By Tom Tapp
30.03.2020 - 19:55 / variety.com
For David France, the chaos surrounding the coronavirus pandemic is depressingly familiar.
When he observes the disaster playing out in New York and other parts of the U.S., the journalist and filmmaker behind the 2012 documentary “How to Survive a Plague” is reminded of the bureaucratic incompetence and overwhelmed healthcare system that led to critical failures in the country’s response to AIDS. It’s a crisis that will lead to suffering and death, and one that France thinks could fundamentally
Celebrity hairdresser Roberto Novo’s dog days of the coronavirus lockdown are a little less lonely now.
By Elsa Keslassy
Modern Paris is coming to life in Netflix’s new musical drama “The Eddy”.
A Dumfries great-grandmother has beaten the odds to survive coronavirus.
Shailene Woodley is getting really real about an apparently major health scare that nearly completely derailed her career — and took her life.
By Elsa Keslassy
BCE is sweeping the nation. Sorry, you don't know what BCE stands for? Around E! News, it's Big Cuomo Energy, as we've now come to think of New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo's press briefings as Coffee With a Cuomo and Chris Cuomo's CNN show Cuomo Prime Time as Cocktail with a Cuomo, with both serving as daily occurrences we look forward to as we continue to practice social distancing amid the coronavirus.
The novel coronavirus has claimed yet another life.
Mariah Carey was the second-to-last performer to close the Fox Presents the iHeart Living Room Concert for America on Sunday night (March 29) with one of her many classics, "Always Be My Baby."
Mariah Carey did what no one else could do during Elton John’s Living Room Concert for America.
Prince Albert II is not here for finger-pointing. After some people blamed him for Prince Charles’ positive coronavirus diagnosis, the Monacan royal took a moment to set the record straight.
While The Circle—Netflix’s truly wild popularity contest where contestants judge each other by social media presence alone—literally just finished on January 15, but the general internet has been dying for more. Well, now you can all get hyped ~officially~ because Netflix has renewed the show for two more seasons. If you haven’t watched, be warned—spoilers ahead.
Richard S. Kline, an Emmy-nominated producer and director of news and game shows, died Saturday in Connecticut following a long illness, his wife Annabelle tells The Hollywood Reporter.