Mindy Kaling is giving fans a very rare glimpse of her two kids!
11.11.2021 - 19:49 / variety.com
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticEvery time I watch a new show that’s ostensibly about high schoolers but stars thirty year-olds going through twentysomething drama, I wonder why there aren’t there more TV shows set in college. It’s a contained setting that allows for a cast as sprawling or tightknit as need be.
Mindy Kaling is giving fans a very rare glimpse of her two kids!
Mindy Kaling is giving the world a glimpse of a part of life that she usually keeps close to the vest. On Thanksgiving, the actress-producer, 42, shared to Instagram a rare photo of her daughter, Katherine Swati, 3, and son Spencer Avu, 1, as the eldest child pushed her baby brother in a stroller during a sunset beach outing.
Holiday love! Mindy Kaling celebrated Thanksgiving with the two people she admires most: her 3-year-old daughter, Katherine, and 14-month-old son, Spencer.
By Mindy Kaling's new HBO Max series is a hilarious—and accurate—story about sex, drinking, and not turning in problem sets on time. By Such a cutie!By Brooke Shields breaks down her favorite wardrobes and costumes from her appearances on TV and film. She talks about wearing true vintage clothing as her wardrobe for her first role at 12-years-old.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticFor more than a decade, Jeremy Renner’s Clint Barton, aka “Hawkeye,” has been the odd man out in the Avengers squad. Now, he’s getting his own television series that both eschews the straightforward superhero script and looks exactly like what you’d expect from the Marvel machine.Unlike most of his peers, Clint has zero superhero powers to speak of beyond an uncanny ability to hit a mark with his bow and arrow.
Mindy Kaling stopped by “The Kelly Clarkson Show” for some cocktails and gossip about “sexy men.”
The Sex Lives of College Girls understands this. Our heroines go to frat parties and emerge depressed, their sweaters saturated with pumpkin ale.
Welcome to campus! Mindy Kaling has a slew of TV hits under her belt, and she aims to add another with The Sex Lives of College Girls.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticAs “Tiger King” itself notes in its Season 2 premiere, during an opening sequence delivered with all the melodramatic gravitas of a grim thriller, Netflix dropped “Tiger King” at precisely the right moment for it to become the cultural sensation it did.
NEW YORK -- When Broadway shut down during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, “ Mean Girls” star, Renee Rapp, figured she'd take the opportunity to return home in North Carolina and wait it out — thinking it would be only a few weeks.
Kudos to Mindy Kaling for staying committed to wacky half-hour comedies about women and their dating lives. She knows how her bread is buttered, and it’s by female protagonists of color, white male love interests, an array of pop culture references, and cliched hijinks about what men and women just don’t understand about each other.
There’s a fresh-faced innocence to HBO Max’s “The Sex Lives of College Girls,” despite the shots of shirtless young men and unvarnished dirty talk.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticThe flashback anchoring “Yellowjackets” is a short horror film unto itself. The first episode opens with a girl running barefoot through a frozen forest, whipping through the trees, stumbling through the snow as piercing shrieks and battle cries echo through the mountains.
Mindy Kaling had the support of her longtime friend BJ Novak at the premiere of her new TV series!
The Sex Lives Of College Girls from the genius that is Mindy Kaling, who gifted us Netflix’s Never Have I Ever and The Mindy Project, is almost here and it’s safe to say we’re more than a little excited.WATCH: The Sex Lives Of College Girls trailer The series, which was picked up for 13 episodes, has Mindy at the helm as executive producer and co-writer, alongside Justin Noble known for his work on Brooklyn Nine-Nine.
Mindy Kaling is opening up about why she never shows her children’s faces on her social media.
Caroline Framke Chief TV CriticIn the first season of “Taste the Nation,” Padma Lakshmi tasked herself with visiting immigrant communities across the country, explaining their entire trajectories from country of origin to the United States, and how they and their food adapted to their new home — in 30 minutes or less. It’s a hugely ambitious premise that succeeded more often than not, in large part thanks to Lakshmi’s confident, compassionate brand of hosting.