Carole Horst Real estate shows play to many aspects of what an audience wants: fantasy, escapism, relatability, drama and personalities that can get welcomed into a viewer’s home on a regular basis.
04.02.2021 - 22:13 / deadline.com
EXCLUSIVE: 101 Studios has acquired Janet Reitman’s 2017 New York Times Magazine article about the death of Marine Corps recruit Raheel Siddiqui that revealed a culture of brutality against Muslims at a South Carolina military training base. The article will be used as source material for a scripted limited series produced by 101 Studios.
Reitman’s article recounts the mysterious death of Siddiqui, which led to exposing a corrupt, brutal and torturous culture at Parris Island boot camp in South
Carole Horst Real estate shows play to many aspects of what an audience wants: fantasy, escapism, relatability, drama and personalities that can get welcomed into a viewer’s home on a regular basis.
FX has landed the rights to a New York Times writer's best-selling book. The network is adapting cybersecurity reporter Nicole Perlroth's newly released nonfiction bookThis Is How They Tell Me the World Ends: The Cyberweapons Arms Race, which chronicles the history of cyberwarfare and how the U.S.
Think of it as one small step for mankind, but a giant leap for Hollywood film studios and moviegoers. That’s the hope, anyway.
Angelique Jackson Entertainment studio Topic Studios and New York-based production company Loveless have entered into an all-media first-look deal, partnering to develop scripted and unscripted projects across TV, film and podcasts.Topic Studios, the entertainment studio from First Look Media, which recently produced the Golden Globe-nominated legal thriller “The Mauritanian,” and Loveless, the production company founded by Emmy-nominees Carly Hugo and Matt Parker, have come together for the
New York Magazine writer Jonathan Chait says Hollywood’s treatment of conservative actress Gina Carano is reminiscent of the Hollywood blacklist in the 1950s.
A former New York model met a tragic end, as 47-year-old Rebecca Landrith was murdered and her body dumped along a Pennsylvania interstate. Her remains were discovered on the morning of Sunday Feb.
IQ.Fans will also have their temperature checked upon entering a venue and will be required to wear face coverings while in attendance.As part of the move, the city will host concerts for the first time in a year as part of the New York Arts Revival programme announced in January.More than 300 pop-up gigs will take place between 20 February and 6 September at venues including the Apollo Theater, Harlem Stage, La Mama, and Alice Busch Opera Theatre.The governor says the gigs will be staged at
Britney Spears documentary is on Hulu and causing a second look at the pop star's conservatorship and media scrutiny during the 90s and 2000s. provides a look into the pop star's ongoing conservatorship battle with her father, Jamie Spears, as well as looking back at the now-39-year-old singer's treatment by the media over the years, particularly during the height of her stardom .Spears is aware of the documentary, which premiered on FX and Hulu earlier this month, a source tells ET.
Queen bee! Bridgerton star Golda Rosheuvel is doing way more than overseeing the Ton. A Black, gay actress herself, she’s setting the stage for a generation to come and the significance is not lost on her.
FX and Hulu and has since cast new light on the singer, her troubled past and her perplexing relationship with her father, Jamie Spears. After Britney experienced a highly-publicised mental breakdown in 2008, her father Jamie was appointed as her conservator, which is basically a legal guardian for those incapable of making their own decisions.
Britney Spears documentary is on Hulu, but a lot of people are having trouble finding it. provides a look into the pop star's ongoing conservatorship battle with her father, Jamie Spears, as well as looking back at the now-39-year-old singer's treatment by the media over the years, particularly during the height of her stardom from the '90s and '00s.Spears is aware of the documentary, which premiered on FX and Hulu on Friday, a source tells ET.«She's always made aware of any important new
The New York Times has severed ties with two reporters that produced some of its highest-profile work in the last three years.
Bill Cunningham, the renowned chronicler of fashion, once wrote of himself, “I just loved to see wonderfully dressed women…That’s all there is to it.”
Grand Central Publishing has landed the publishing rights to The Antisocial Network by New York Times bestselling author Ben Mezrich. In a preemptive deal, the acquisition was one of two non-fiction books GCP acquirred from Mezrich with the other going unnamed. The book will be published in hardcover, e-book and an audio edition by Hachette Audio in the Fall of 2021.
Angelique Jackson Rebecca Hall’s directorial debut already made a big splash with its Sundance Film Festival premiere — and its set to make even bigger noise as Netflix is nearing a $16 million deal for worldwide distribution rights on the film, an individual with knowledge of the deal tells Variety.Tessa Thompson and Ruth Negga star in the project — written and directed by Hall and based on the 1929 novella by Nella Larsen –about racial passing in 1920s New York.More to come…
EXCLUSIVE: Amazon Studios is developing a TV series adaptation of Reeves Wiedeman’s New York Magazine article “Who Killed Tulum?“. Written and executive produced by Mehar Sethi (BoJack Horseman, It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia), the project hails from Annapurna, New York Magazine, and Vox Media Studios.
New York Times best-selling author Ben Mezrich.As Deadline reports, Mezrich’s book proposal, currently titled The Antisocial Network, was placed on the market at the end of last week and had been acquired by Friday night (January 29) by MGM. Nothing has been revealed specifically around Mezrich’s plot for the book.Mezrich is known for his 2003 book Bringing Down The House: The Inside Story of Six M.I.T.
The New York Post that his Times Square billboard cost him only $18, as it was a one-hour purchase from his own company. “Did it purely to support the movement and make some people smile,” he said.
downplayed the coronavirus several times, calling it "God's way of thinning the herd." Now, though, she's claiming to be the "victim" of "cancel culture."While appearing on "The Real Housewives of Orange County" reunion on Jan. 27, Kelly was asked about the time she referred to protesters as "looters.""Listen, I don't have anything with protesting …Peaceful protests — I'm all about it," she said.