Mary J. Blige is practicing more self-love amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
20.08.2020 - 20:59 / etonline.com
Freeform's was borne out of a conversation. It was the end of April -- more than a month into quarantine — and executive producer was preparing for the third season of in the virtual writers' room when she and her manager,, had a frank discussion about dating during quarantine.
Through that conversation, Meisinger shared that she had begun seeing someone she met virtually. The wheels started turning in Johnson's head.«Not just people looking for love because they're lonely, but people that are
.Mary J. Blige is practicing more self-love amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Thomas Rhett is reflecting on what he describes as the “rougher” moments in his marriage to Lauren Akins.
(CNN)The first days and weeks of quarantine seem so far away now. But we're reminded of how weird they felt in "Love in the Time of Corona," a new Freeform and Hulu series that takes us into the love lives of four different households during the pandemic.
K-pop fans were out in full force to welcome BLACKPINK’s new collaboration with Selena Gomez when it dropped at midnight ET on Thursday.
Mika has announced he will be live-streaming an ‘I Love Beirut’ benefit concert on Saturday September 19.He revealed his plans for the performance a few days ago on social media, with tickets going on sale yesterday (August 24).
Jem Aswad Senior Music EditorLebanese-British singer-songwriter Mika will stage a livestreamed concert to raise funds and awareness for relief in the wake of the explosion in Beirut last month that killed more than 200 people and devastated a large area in the country’s capital.His “I Love Beirut” benefit concert will take place on Saturday 19 September and will be live-streamed across four time zones via YouTube.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticIt only took a few weeks of social distancing to make the world that existed before COVID-19 feel absurdly out of reach. After building new routines of donning face masks and frantically wiping down precious groceries, a reality with dive bars, concerts and dinner parties becomes more and more abstract, not to mention painful to recall.
ITV are planning to fix that next month as Love Island USA series two arrives onto our screens.
As some showrunners continue to grapple with the decision to write the coronavirus pandemic into their series, Joanna Johnson took a different approach: writing a new series about the pandemic. Freeform's Love in the Time of Corona is a four-episode miniseries about the struggles of connecting with other people in a time where safety mandates six feet of separation.
Love in the Time of Corona, many were skeptical about whether it could (or frankly should) pull it off.
Netflix has another rom-com coming our way.
Love Island in 2017. She previously had a reality show with ex-boyfriend Chris Hughes, who she met on the ITV2 dating show, called Crackin' On.The former Motorsport Grid Girl from Surrey moved to Manchester to be with Bradley, 26, last year.
coronavirus pandemic.“On a global level, this is such a unique moment for everyone,” Robinson, 32, told The Post. “We wanted to be able to time-capsule it, in a way.
Love in the Time of Corona, found inspiration in the new circumstances and created an interesting workaround to kept everyone safe while filming pushed forward. It was a gargantuan task, but here's how this limited-series got the cameras rolling when everything else in Hollywood was still on lockdown.The first concept for the show was introduced to showrunner Joanna Johnson soon after her other project, Good Trouble, shutdown production in March.
NEW YORK -- From grappling with big life decisions to a marriage on the brink, a new four-part miniseries tackles relationship struggles during the COVID-19 pandemic. Leslie Odom Jr.
Lovecraft Country got the week off to a great start, but if a different kind of love is more your thing, Freeform's Love in the Time of Corona is a refreshing quarantine experiment about how we're all dealing with our lockdowns.
Joaquin Castro Just over a year ago, a gunman drove more than 600 miles to shoot and kill people because he viewed Latinos, who have lived in El Paso long before the U.S. was even founded, as invaders.