Drew Barrymore is appearing in a new series of ads for Pluto TV, the streaming service owned by Paramount Global, which also distributes her daily talk show via CBS Media Ventures.
25.11.2022 - 23:07 / usmagazine.com
Sharing her truth. Busy Philipps addressed the claims that she was “rude and dismissive” on the set of her short-lived talk show, Busy Tonight.
“@deuxmoi no need to be ANON FOR ME!,” the actress, 43, wrote via her Instagram Story late on Wednesday, November 23, acknowledging the claims made about her on the gossip account. “Someone sent me this and it’s probably very true to many of the executives who were at the network then.”
She continued: “It’s not T that I f—king hated working for the E! Execs when we were trying to make our show. I’ve talked about it with @instacais on our podcast multiple times as to why I felt that way and we’ve been specific about situations where I know I was rude and dismissive.”
The Cougar Town star started hosting the late-night show on E! in 2018. A year later, the series was canceled after one season. Shortly after the news broke of the cancellation, Philipps was nominated for a Critics’ Choice Real TV Award.
“But I doubt you would find a crew member or pa or security guard who would tell you I’m rude and dismissive — I just don’t like it when people who are bad at their jobs are insistent on telling me how to do mine,” she added in the lengthy, since-deleted post on Wednesday. “But. Let’s be real. The idea that I was rude and dismissive is so steeped in misogyny it proves my f—king point anyway.”
The White Chicks actress has been candid about her experience working with the entertainment network, stating that the former network “wasn’t the right place” for her show or her audience.
“I think that we’ve had a real point of view,” the He’s Just Not That Into You star said in an Instagram Story about her show in 2019. “And I’m so proud of all of the things that we’ve done, that we’ve been able to
Drew Barrymore is appearing in a new series of ads for Pluto TV, the streaming service owned by Paramount Global, which also distributes her daily talk show via CBS Media Ventures.
Taylor Sheridan and Paramount have come together with the next generation of scripted shows geared toward an adult audience thanks to the massive success of the flagship series, “Yellowstone.” The writer/producer is also behind the new mob series “Tulsa King” at Paramount+ from showrunner Terence Winter (“Sopranos”) that stars Sylvester Stallone as a New York gangster who is essentially banished by his crime family after spending 25 years in prison and told to set up his own syndicate in Tulsa, Oklahoma.
Sylvester Stallone’s mob boss is staying in Tulsa.
Busy Philipps is shutting down the accusations of her being disrespectful to anyone on the set of her former show (well, somewhat)!
In today’s episode of Bingeworthy, our TV and streaming podcast hosts Mike DeAngelo, and Rodrigo Perez set their sights on the new mob dramedy from Paramount+, “Tulsa King.” The Sylvester Stallone-led show centers on Dwight “The General” Manfredi, a New York Mafia capo who just completed a 25-year prison sentence and is exiled by his bosses to start his own territory in Tulsa, Oklahoma. The series also stars Andrea Savage, Martin Starr, Jay Will, Garrett Hedlund, and Domenick Lombardozzi.
Paramount+ is crediting the series premiere of Tulsa King, starring Sylvester Stallone, and NFL On CBS with driving a record number of single day subscriber sign-ups to the service on Sunday.
Rangers defender Borna Barisic failed to shrug off his struggles for his club as he warmed up for the World Cup with Croatia.
Defending herself. Lindsay Hubbard addressed Amanda Batula‘s claims that she is rude to fans — and the publicist had her own take on the situation.
Warning, Spoilers Abound: The Taylor Sheridan Universe got back in business tonight with two Fifth Season debut episodes of Yellowstone, and the launch of Tulsa King. Latter is the comedy that has Sly Stallone as its aging mobster star, and Sopranos and Boardwalk Empire vet Terence Winter as show runner. This will serve as a short recap of Yellowstone, with a thought or two on the potential of Tulsa King. Yellowstone is a Paramount Network show, while Tulsa King will find its place on the streaming service Paramount+, both produced by 101 Studios.
Terence Winter knows a thing or two about depicting the underworld. He served as an executive producer on both The Sopranos and Boardwalk Empire before Taylor Sheridan called upon him to tell a fish-out-of-water tale about New York mafia capo Dwight “The General” Manfredi in Tulsa King, dropping Nov. 13 on Paramount+. Here, the veteran writer-producer talks about the drama’s beginnings, avoiding mob stereotypes, and working with Sylvester Stallone.
Real talk. Tulsa King star Max Casella opened up about his pituitary dwarfism diagnosis — and how it kept him from hitting puberty until he was 27 years old.