ‘Wait, he was pretty fucked up.’ And I was very...
“Jimmy Gandolfini, whom I knew a little bit, had a similar relationship to Tony Soprano, and Bryan Cranston had it with Walter White. The character got celebrated for the wrong reasons,” said Hamm. “People thought that Don was this paragon of masculinity or whatever. There were so many think-pieces, and you go, ‘Wait, he was pretty fucked up.’ And I was very...
- 6/24/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
It’s been more than two years since fans last saw John Cena‘s titular DC anti-hero Peacemaker on TV, but Season 2 is taking shape at Max, promising more R-rated comedy on the horizon. As the latest chapter of Peacemaker’s story comes together at the streamer, we’re breaking down everything you need to know regarding casting, storylines, a new dance intro, and much more. Scroll down for a closer look at what’s on the horizon, and stay tuned for more as further details emerge. Who Is Making Peacemaker Season 2? James Gunn will once again helm the series for Max as the new head of DC. When the show was renewed for Season 2 in February 2022, the streamer unveiled that Gunn, who also helmed The Suicide Squad in 2021 in which Cena’s character was introduced to audiences onscreen, will write all forthcoming Season 2 episodes. No official announcements about episode...
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
Ken Burns attended the 29th annual Nantucket Film Festival, which concludes Sunday, to give audiences a glimpse of his latest PBS documentary “Leonardo da Vinci.” The two-part, four-hour doc — directed by Burns, his daughter Sarah Burns and his son-in-law David McMahon — explores the life and work of the 15th-century polymath. “Leonardo da Vinci,” which begins airing in November, marks the first project Burns has directed that unfolds entirely outside the continental United States.
Although his work on “Leonardo da Vinci” is done, Burns has projects lined up through 2029. Currently, the director is working on several documentaries, including ones on Lyndon B. Johnson,...
Although his work on “Leonardo da Vinci” is done, Burns has projects lined up through 2029. Currently, the director is working on several documentaries, including ones on Lyndon B. Johnson,...
- 6/23/2024
- by Addie Morfoot
- Variety - TV News
Jerry Seinfeld shut down another group of pro-Palestine hecklers at his stand-up show in Australia, which was only the most recent occurrence in his chain of disruptions during the comedian’s tour.
On Saturday night, Seinfeld was performing to thousands of fans at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena when a group of pro-Palestine protesters began shouting, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” toward the end of his set.
“Oh, you’re back. They’re back! The protesters are back! I missed you,” Seinfeld said on stage, before addressing them directly.
“Listen, you and I are in the same business.
On Saturday night, Seinfeld was performing to thousands of fans at Melbourne’s Rod Laver Arena when a group of pro-Palestine protesters began shouting, “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,” toward the end of his set.
“Oh, you’re back. They’re back! The protesters are back! I missed you,” Seinfeld said on stage, before addressing them directly.
“Listen, you and I are in the same business.
- 6/23/2024
- by Lexi Carson
- Variety - TV News
While it may be the male steel and oil magnates who allow for the exorbitant wealth featured on “The Gilded Age,” it’s the women who wield it with both unabashed veracity and singular panache. Whether it be Christine Baranski’s Agnes Van Rhijn with her pursed-lip, old-world attitude or the bawdy charm of Ashlie Atkinson’s Mamie Fish, these socialites always keep things interesting, even when they’re just fighting over who gets to have the Duke as a guest at dinner. But perhaps the most ruthless and engaging of them all is Carrie Coon’s Bertha Russell. Of the new-money ilk, she’s initially shunned by high society, but quickly pushes back and muscles her way to the top.
“I love that she calls people out on their B.S. That’s the most fun, when she really cuts through the social expectations and just calls it how she sees it,...
“I love that she calls people out on their B.S. That’s the most fun, when she really cuts through the social expectations and just calls it how she sees it,...
- 6/23/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
The M/Y Mustique barely got off the dock before Elena “Ellie” Dubaich faced the fire on Below Deck Mediterranean Season 9. The second stew had a 25-hour work day during the first charter trying to satisfy demanding young influencers. After they asked for some late-night snacks, she attempted to wake Chef Jonathan “Jono” Shillingford. This didn’t sit right with Shillingford or Captain Sandy Yawn while Chief Stew Aesha Scott understood the circumstances behind the decision. If that weren’t enough, the Slovenian has some drama brewing with newer stew Bri Muller. There are the makings of a love triangle with both having eyes for deckhand Joe Bradley. Here Dubaich opens up about her rough start and it’s only a sign of things to come. You were on the show for a little bit in Season 7. What did you take from that experience? Elena Dubaich: I was on...
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
Unlike his character Trey on “Broad City,” the acting future of Paul W. Downs is looking bright. And though he may have earned more attention for his work on “Hacks” behind the scenes as co-creator, co-showrunner, and one of the directors on the TV series, it’s his supporting role as manager Jimmy LuSaque Jr. that Downs really covets.
“Acting is what I’ve always wanted to do,” Downs said in a recent interview with Vanity Fair. “I started writing because it’s easier to write for yourself and put yourself in something. I always did both hand in hand, but it certainly is a means to get to perform.”
And not just in comedies either. Downs hopes to work with the greats one day.
“I would love to be in a Todd Haynes movie…. That would be a dream,” he said.
Haynes’ next film, a gay romance/detective film...
“Acting is what I’ve always wanted to do,” Downs said in a recent interview with Vanity Fair. “I started writing because it’s easier to write for yourself and put yourself in something. I always did both hand in hand, but it certainly is a means to get to perform.”
And not just in comedies either. Downs hopes to work with the greats one day.
“I would love to be in a Todd Haynes movie…. That would be a dream,” he said.
Haynes’ next film, a gay romance/detective film...
- 6/23/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
Three decades after sharing the screen with Morgan Fairchild on Roseanne, Sandra Bernhard is apologizing for her less-than-nice behavior toward her scene partner. “You know, it’s one of my biggest regrets that I wasn’t nicer to her,” Bernhard said on Watch What Happens Live With Andy Cohen on Thursday, June 20, after a viewer asked the comedian about working with Fairchild. “I was a little dismissive of Morgan, and to this day, would like to say to Morgan, you are incredible to work with, you went there. … You’re fabulous, and you are on the right side politically. I owe you an apology. I adore you. And thank you for putting up with my snotty little attitude.” As Bernhard recurred as Nancy Bartlett, a business partner of Roseanne (Roseanne Barr) and Jackie (Laurie Metcalfe) on the ABC sitcom, Fairchild guest-starred as Nancy’s girlfriend Marla in three episodes in...
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
After her Tony Award-winning performance as Angelica Schuyler in the original Broadway cast of Lin Manuel-Miranda’s “Hamilton,” Renée Elise Goldsberry’s career finally hit a hot streak. She earned roles in films like “Waves” and “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” as well as TV shows like “Documentary Now” and “She-Hulk: Attorney at Law,” but, in a recent interview with Variety, Goldsberry said it was her character Wickie Roy on “Girls5Eva” that finally gave her the opportunity to unleash her wild side.
“I believe as actors we get a license to set some crazy things free within ourselves, and that’s what Wickie gives me,” Goldsberry said. “A license to not only dress and style myself in a certain way, but a freedom to not check the part of me that feels like it is important to share anything.”
What makes Wickie so funny as a character is how...
“I believe as actors we get a license to set some crazy things free within ourselves, and that’s what Wickie gives me,” Goldsberry said. “A license to not only dress and style myself in a certain way, but a freedom to not check the part of me that feels like it is important to share anything.”
What makes Wickie so funny as a character is how...
- 6/23/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
Broadcast television would undoubtedly look different if it weren’t for Jamie Kellner, a TV executive who died on Friday, June 21, at age 77 at home in Montecito, California. Kellner launched both Fox and The WB, becoming the first and only exec to create two broadcast networks, as Variety reports in its obituary. Elsewhere on his résumé, Kellner founded the Acme Communications stations group and succeeded Ted Turner as head of Turner Broadcasting. An alum of the syndication TV business, Kellner got the call from Rupert Murdoch and Barry Diller in 1986 to help launch Fox, and he served as Fox’s first president and CEO, pitching the idea of a fourth broadcast network to independent TV stations around the United States. After leaving Fox in 1993, Kellner turned his attention to another upstart broadcast TV network, The WB, which launched in 1995 as a joint venture between him, Warner Bros., and Tribune Broadcasting.
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
For most sports documentarians, a chance to get inside access to the Dallas Cowboys organization would be the gig of a lifetime. But Greg Whitely wasn’t sure he wanted to do it.
For the past two decades, the filmmaker has established himself as one of the most prominent storytellers working in the sports space through projects as varied as “Cheer,” “Wrestlers,” and the “Last Chance U” franchise. “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” was the kind of opportunity that fell squarely in the middle of his wheelhouse, but Whiteley was concerned that working with the most valuable sports league’s most valuable franchise would inevitably stifle his creative freedom.
“The Cowboys reached out to me and wanted to know if I’d be interested. Initially, if I’m being honest, I wasn’t. I just didn’t think there was any possibility for us to get what we needed to...
For the past two decades, the filmmaker has established himself as one of the most prominent storytellers working in the sports space through projects as varied as “Cheer,” “Wrestlers,” and the “Last Chance U” franchise. “America’s Sweethearts: Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders” was the kind of opportunity that fell squarely in the middle of his wheelhouse, but Whiteley was concerned that working with the most valuable sports league’s most valuable franchise would inevitably stifle his creative freedom.
“The Cowboys reached out to me and wanted to know if I’d be interested. Initially, if I’m being honest, I wasn’t. I just didn’t think there was any possibility for us to get what we needed to...
- 6/23/2024
- by Christian Zilko
- Indiewire Television
Chrisley Knows Best alum Julie Chrisley might end up out of prison earlier than expected after an appeals court threw out her sentence and ordered a new sentencing for the reality star. In its ruling on Friday, June 21, a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld the bank fraud convictions of Julie; Chrisley Knows Best costar Todd Chrisley, Julie’s husband; and Peter Tarantino, the couple’s accountant. But the judges found insufficient evidence that Julie was involved when the scheme began in 2006, People reports. “The problem is that we have not located the evidence the district court relied on in adopting that finding,” the judges wrote, per People. “Our review of the record hasn’t revealed evidence to show, even by a preponderance of the evidence, that [Julie] was involved in 2006. Indeed, the government’s brief concedes that the evidence shows Julie ‘participated in the...
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
A&e Biography has your backstage pass to stories behind the biggest icons who have transcended the genre. Next up in the “Rock Legends” series is Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider, who started as a high school choir boy before truly finding his voice and becoming one of the larger-than-life figures of the 1980s. The show-stopping performer’s success was born out of rejection from record companies and naysayers including his own dad. Snider turned frustration into inspiration. It fueled the band’s anthem “We’re Not Gonna Take It.” The hit song turned glam metal on its ear during the early days of MTV. Twisted Sister was launched into superstardom thanks to its best-selling record Stay Hungry, which also included “I Wanna Rock.” With big hair, spandex, colorful makeup, and platform shoes, Snider, founder Jay Jay French, and the rest of the group blazed a trail all their own. The...
- 6/23/2024
- TV Insider
Conan O’Brien Reflects on ‘Hot Ones’ Appearance: ‘Many of My Friends Went Online and Thought I Died’
Back in April, Conan O’Brien took the internet by storm with his unhinged appearance on “Hot Ones” with host Sean Evans, where he faced down the wings of death with brash abandon.
“Many of my friends went online and thought I died,” O’Brien said recently for a profile in The New York Times.
Dousing extra hot sauce on already blazing wings, O’Brien licked and chewed like a beast, mocking the conceit of the popular talk show while at the same time visibly struggling with the effects of the heat.
“My father, who I love, once said that if you agonize enough — he used the word ‘agonize,’ I’ll never forget — if you agonize long enough, eventually ideas will come,” said O’Brien, drawing a link not only to his willingness to cause physical harm to himself for a laugh in this instance, but over his entire career in general and even further back.
“Many of my friends went online and thought I died,” O’Brien said recently for a profile in The New York Times.
Dousing extra hot sauce on already blazing wings, O’Brien licked and chewed like a beast, mocking the conceit of the popular talk show while at the same time visibly struggling with the effects of the heat.
“My father, who I love, once said that if you agonize enough — he used the word ‘agonize,’ I’ll never forget — if you agonize long enough, eventually ideas will come,” said O’Brien, drawing a link not only to his willingness to cause physical harm to himself for a laugh in this instance, but over his entire career in general and even further back.
- 6/23/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
Jamie Kellner, who made his name as the only exec ever to create two broadcast networks — Fox and The WB (both of which also achieved profitability under his watch), died Friday at his home in Montecito, Calif. He was 77. Kellner had a tremendous impact on the television business in the 1980s, 1990s and early 2000s, and was considered an entrepreneur at heart as he built Fox and The WB, and then independently created the Acme Communications stations group, and for a time ran Turner Broadcasting as chairman and CEO (succeeding Ted Turner).
Kellner’s impact includes landmark programming like “The Simpsons,...
Kellner’s impact includes landmark programming like “The Simpsons,...
- 6/22/2024
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety - TV News
A big reason FX’s “The Bear” has blown up in the way that it has is for how the show connects us to each character and even the actors and actresses who play them, many of whom have been working for a long time, but are only getting their due now. One such presence on the show is Ebon Moss-Bachrach, who plays Richie, but has also been seen in films like “The Royal Tenenbaums” and television shows like “Girls.” In a recent interview with The Guardian, Moss-Bachrach shared his feelings on the overnight success of the series and how his newfound fame has started to affect him in daily life.
“I was on top of a little mountain outside Kyoto and a Korean couple came up to me and were saying how much they love the show,” he said. “I get a lot of comments. People yell ‘Cousin!’ at me all day.
“I was on top of a little mountain outside Kyoto and a Korean couple came up to me and were saying how much they love the show,” he said. “I get a lot of comments. People yell ‘Cousin!’ at me all day.
- 6/22/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
Ryan Hadley, a tattoo artist that appeared in Season 6 of the reality competition series “Ink Master,” has died after a battle with seminoma cancer. He was 46.
Hadley’s family announced the news in an Instagram post on Thursday, featuring a photo of Hadley tattooing, with the words “Forever a Legend” and “Rip.”
“Ryan left this world last night surrounded by loved ones,” the post read. “While his life was cut short, in that time he left a legacy behind in both the art and tattoo world. He loved his many fans, his friends and clients, and most of all his children.
Hadley’s family announced the news in an Instagram post on Thursday, featuring a photo of Hadley tattooing, with the words “Forever a Legend” and “Rip.”
“Ryan left this world last night surrounded by loved ones,” the post read. “While his life was cut short, in that time he left a legacy behind in both the art and tattoo world. He loved his many fans, his friends and clients, and most of all his children.
- 6/22/2024
- by Selena Kuznikov
- Variety - TV News
Yellowstone‘s future is looking more clear now that we know for sure Kevin Costner won’t be returning, but it’s a disappointing future knowing that the main character won’t be back for the final episodes. Yellowstone tracks the Dutton family, a family of ranchers who have been overseeing their family ranch for generations. John Dutton (Costner) is the latest family patriarch fighting to keep the ranch running and protect the land from modern capitalistic forces. The threat came home in Season 5 Part 1, which aired in 2022 on Paramount Network, when John and daughter Beth (Kelly Reilly) prepared to square off with son Jamie (Wes Bentley) after he went ahead with his efforts to remove John from the governorship, a “declaration of war,” as Beth called it. Now, that war will be waged without John. (Or could he perish because of it?) Paramount announced in May 2023 that Yellowstone would...
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
Before Jake Lacy graduated drama school, he had to make a huge decision: picking his stage name. Born Jameson Griffin Lacy, he planned on using his given moniker throughout his career. But, after seeing his decision, his dean questioned him: “Who is this Jameson? You’re the most Jake person I know!”
Lacy, who plays Troy Delaney on potential Emmy nominee “Apples Never Fall,” said on an episode of the Variety Awards Circuit Podcast that he thinks plenty of actors are pigeon holed in the industry, but he can chameleon around and play a multitude of characters: “I’ve never been a star.
Lacy, who plays Troy Delaney on potential Emmy nominee “Apples Never Fall,” said on an episode of the Variety Awards Circuit Podcast that he thinks plenty of actors are pigeon holed in the industry, but he can chameleon around and play a multitude of characters: “I’ve never been a star.
- 6/22/2024
- by Selena Kuznikov
- Variety - TV News
Even though Jodie Foster worked with multi-take director David Fincher on “Panic Room,” that doesn’t mean she necessarily enjoys that kind of process. Speaking with Jodie Comer for Interview magazine, Foster admitted that she tends not to get too in her own head about acting and, at one point in her career, would even insulate herself from her co-stars.
“I’ve always made movies by myself, where it was just about my character, and I didn’t have to deal with the other actors,” Foster said. “As I’ve gotten older, I’ve come to understand that was selfish of me, jealously guarding something that I didn’t want to share. Now I’m learning to enter in and say, ‘How are we together and dynamic?’ Instead of it all being about me. It has been so interesting, because now I meet all these actors that do everything differently.
“I’ve always made movies by myself, where it was just about my character, and I didn’t have to deal with the other actors,” Foster said. “As I’ve gotten older, I’ve come to understand that was selfish of me, jealously guarding something that I didn’t want to share. Now I’m learning to enter in and say, ‘How are we together and dynamic?’ Instead of it all being about me. It has been so interesting, because now I meet all these actors that do everything differently.
- 6/22/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
Thirty years ago, General Hospital‘s creative team – at the time, Wendy Riche, executive producer, and head writer Claire Labine – brought the Nurses’ Ball to daytime TV. Hosted by Lucy Coe, played by Lynn Herring, the event brought citizens of Port Charles together as they lent their impressive musical talents to a worthy cause. Other daytime dramas had addressed the issue of AIDS/HIV before, starting with nurse Noreen Donovan (Marilyn McIntyre) on Loving, but General Hospital told an ongoing story with the Nurses’ Ball. A year after the first Nurses’ Ball in 1994, the show took Robin and Stone’s love story in a powerful direction when Stone (Michael Sutton) died from AIDS, and Robin (Kimberly McCullough) was diagnosed as HIV-positive. TV Insider chatted with Scott Barton, the show’s former publicist, who had previously worked with Elizabeth Taylor (ex-Helena Cassadine) in 1985 on the Commitment to Life fundraiser for AIDS...
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
While the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie is a bit short on contenders with truly standout performances, the Emmy race for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie is full of them. The distinction here is whether voters will choose multiple actresses from a few specific shows, or pick one...
The State of the Race
While the Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie is a bit short on contenders with truly standout performances, the Emmy race for Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Limited Series or a Movie is full of them. The distinction here is whether voters will choose multiple actresses from a few specific shows, or pick one...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
The 2023-2024 TV season was not a big year for juicy roles that put a star in contention to win the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie.
Lewis Pullman definitely stood out from the pack going into the winter awards season, and even earned a couple nominations from Critics Choice and the...
The State of the Race
The 2023-2024 TV season was not a big year for juicy roles that put a star in contention to win the Emmy for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Limited Series or a Movie.
Lewis Pullman definitely stood out from the pack going into the winter awards season, and even earned a couple nominations from Critics Choice and the...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
To hear the roar of the crowd at the 2024 National Hispanic Media Coalition Impact Awards Gala as Jodie Foster came out to present her “True Detective: Night Country” helmer Issa López the Trailblazer Award, and talk about them discussing “industry chisme,” one could recognize the veteran actress still has the power to win over any crowd.
And pulling back,...
The State of the Race
To hear the roar of the crowd at the 2024 National Hispanic Media Coalition Impact Awards Gala as Jodie Foster came out to present her “True Detective: Night Country” helmer Issa López the Trailblazer Award, and talk about them discussing “industry chisme,” one could recognize the veteran actress still has the power to win over any crowd.
And pulling back,...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
Should his NCIS character die, Wilmer Valderrama wants to go out in a blaze of glory. The actor revealed his idea for NCIS Special Agent Nick Torres’ possible death while speaking at a recent Monte-Carlo Television Festival panel, according to People. “Like Denzel Washington in Training Day — just go out,” Valderrama said, referring to Washington’s corrupt cop, Det. Alonzo Harris, dying in a Russian mafia ambush in the 2001 film. “I think not being the bad guy, of course I’d like to die as a good guy,” Valderrama added. “But defending my family somehow, just in a storm of bullets. I just see a storm of bullets just washing over me, just dying heroically with violins in the background and the rain is pouring.” Mike Coppola/Getty Images Costar Brien Dietzen suggested “some white doves” for that death scene, but Valderrama thought that image seemed “a little too Nicolas Cage.
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
Critics called the premise “ludicrous,” “idiotic” and “ill-conceived.” With that start, the team of us that launched “Suits” on USA Network never expected the show to become a global phenomenon.
When the series debuted on June 23, 2011, we were nervous about its prospects. A series about a fake lawyer from the network that just brought you Dule Hill in a series about a fake psychic. Seriously?
So how did Suits, in its “third life”, become one of the most-binged series despite the array of options available to viewers? More importantly, what can we learn from its late-stage popularity?
First, the resurgence...
When the series debuted on June 23, 2011, we were nervous about its prospects. A series about a fake lawyer from the network that just brought you Dule Hill in a series about a fake psychic. Seriously?
So how did Suits, in its “third life”, become one of the most-binged series despite the array of options available to viewers? More importantly, what can we learn from its late-stage popularity?
First, the resurgence...
- 6/22/2024
- by Chris McCumber
- Variety - TV News
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
As written elsewhere among these predictions, the Limited Series Emmy races seem shaped by Netflix having both the most critically acclaimed pick, arguably, in Steve Zaillian’s “Ripley,” and the most widely watched pick in Richard Gadd’s “Baby Reindeer,” objectively.
Oftentimes, when creators who star in their own series receive Emmy nominations, the TV Academy will award...
The State of the Race
As written elsewhere among these predictions, the Limited Series Emmy races seem shaped by Netflix having both the most critically acclaimed pick, arguably, in Steve Zaillian’s “Ripley,” and the most widely watched pick in Richard Gadd’s “Baby Reindeer,” objectively.
Oftentimes, when creators who star in their own series receive Emmy nominations, the TV Academy will award...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
Sorry, but the Outstanding Television Movie category is a delight. What other category can put Oscar-winning director William Friedkin’s last film up against the feature-length continuation of the model blue sky-era USA Network procedural?
This category is where Emmy voters get the most strict about reverence for television as a medium. A film trying to win cannot...
The State of the Race
Sorry, but the Outstanding Television Movie category is a delight. What other category can put Oscar-winning director William Friedkin’s last film up against the feature-length continuation of the model blue sky-era USA Network procedural?
This category is where Emmy voters get the most strict about reverence for television as a medium. A film trying to win cannot...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
Many of us know Jean Smart for her hilarious, yet touching turn as Deborah Vance on the hit Max comedy “Hacks” or her alluring take on Laurie Blake aka Silk Spectre on HBO’s “Watchmen” television series, but she has been working regularly since the ‘80s with her big break coming on the sitcom “Designing Women.” Despite the steady paycheck provided by the show, Smart said in a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter that it wasn’t what she wanted in her career.
“I think I didn’t want to get used to such an easy schedule and money,” Smart said. “By season two, we were working only 30 hours a week! I thought, ‘This is fun, but not why I became an actor.’ So I left and was immediately offered a TV movie role playing Aileen Wuornos, America’s first female serial killer. (Laughs.) I remember asking the producer why he thought of me.
“I think I didn’t want to get used to such an easy schedule and money,” Smart said. “By season two, we were working only 30 hours a week! I thought, ‘This is fun, but not why I became an actor.’ So I left and was immediately offered a TV movie role playing Aileen Wuornos, America’s first female serial killer. (Laughs.) I remember asking the producer why he thought of me.
- 6/22/2024
- by Harrison Richlin
- Indiewire Television
We will update this article throughout the season, along with all our predictions, so make sure to keep checking IndieWire for the latest news from the 2024 Emmys race. The nomination round of voting takes place from June 13 to June 24, with the official Emmy nominations announced Wednesday, July 17. Afterwards, final voting commences on August 15 and ends the night of August 26. The 76th Annual Primetime Emmy Awards are set to take place on Sunday, September 15, and air live on ABC at 8:00 p.m. Et/ 5:00 p.m. Pt.
The State of the Race
Same narrative, different year. Last TV season, at the end of the Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series race, the two frontrunners were “Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” and “Beef.” One came out earlier in the season, and was pegged as a prestige choice, with so much talk of Evan Peters disappearing into his murderous role. The other was...
The State of the Race
Same narrative, different year. Last TV season, at the end of the Outstanding Limited or Anthology Series race, the two frontrunners were “Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story” and “Beef.” One came out earlier in the season, and was pegged as a prestige choice, with so much talk of Evan Peters disappearing into his murderous role. The other was...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marcus Jones
- Indiewire Television
Jess Vestal knows by now that Harry Jowsey is not her Perfect Match, but for much of the Netflix dating show’s second season, she thought the two of them had a chance at a happily-ever-after. “I do think people can change. I don’t know if that was the best example of it, but I do believe that,” Jess told People in a post-finale interview. “I feel like at some point, I’d like to think everyone has to grow up. I’d like to think when someone says they want to settle down, and they want to have a family, and they want to get married, that they mean that. So I just took what he said at face value.” Netflix Jess and Harry broke up for good after filming, and the Season 2 finale revealed that he had lied to her and had, in fact, kissed costar Melinda Berry during the competition.
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
I was a new set decorator so excited to be working on “My Life as an Experiment,” a pilot that was produced by Jack Black. I was even more excited to learn that Donald Sutherland was one of the actors. One day, an A.D approached me, telling me that The Donald Sutherland wanted a meeting…with me. The set decorator.
I knocked on the door, and there he was. He was tall and a very large person, not like many actors and not at all what I expected. He had a huge presence and his voice moved through you, not in a threatening way, but in a way that almost reverberated your energy. He wanted to talk about his character and what the set could do to help bring him to life.
We had a long meeting and I listened to Mr. Sutherland share everything about every component of...
I knocked on the door, and there he was. He was tall and a very large person, not like many actors and not at all what I expected. He had a huge presence and his voice moved through you, not in a threatening way, but in a way that almost reverberated your energy. He wanted to talk about his character and what the set could do to help bring him to life.
We had a long meeting and I listened to Mr. Sutherland share everything about every component of...
- 6/22/2024
- by Amber Haley
- Indiewire Television
The United States Postal Service is paying tribute to Alex Trebek with a new Forever stamp — but you won’t see the late Jeopardy! host’s face or his famous mustache on the design. Instead, the stamp is formatted like a clue from the long-running syndicated game show. It reads: “This naturalized U.S. citizen hosted the quiz show ‘Jeopardy!’ for 37 seasons.” Underneath, written upside down, the stamp shows the correct response: “Who is Alex Trebek?” The design is fitting: As current Jeopardy! host Ken Jennings recalled in a Time tribute, Trebek always considered the game to be the star of the show, not himself. Usps Each sheet of 20 stamps resembles the game board from the Jeopardy! set, with the categories “Entertainment,” “Game Show Hosts,” “Famous Alexes,” and “Forever Stamps” shown above the stamps and a photo of Trebek to the left of the grid. Usps art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamps,...
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
Oxygen True Crime has been taking viewers down the winding road of some of the most tragic cases of Accident, Suicide, or Murder. The series delves into unbelievable but true stories of suspicious deaths. Things are not always what they seem once you go down the rabbit hole as new evidence, clues, and details are revealed about what actually happened. Detectives and victims’ families help paint the picture by recounting these often heart-wrenching stories. The season finale centers on the 2002 death of Patty Wlasiuk, who first was thought to have drowned after her pickup flipped in the frigid waters of Guilford Lake in Upstate New York. That’s the story Patty’s husband Peter gave police, but further investigation revealed a different scenario led to her demise. Peter ended up being arrested and sentenced to 25 years to life for second-degree murder. Ahead of the episode, we spoke with Patty’s...
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
Survivor alum Drew Basile is applying that show’s “outwit, outplay, outlast” philosophy to Jeopardy! Drew won his third Jeopardy! game in the June 21 episode, defeating one of his opponents in a rare Tiebreaker Round. In Friday’s game, Drew, who’s a graduate student from Birmingham, Michigan, faced Josh Heit, a government relations professional from Silver Spring, Maryland, and Richelle Brown, a substitute teacher from Alexandria, Virginia. Drew was just ahead of Josh by the first commercial break, and Richelle rallied to replace Josh in second place at the end of the Jeopardy! round. But Drew widened his lead in Double Jeopardy! — especially with a correct response on a $4,000 Daily Double wager. At the end of that round, Drew had a score of $20,000, Josh had $10,000, and Richelle had $1,000. Then came the Final Jeopardy! round — a clue about which sports star got a “standing ovation in the Deep South,” per Vin Scully,...
- 6/22/2024
- TV Insider
June started with LGBTQ Pride events in Los Angeles and New York City. The rainbow-colored festivities will continue throughout the month with NYC’s annual parade taking place June 30.
Also, in L.A., Michael Kors celebrated his new Rodeo Drive store with a Spago-catered dinner at Canter’s Deli and a starry guest list that included Kerry Washington, Gabrielle Union, Olivia Wilde and more.
HBO premiered “The House of the Dragon” Season 2 in NYC while the annual Tribeca Festival launched with a new documentary about Diane Von Furstenberg.
Keep checking back all month long for more photos.
More from VarietyHarvey...
Also, in L.A., Michael Kors celebrated his new Rodeo Drive store with a Spago-catered dinner at Canter’s Deli and a starry guest list that included Kerry Washington, Gabrielle Union, Olivia Wilde and more.
HBO premiered “The House of the Dragon” Season 2 in NYC while the annual Tribeca Festival launched with a new documentary about Diane Von Furstenberg.
Keep checking back all month long for more photos.
More from VarietyHarvey...
- 6/22/2024
- by Marc Malkin
- Variety - TV News
A raft of high-concept unscripted formats from the likes of Yes Yes Media, Keshet International and Fulwell 73 were informally presented this week at the first edition of the International Creative Alliance Days hosted by Satisfaction Group, the Paris-based outfit founded by entrepreneur and famed TV host Arthur Essebag.
The two-day event brought together creatives and industry players who are either part of Satisfaction or doing business with the company, notably acquisition executives from M6, France Televisions and Amazon Prime Video, among others.
Richard Bacon, whose banner Yes Yes Media welcomed Satisfaction as a shareholder last year; spoke about several music-themed talent shows,...
The two-day event brought together creatives and industry players who are either part of Satisfaction or doing business with the company, notably acquisition executives from M6, France Televisions and Amazon Prime Video, among others.
Richard Bacon, whose banner Yes Yes Media welcomed Satisfaction as a shareholder last year; spoke about several music-themed talent shows,...
- 6/22/2024
- by Elsa Keslassy
- Variety - TV News
[Editor’s Note: The following article contains light spoilers for “Fantasmas” through Episode 3, “Toilets.”]
Sitting in an office as transparently fake as any late-night talk show set, Julio Torres pitches his idea of Crayola’s next great crayon color: clear. The executives across from him are dubious, even angry at his proposal. “Clear isn’t a color,” one shouts. “If it isn’t a color, what do you call this?” Julio asks, gesturing to absolutely nothing. “Call what?” the suit asks. “The space between us — the emotional space,” Julio says, before waxing poetic (as he has before) about a clear glass of water, clear smells, and the clear memories all around them. “Some things aren’t one of the normal colors,” he says. “They don’t play by the rules of the rainbow. […] To color something clear is to acknowledge that some things are different, and that’s just fine.”
Instantly, a smile spread across my face. “Fantasmas,” from start to finish,...
Sitting in an office as transparently fake as any late-night talk show set, Julio Torres pitches his idea of Crayola’s next great crayon color: clear. The executives across from him are dubious, even angry at his proposal. “Clear isn’t a color,” one shouts. “If it isn’t a color, what do you call this?” Julio asks, gesturing to absolutely nothing. “Call what?” the suit asks. “The space between us — the emotional space,” Julio says, before waxing poetic (as he has before) about a clear glass of water, clear smells, and the clear memories all around them. “Some things aren’t one of the normal colors,” he says. “They don’t play by the rules of the rainbow. […] To color something clear is to acknowledge that some things are different, and that’s just fine.”
Instantly, a smile spread across my face. “Fantasmas,” from start to finish,...
- 6/22/2024
- by Ben Travers
- Indiewire Television
“Bridgerton” had a predictably massive week on Luminate’s weekly viewership rankings, landing as the No. 1 streaming original for June 14-20. In the first full week of availability of Season 3’s last four episodes, the season was watched for 3.1 billion minutes. The earlier seasons of “Bridgerton” continued to see solid viewership, with Season 1 landing at No. 4 with 297.8 million minutes watched and Season 2 taking No. 9 with 255.6 million minutes watched.
“The Boys” was the second-most-watched title of the week following its Season 4 debut. The June 14-20 window marked the first full week of availability of the season’s first three episodes plus...
“The Boys” was the second-most-watched title of the week following its Season 4 debut. The June 14-20 window marked the first full week of availability of the season’s first three episodes plus...
- 6/22/2024
- by Selome Hailu
- Variety - TV News
[Warning: The below contains Major spoilers for the Doctor Who Season 1 finale “Empire of Death.”] Well, the good news is we now know who Ruby’s (Millie Gibson) mother is after the Doctor Who Season 1 finale, “Empire of Death.” The more frustrating than bad news? The mystery of Mrs. Flood (Anita Dobson), Ruby’s neighbor who knows about the Doctor (Ncuti Gatwa) and has spoken directly to the camera more than once now, continues. Sutekh and his followers (Susan Twist‘s Susan Triad and Genesis Lynea’s Harriet Arbinger) bring his “dust of death” to pretty much the entire universe. Yes, Kate (Jemma Redgrave), Rose (Yasmin Finney), Carla (Michelle Greenidge), Cherry (Angelya Wynter), and Mrs. Flood (with her chilling apology to Cherry) are among the dead (for now?). The Doctor and Mel (Bonnie Langford) escape back to Unit and into the Time Window with Ruby. In that Time Window is a Tardis—made of memories, feeding off Ruby...
- 6/21/2024
- TV Insider
Sanaa Hamri, executive producer and director of the Prime Video fantasy series “The Wheel of Time,” feels like she’s just getting started.
The Moroccan-born filmmaker began her career in the late 1990s directing music videos for artists such as Prince, Mariah Carey, Sting and Nicki Minaj. She transitioned to television in the mid-2000s, directing episodes of “Desperate Housewives,” “Glee,” and “Nashville.” Hamri made her feature directorial debut in 2006 with the romantic comedy “Something New” for Focus Features. She has since directed the hit 2008 sequel “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2” for Warner Bros. and the romantic comedy...
The Moroccan-born filmmaker began her career in the late 1990s directing music videos for artists such as Prince, Mariah Carey, Sting and Nicki Minaj. She transitioned to television in the mid-2000s, directing episodes of “Desperate Housewives,” “Glee,” and “Nashville.” Hamri made her feature directorial debut in 2006 with the romantic comedy “Something New” for Focus Features. She has since directed the hit 2008 sequel “The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2” for Warner Bros. and the romantic comedy...
- 6/21/2024
- by Clayton Davis
- Variety - TV News
If you’re one of the many, many people who finally discovered “Suits” this year, man, does Netflix have exciting news for you. The final season of the USA Network program will finally hit Netflix in July. Previously, Seasons 1-8 were available on the streamer (Meghan Markle and others left the show after Season 7), and Season 9, starring Katherine Heigl, used to only be available to stream on Peacock. So this will be the first time all those viewers that started binging the series last year will become aware that there is actually even more of it.
Huge news for some people!
For the rest of us there is a plethora of intriguing movie and TV options to watch on Netflix this month, including critical Olympics prep in “Simone Biles Rising,” a two-episode docu-series that will allow viewers to watch Biles prep for her Olympics returns as well as study her (insane!
Huge news for some people!
For the rest of us there is a plethora of intriguing movie and TV options to watch on Netflix this month, including critical Olympics prep in “Simone Biles Rising,” a two-episode docu-series that will allow viewers to watch Biles prep for her Olympics returns as well as study her (insane!
- 6/21/2024
- by Erin Strecker
- Indiewire Television
When it comes to the family at the center of HBO‘s hilarious Danny McBride comedy The Righteous Gemstones, music is a key component to their bond, but how does the distinctive sound of the megachurch-set series come together? Music Supervisor DeVoe Yates and Composer Joseph Stephens are two of the creatives helping to bring the cheery musical numbers and compositions together along with the more epic and holy-sounding tunes set against the show’s more dramatic moments. Season 3 had its fair share of music moments between Uncle Baby Billy’s (Walton Goggins) Bible Bonkers and the introduction of the Montgomery family. Among one of the first performances of the season though was the inclusion of “There’ll Come a Payday,” the old gospel song Billy sings by the pool at Zion’s Landing, the religious resort the Gemstones opened in Season 2. When it came to selecting the song, Yates says,...
- 6/21/2024
- TV Insider
In April 2019, New York magazine published “Larry Ray and the Stolen Kids of Sarah Lawrence,” a shocking account of a group of bright college students who fell under the influence of a classmate’s father and did everything he asked of them, no matter how vile — ultimately resulting in his incarceration for sex trafficking, extortion, and conspiracy. As a Sarah Lawrence graduate, director Elisabeth Rohm read the article with intense interest. “It could have happened to me,” she told IndieWire. “I felt so strongly about that.” Rohm immediately saw the potential for a compelling feature film, but it would take several years of script development and untangling of legal issues for the story to finally make it to the screen.
The result was worth the wait. Lifetime’s “Devil on Campus: The Larry Ray Story” is easily one of the best TV movies in years, a tonally complex and expertly...
The result was worth the wait. Lifetime’s “Devil on Campus: The Larry Ray Story” is easily one of the best TV movies in years, a tonally complex and expertly...
- 6/21/2024
- by Jim Hemphill
- Indiewire Television
Apple TV+ brought viewers to Palm Royale earlier this year, making way for a strong ensemble of empowering female characters, among which included Leslie Bibb‘s Dinah Donahue. Becoming Maxine’s (Kristen Wiig) first reluctant friend of the season, Dinah is initially harsh to the newcomer until she helps her access an abortion, a next-to-impossible task in the 1969-set comedy. Realizing she might be able to trust Maxine to an extent, Dinah may be blackmailed into sponsoring Maxine at her ultra-exclusive club, but over time their dynamic transforms into something resembling a friendship. When it came to taking on the role, Bibb says, “There’s this vulnerability underneath her that I was always trying to find. I think that that’s who we all are as people. Nobody’s just an a**hole. There’s a reason we all have some trauma that led us to this point in our lives.
- 6/21/2024
- TV Insider
Billy Zane makes his Lifetime movie debut in the network’s new original film Devil on Campus: The Larry Ray Story, premiering June 23. The movie is based on the true story of Larry Ray, an ex-con who moved in with his daughter at Sarah Lawrence College and started a cult that included many of his daughter’s friends. Ray’s crimes were exposed in a New York Magazine article, and he’s since been sentenced to 60 years in federal prison. Zane and director/executive producer Elisabeth Rohm spoke with TV Insider about exploring Ray’s twisted crimes and what happened to his victims. “What I really enjoyed and understood up front why this was absolutely the right place to tell this story was the restraint shown by the platform and the network,” Zane said. “Had it been in the hands of any other streamer, I think it would be too salacious,...
- 6/21/2024
- TV Insider
Hands down, Giancarlo Esposito remains the busiest man in show business. Over the past year he’s starred in AMC’s “Parish” (which he also executive produces), Netflix’s “The Gentlemen,” Disney+’s “The Mandalorian,” MGM+’s “Godfather of Harlem,” Netflix’s “Kaleidoscope” and voiced Max’s “Harley Quinn.”
And on the film side, his recent gigs include “Abigail” and the upcoming “MaXXXine” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis.”
“I wrote in my notes last week, ‘I’m the busiest motherfucker,’” Esposito laughs. “I know. It was a very weird note, just to remind myself that all my dreams are coming true…...
And on the film side, his recent gigs include “Abigail” and the upcoming “MaXXXine” and Francis Ford Coppola’s “Megalopolis.”
“I wrote in my notes last week, ‘I’m the busiest motherfucker,’” Esposito laughs. “I know. It was a very weird note, just to remind myself that all my dreams are coming true…...
- 6/21/2024
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety - TV News
Everyone deserves a second chance at love. Or third. Or fourth. Just like on the steamy Netflix reality show of the same name, the Netflix Stories: Perfect Match mobile game is all about finding your flame among a rotating cast of the hottest and most eligible singles on the planet.
Live out your main-character energy with a custom avatar, complete compatibility challenges, and hopefully end each night matched up. Play your cards right, and you’ll even take a trip to the infamous boardroom to engineer some drama of your own. Beware: Just like on the show, you need a match every night to stay in the house. Can you make it?
In Netflix Stories: Perfect Match, you play a professional relationship podcaster who waxes scientific with couples –– all in different stages of their liaisons –– about love. Then you enter the house, and it is full of hotties, scheming...
Live out your main-character energy with a custom avatar, complete compatibility challenges, and hopefully end each night matched up. Play your cards right, and you’ll even take a trip to the infamous boardroom to engineer some drama of your own. Beware: Just like on the show, you need a match every night to stay in the house. Can you make it?
In Netflix Stories: Perfect Match, you play a professional relationship podcaster who waxes scientific with couples –– all in different stages of their liaisons –– about love. Then you enter the house, and it is full of hotties, scheming...
- 6/21/2024
- by Timothy J. Seppala
- Tudum - Netflix
The Hollywood Creative Alliance has ended its defamation lawsuit against the Critics Choice Association, as both sides announced Friday that they had reached an “amicable agreement.” In a joint announcement between Cca CEO Joey Berlin and Hca CEO Scott Menzel, the two sides said that the Critics Choice Association will once again allow its members to also be a part of the Hollywood Creative Alliance.
Also, Berlin has joined Hca’s advisory committee to “provide guidance on the best practices in awards show production and not-for-profit organization management,” and Hca has agreed to advise Cca on “best accessibility practices at its events.
Also, Berlin has joined Hca’s advisory committee to “provide guidance on the best practices in awards show production and not-for-profit organization management,” and Hca has agreed to advise Cca on “best accessibility practices at its events.
- 6/21/2024
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety - TV News
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