Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman is sashaying away.
05.03.2021 - 08:11 / etcanada.com
SPOILER ALERT: For anyone who hasn’t watched Thursday night’s eviction episode of “Big Brother Canada”, be forewarned that spoilers are coming.
Following Wednesday’s season premiere, “Big Brother Canada” held the first eviction of its ninth season on Thursday night.
The episode kicked off in the wake of the premiere episode’s challenge, which saw Team Destiny crush Team Defender — putting everyone on the team except for team captain Kiefer on the chopping block.
As their reward, the houseguests
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman is sashaying away.
While it’s not really a time to take a victory lap at the box office with only 3,1k movie theaters opened out of U.S. and Canada’s 5,8K, five out of the eight Oscar nominated best pictures this past weekend in theatrical release reaped the halo effect of Monday’s noms.
SPOILER ALERT: For anyone who hasn’t yet seen Thursday night’s eviction episode of “Big Brother Canada”, spoilers lie ahead.
The Motion Picture Association released its annual report on box office and home entertainment, and the bottom line is sobering but little surprise after a year of Covid closures.
The Handmaid’s Tale will return to Channel 4 for its fourth season, the broadcaster has confirmed.The Golden Globe-winning drama is set to air later this year with new episodes, following multiple delays due to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.Season four of the show will detail the aftermath of June’s plan to help children escape Gilead for Canada, while choosing to stay in Gilead herself.Check out a teaser for season four of The Handmaid’s Tale here:Let freedom reign.
Finally, Canadians will be getting a taste of the Rock’s tequila.
Canada’s two biggest cable companies agreed to merge Monday with Rogers Communications announcing plans to buy Shaw Communications in a deal worth $20 billion Canadian ($16 billion U.S.) that would create a powerhouse in video and wireless.
The Alberta government’s energy “war room” is going to battle with a Netflix children’s movie saying it inaccurately portrays the oil industry.
SPOILER ALERT: For those who haven’t watched Thursday night’s eviction episode of “Big Brother Canada”, be warned that spoilers are coming.
The Netflix/CBC sitcom Kim's Convenience, which broke ground in Canada as the country's first comedy led by an Asian cast, is to end after its fifth season. Launched on the CBC in fall 2016, Kim's Convenience, set around a Korean-Canadian family running a corner shop in Toronto, streams on Netflix and on cable and video-on-demand platforms internationally.
Netflix in the U.S. and Canadian Broadcasting Corporation in Canada."Kim’s Convenience″ stars Paul Sun-Hyung Lee and Simu Liu as members of a Korean-Canadian family who run a corner store in Toronto.The producers said in a statement that they decided they couldn’t move forward with another season after two of the show’s co-creators left to pursue other projects.
Kim’s Convenience, the Canadian sitcom that airs on Netflix in the U.S. and in many countries around the world, is ending with its upcoming fifth season.
Jennifer Garner and Édgar Ramírez may look like they’re having a blast in their new Netflix family comedy “Yes Day”, but the actress tells ET Canada filming an amusement park scene was anything but fun.
When it comes to Chris Harrison‘s controversial Extra interview, Bachelor alum Serena Pitt isn’t ready to simply forgive and forget.
Ben Croll When directors Joana Hadjithomas and Khalil Joreige uncovered a trove of photographs, journals and audio recordings they had made while growing up in Beirut of the 1980s, they knew these personal archives would fuel their next film.
Attention, “Big Brother Canada” fans! The most epic season of the reality series is just days away, and Arisa Cox is spilling all the tea.