Zheng Shuang is facing an enormous fine.
12.08.2021 - 03:09 / deadline.com
Muhammad Ali called himself the greatest, and filmmaker Ken Burns, director of the upcoming PBS documentary series about the boxing champion, “global icon and inspiration,” is not one to disagree.
“He comes to us, first and foremost, as the greatest athlete perhaps of all time, certainly of the 20th century, and as the greatest boxer,” Burns noted during the PBS TCA presentation Wednesday. “It is not a bad thing to die the most beloved person on your planet. And he did.”
The four-part, eight-hour
Zheng Shuang is facing an enormous fine.
Not today, mommy-shamers!
Six documentary films remain in the running for the third annual Library of Congress Lavine/Ken Burns Prize for Film, the richest award in nonfiction filmmaking.
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A Chipotle employee might need to think about getting another job soon after an unfortunate — and downright scary — incident was caught on video and posted to Facebook.
Lizzo is opening up to the world after some unkind comments starting popping up regarding the release of her new single, Rumors.
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[Warning: Potentially Triggering Content]
EXCLUSIVE: Oscar and Emmy Award-nominated POV Shorts, from American Documentary, is set to premiere its fourth season via PBS and streaming at POV.org on Sept. 6. This season will feature 13 new diverse, short nonfiction films across 7 episodes tackling the complexities of family, identity, and community.
LOS ANGELES -- PBS has fallen short on some aspects of diversity and is taking steps toward comprehensive change to be overseen by a new executive hired for the task, CEO and President Paula Kerger said.While the measures took into account allegations that PBS favors white male filmmaker Ken Burns (“The Civil War,” “Baseball”) and slights viewers of color, Kerger said, they emerged from a deeper reappraisal prompted by the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer in 2020.“I think
previous response denying the criticism laid against PBS “did not fully appreciate” the situation, but, through conversations with filmmakers and internally at PBS, she eventually grew to realize “that there are areas where we’re not as strong as we could be.”PBS recently came under fire for allotting a disproportionate amount of its airtime and funding to programs from Ken Burns.
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Jennifer Aniston is taking a stand.
Jennifer Aniston is doubling down on her stance about the coronavirus vaccine. The "Friends" actress recently admitted she's had to cut ties with some friends who "refused" or "did not disclose" their coronavirus vaccination status. The 52-year-old's revelation was met with backlash, and on Thursday, she brought some attention to the questions surrounding her decision on her Instagram Stories.
Jennifer Aniston received backlash after announcing her decision to cut her friends who are anti-vaxxers out of her life and now she has faced her critics head-on.
Jennifer Aniston, 52, is facing backlash after revealing she has been cutting out friends from her life who have refused to get vaccinated against COVID-19. But now, she’s clapping back and revealing why she made that decision.