Kane Lim talks all things “Bling Empire” as he appears on Tuesday’s “Ellen DeGeneres Show”.
15.01.2021 - 21:23 / glamour.com
Top Gun, a tradition among the cousins.It’s pretty much the opposite of what Chinese New Year looks for the super rich—if the cast of Bling Empire is any indication, at least. The , which follows a group of wealthy Asians living and socializing in Los Angeles, opens with a dinner party celebrating the Lunar New Year on Rodeo Drive.
Kane Lim talks all things “Bling Empire” as he appears on Tuesday’s “Ellen DeGeneres Show”.
Christine Chiu is owning her status as TV’s newest bad girl.
A new documentary series from Netflix is on its way, and it looks terrifying.
Michael Schneider Variety Editor at LargeThe Television Academy Foundation has unveiled its Diversity and Inclusion Unscripted Internship Program, a new $1 million initiative targeted toward Los Angeles-area college students.The goal is to provide paid internships that might give young people from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds in Southern California an entry into the unscripted TV industry.The program was launched via personal donations from reality TV execs Cris Abrego, Chairman of
, has a lot of people talking—and not all of it is good. The four-episode series centers on Richard Ramirez, the serial killer who terrorized Los Angeles and San Francisco in the 1980s. Ramirez didn't have a certain “type” of target; he murdered young people, old people, women, men, and across races.
Netflix has acquired worldwide rights (with the exception of China) to The Mitchells vs. The Machines from Sony Pictures Animation.The animated comedy, which was previously titled Connected and is now back with its original name, was produced by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller, the creative team behind Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse and The Lego Movie.
Netflix has picked up from Sony Pictures Animation the worldwide rights (excluding China) to “The Mitchells Vs. The Machines,” an animated film that’s produced by Phil Lord and Chris Miller.The film at one point had its title changed to “Connected” by the studio, but it has since gone back to its original title.
Netflix fans have told how they have been left terrified by new series The Night Stalker: The Hunt for a Serial Killer.The series details the hunt for one of America's most evil and infamous serial killers, Richard Ramirez. Satan worshipping Richard went on a murderous rampage in Los Angeles and San Francisco in the 1980s.
It’s been called Selling Sunset meets Crazy Rich Asians and overnight, Bling Empire has become the new must-watch reality show.
Two days after the Los Angeles Public Health Department announced that the much-talked-about U.K. variant of Covid-19, known as B.1.1.7, had been identified in the region, the California Department of Public Health revealed that another lesser-known strain had been circulating in the county as well.
Virgin River, and who can blame them? The romance series is an adaptation of a book series by author Robyn Carr and has shades of a Hallmark movie (in a good way!), so it's great for fans of romance novels.
Bling Empire draws you in with its Crazy Rich Asians hook, but it’s the heart behind the show — the friendships, feuds and romances of a group of Los Angeles-based pals — that makes you stick around through all eight episodes, which we can only assume led you here, to this article.
Night Stalker’s true story—which is pretty scary due to its subject matter but, unlike the show, probably won’t keep you up tonight. Maybe.
What happens when Crazy Rich Asians meets The Real Housewives? Netflix’s Bling Empire. The new reality show follows a group of Asian and Asian American friends and enemies living their very lavish lives in Los Angeles. Between shopping sprees and fabulous parties, the group wastes no time before getting into the drama.
Jennifer Garner rocks a hot pink face mask during a walk around her neighborhood in Los Angeles on Monday (January 11).