TV presenter Richard Madeley appeared on Good Morning Britain and a debate arose about whether it was okay to smack your children or not.
04.02.2020 - 01:51 / etonline.com
Following his Emmy-nominated breakout role as serial killer Ed Kemper on, Cameron Britton is once again playing a real-life person in trouble with the law. This time, however, he’s taking on the story of Richard Jewell, who was wrongfully accused of being responsible for the deadly 1996 Centennial Olympic Park bombing, on, season two of the Spectrum Original anthology series .
During the Summer Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia, a bomb killed one person and injured hundreds. Jewell, who was a
TV presenter Richard Madeley appeared on Good Morning Britain and a debate arose about whether it was okay to smack your children or not.
In this new series from W magazine, an expert dissects the history of a particular, iconic fashion item—then has room to let their mind wander down a path of free association. Here, Colby Mugrabi examines the Burberry TB bag.
Caroline Flack’s boyfriend Lewis Burton has broken his silence after the death of the former Love Island host.
Judith Light has embodied a range of characters, from Shelly Pfefferman in “Transparent” to Marilyn Miglin in “American Crime Story” to Angela Bower in “Who’s the Boss?” Most recently, she played Bobi Jewell in “Manhunt: Deadly Games,” a 10-part series that focused on Richard Jewell’s story. Yes, last year’s “Richard Jewell,” directed by Clint Eastwood, also told the story, but the Spectrum series dives deeper into the pursuit of the real bomber.
Natti Natasha came to slay at New York Fashion Week.
Richard E. Grant has taken his obsession with Barbra Streisand to a new level by commissioning a sculpture of his heroine’s head.
By Jake Kanter
German film and TV company Telepool, jointly owned by Hollywood actor-producer Will Smith and Swiss investor Elysian Fields, is moving forward in multiple areas of the entertainment business, CEO André Druskeit tells Variety.
The Jason Segel-created show will air on BT TV in the UK
By Antonia Blyth
Dean-Charles Chapman (1917) has left WME for CAA, The Hollywood Reporter has exclusively learned.The English actor is the co-lead opposite George MacKay in Sam Mendes' seemingly one-shot World War I epic, a frontrunner in the Oscars race with 10 nominations.Chapman was previously best known as the tender-hearted and doomed young king Tommen Baratheon on HBO's Game of Thrones.
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89-year-old Hollywood filmmaking icon Clint Eastwood shows no signs of slowing down with his latest docu-drama taking a look at a man thrust into the middle of a media storm.