Hoda Kotb says her 50s are some of the best years of her life. Actually, scratch that.
19.01.2020 - 03:56 / tvguide.com
Manhunt: Deadly Games, Spectrum Originals' upcoming anthology series about the 1996 bombing in Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park, is about an event that happened nearly 25 years ago, but one that's still tremendously relevant and resonant today, the cast and producers said Saturday at the Television Critics Association winter press tour.
The second season of the Manhunt anthology series tells the story of the same historical event depicted in the contemporaneous Clint Eastwood film Richard
Hoda Kotb says her 50s are some of the best years of her life. Actually, scratch that.
Tucked away on the sixth floor of the New York City's renowned 30 Rockefeller Center is a no judgement zone: Hoda Kotb and Jenna Bush Hager's studio.
Today's Peak TV snapshot: The first thing I'm going to actually recommend from Spectrum Originals — a service many viewers don't even have the option to receive — is a limited series developed for another cable network that eventually dropped out of the scripted programming rat race; it's a 10-episode take on a story you may already have chosen to skip when it was a box office disappointment in big-screen form less than two months ago.Spectrum's Manhunt: Deadly Games has a very bad title, is
Following his Emmy-nominated breakout role as serial killer Ed Kemper on, Cameron Britton is once again playing a real-life person in trouble with the law. This time, however, he’s taking on the story of Richard Jewell, who was wrongfully accused of being responsible for the deadly 1996 Centennial Olympic Park bombing, on, season two of the Spectrum Original anthology series .
By Antonia Blyth
Richard Plepler has hopped on the podcast train. The former HBO chief executive has invested in Luminary Media, a podcast-subscription service, and taken a seat on its board.
89-year-old Hollywood filmmaking icon Clint Eastwood shows no signs of slowing down with his latest docu-drama taking a look at a man thrust into the middle of a media storm.
Clint Eastwood has no plans to retire as a director – as he wants to keep making movies into his 90s.
In the latest episode of My Billboard Moment, Judah & the Lion recall how it felt when their song “Take It All Back” topped the Alternative Songs chart in 2017, and how that moment left them with a “growing awareness” of what it meant for their career.Speaking with Billboard, banjo player and vocalist Nate Zuercher admits that at the time, the trio were a little bit unaware as to what the chart feat meant.“We were very grateful,” he explains.
Appeals court officials have shot down Harvey Weinstein’s last-minute motion to move his rape trial out of New York City.
TV, film and theater actor William Bogert, who appeared in a recurring role on 1980s sitcom “Small Wonder” and in films such as “War Games,” died Jan. 12 in New York. He was 83.
Former President Bill Clinton and his wife, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, are opening up for a new documentary series.
By Diane Haithman
Richard Russell, the producer and musician who runs XL Recordings, has announced a new memoir about the three-decade history of the label. It’s called Liberation Through Hearing and it’s out April 2 via music book publishing house White Rabbit. The book is set to tell the story of Russell’s early years, his production work with Bobby Womack and Gil Scott-Heron, his own work as Everything Is Recorded, and more.
By Denise Petski
The second weekend of 2020 made for a downbeat period of moviegoing at multiplexes throughout China, with local holdover releases taking the top three spots at the box office.New Classic Media's romantic comedy Adoringscored first with $8.8 million, according to Artisan Gateway, a box office tracking company. After two weekends, the film has earned $81.3 million.