Country music duo Big & Rich have released a new coronavirus-themed single encouraging everybody to “Stay Home”.
16.03.2020 - 20:47 / variety.com
The nation’s biggest news networks are being swept along by the very headlines they’re trying to deliver.
Two of the biggest TV-news operations have had to make noticeable changes to their most important programs and redirect personnel behind the scenes in the earliest days of America’s coronavirus crisis, even as those staffers come under increasing pressure to keep America informed about the latest developments around the contagion.
NBC News took “Today” regulars Al Roker and Craig Melvin off
Country music duo Big & Rich have released a new coronavirus-themed single encouraging everybody to “Stay Home”.
Jason Hargrove, a bus driver in Detroit, has died from coronavirus, just two weeks after his Facebook video about a passenger coughing on his bus went viral.
Diesel took on the superhero avatar for the film "Bloodshot" to tell the story of a super-soldier Ray, aka the superhero Bloodshot, who is brought back from the dead by a corporation through the use of nanotechnology. It is directed by Dave Wilson.
The Fox News Channel is facing questions about its coverage of the novel coronavirus, which hosts like Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham and Jeanine Pirro initially downplayed as a cudgel to "bludgeon" President Donald Trump politically. But the network's advertisers don't have much to say about the coverage.
Maddox Jolie-Pitt is back stateside. People magazine confirmed that Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s oldest son has returned home early from Seoul, South Korea, where he is a student at Yonsei University.
Producers of Global‘s “Big Brother Canada” are taking some extra precautions on the show during the coronavirus pandemic, and announced some additional measures.
By Anthony D'Alessandro
Pan-European independent music companies trade body IMPALA has established a COVID-19 Task Force to help address the effects of the health crisis on the indie sector right across the Continent.
LOS ANGELES — Movie studios Walt Disney and Universal Pictures said on Thursday they were suspending the release of box office data because of the closure of movie theaters in multiple countries in a bid to contain the coronavirus.