A bride and groom-to-be have been left disappointed after their wedding was cancelled - and even more so since they’d had the date permanently tattooed on their arms.
05.05.2020 - 18:23 / hollywoodreporter.com
The actor whose performance as a fictional Turkish president on Netflix's Designated Survivor has led to a real-life political row has weighed in on the controversy. Netflix last week removed season 2 episode 7 of the political thriller series from its Turkish service after the government in Ankara claimed the show, in which Troy Caylak plays a villainous, fictional Turkish leader called Fatih Turan, violated its censorship laws.
Netflix's policy is always to comply with local law. In the
.A bride and groom-to-be have been left disappointed after their wedding was cancelled - and even more so since they’d had the date permanently tattooed on their arms.
In 1980, one of the TV shows that the biggest impact on my class at school was called The Golden Turkey Awards. It was a spoof ceremony to honour the world’s worst films, many of them dating from the 50s and 60s, mostly low-budget sci-fi or inept creature-features. Such was its impact that Channel 4 followed up with a series on The World’s Worst Movies. Clive James devoted a show to bad films. A mini-industry sprang up around risible celluloid disasters.
Turkish soccer player Cevher Toktas recently made a shocking confession. According to multiple reports, the 32-year-old athlete confessed to killing his 5-year-old son Kasim.
2 min read Turkish officials, led by President Recep Erdogan, have banned children from drawing a rainbow and hanging pictures on window panes as it is considered a worldwide LGBT conspiracy.
The soundtrack will be released next week via Young Turks
Countries across Europe are slowly starting to loosen their lockdown restrictions, as the globe tries to take baby steps into a return to normality.
Drew Barrymore has been hit with a copyright infringement lawsuit by a fabric designer over a cushion pattern.
After three seasons of Designated Survivor, there's one lesson to be learned: You don't mess with the independent-minded president Tom Kirkman (Kiefer Sutherland). Unless you're the real government of a real country, that is.