FX has placed a two-season order for Welcome to Wrexham, a documentary series on the tiny Welsh soccer club that was recently acquired by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
28.04.2021 - 20:13 / variety.com
Naman Ramachandran The nascent Basketball Africa League (BAL), a partnership between the National Basketball Association (NBA) and the International Basketball Federation (FIBA), is set to get its own documentary series.Fremantle, “True Detective” executive producer Richard Brown and sports marketing company Infront have teamed with the BAL to produce an original documentary series telling the story of its launch and inaugural season.
The BAL is a new professional league featuring 12 teams from
.FX has placed a two-season order for Welcome to Wrexham, a documentary series on the tiny Welsh soccer club that was recently acquired by Hollywood stars Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
A new thriller from writer Dan Brown is on its way to TV screens.
Paul McCartney has teamed up with Rick Rubin for a new documentary series on Hulu.McCartney 3, 2, 1 will explore McCartney’s musical history as a former Beatle, for a rare one-on-one interview with Rubin.The six-episode series will span McCartney’s work with The Beatles and Wings as well as his 50 plus years as a solo artist.
Paul McCartney and Rick Rubin’s documentary series examining the former Beatles’ musical history has landed at Hulu.
EXCLUSIVE: New Pictures, the All3Media-backed producer behind Catherine The Great and Des, is to adapt Booker Prize-shortlisted author Monica Ali’s upcoming novel, Love Marriage.
J.Cole has made his professional debut in the Basketball Africa League, after signing a contract with the Rwandan Patriots BBC.Just six days after securing a three-to-six game deal with the Kigali-based side, the American rapper made his debut yesterday (May 16) against Nigeria’s Rivers Hoopers.It didn’t take long for the rapper to make an impact, securing his first bucket as a professional player only minutes after checking into the game.
MTV is bringing Behind The Music back this summer.
Last week, ESPN reported that J. Cole was taking a detour from music in order to play professional basketball in Africa.
Brian Van Holt has been tapped for a key role opposite Kate McKinnon’s Carole Baskin and John Cameron Mitchell’s Joe “Exotic” Schreibvogel in Joe Exotic (working title), Peacock’s limited series based on the Wondery podcast.
Scott Brown was caught up in a hilarious on-air blooper to mark his Parkhead send off. The skipper will play his last game for the club this week ahead of his move to Aberdeen as a player-coach under Stephen Glass.
Céline Dion, Carrie Underwood, Katy Perry and Luke Bryan are heading to Las Vegas!ET has learned that the music superstars will become the founding headliners at the Strip’s highly anticipated Resorts World Las Vegas, which opens its doors on June 24.
J. Cole is reportedly set to undergo a surprising career change, being the latest team member for African basketball team, the Rwanda Patriots.ESPN reports that Cole is currently completing a two-week quarantine in Rwanda in order to compete in the Basketball Africa League, with an official announcement of his signing to come this Thursday (May 13).
Steve McQueen will further cement his creative partnership with the BBC by co-directing a documentary series on three dramatic events in the UK in 1981 that defined race relations for a generation.
Apple TV+ announced that The Me You Can’t See, a multi-part documentary series from Oprah Winfrey and Prince Harry on the current state of mental health and emotional well-being, will premiere on May 21.
Naman Ramachandran “The Me You Can’t See,” the mental health documentary series from Oprah Winfrey and Prince Harry, will premiere May 21 on Apple TV Plus.In the series, co-creators and executive producers Winfrey and Harry guide discussions about mental health and emotional well-being while opening up about their own mental health journeys and struggles.
Elsa Keslassy International CorrespondentTwo years after a devastating fire ripped through the Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris, French producer Christine Le Goff (“Sacred Space”) is preparing an ambitious three-part documentary series exploring how the 800-year-old landmark will be reconstructed and how it was originally built.Titled “Raising Notre-Dame,” the documentary series was commissioned from Paris-based banner ZED by Arte and is being directed by Vincent Amouroux, whose credits include
NEW YORK -- The voice on the phone is steady and clear. “It is unnatural to kill anything,” the man says.