By David Robb
15.05.2020 - 22:35 / usmagazine.com
Whatever it takes! Degrassi: The Next Generation launched the careers of Drake (Real name: Aubrey Graham), Nina Dobrev, Shenae Grimes and more, but some fans will always see the actors and actresses as their iconic characters.
Degrassi: The Next Generation, the fourth instatement of the Degrassi franchise, premiered in 2001. The series originally centered on Degrassi Junior High character Spike’s (Amanda Stepto) daughter Emma Nelson (Miriam McDonald).
After a decade, Degrassi: The Next Generation
Jacqueline Susann's novel Valley of the Dolls, published in 1966, is still one of the best-selling books of all time — more than 31 million copies to date. The novel, which centers on women finding success in New York City, grew more popular after the story was adapted for the big screen — but its journey to the screen was not all an easy path.
NEW YORK -- Six of America's late-night television comedy hosts — five of them white men — turned serious after the nation's weekend of unrest following the death of George Floyd to suggest they and others need to do more than talk about racism.
Chrissy Teigen always has a —and that applies to her as well. On Saturday, May 30, Teigen began to help protesters arrested for assembling in cities such as Minneapolis, New York, Los Angeles, and Atlanta after the death of George Floyd, a black man in Minneapolis who at the hands of a police officer who knelt on his neck while his coworkers held Floyd down or stood back and watched.
Kevin Hart has said he is worried about the next generation of black men, following the death of George Floyd.
Love is in the air for new couple Nina Dobrev and Shawn White. The pair, who have reportedly been dating for a few months, went public with their relationship on social media Thursday night.The actress, 31, posted photos as she cut the Olympian's signature hair.
Michael Punke, author of the New York Times best-seller The Revenant is set to publish his first novel in 19 years. Ridgeline (Henry Holt and Company) is slated to hit bookshelves in summer 2021.
“The Vast of Night” is barely a minute in when it first pulls a “Gotcha!”
It wouldn't be a trip if someone didn’t cry, right?
The COVID-19 pandemic has delayed the production of most major films for more than two months now. We’re just now beginning to see that places like California and European countries are expected to be allow for filming in the weeks to come.
A head-snapper of a debut from Andrew Patterson, “The Vast of Night” is one of those eerie indies that uses the trappings of genre (alien invasion in this case) as a launchpad into its own brand of American weird. Located somewhere to the left of a lost “X-Files” episode set in the UFO-haunted 1950s, it unspools over the course of one night in a flyspeck New Mexico border town.
By Dade Hayes
After years of delays and then having production halted due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the upcoming “Avatar” sequels may be moving forward.