President Donald Trump‘s tax returns are not immune from legal proceedings, the Supreme Court just ruled.
20.06.2020 - 00:03 / foxnews.com
American television is going through a game show boom. Sure, we generally see an influx of fun and games permeating our living rooms each year as the summer months roll around, but this year seems to have presented us with more bizarre game shows in the vein of what international viewers may be used to in their home countries.
Suffice to say Netflix’s newest offering, “Floor is Lava,” fits right into that rambunctious category and for good reason. The new reality series from the streaming giant
.President Donald Trump‘s tax returns are not immune from legal proceedings, the Supreme Court just ruled.
The New York Times' landmark 1619 Project magazine issue, which examined the impact of slavery on American history, is headed to the big and small screen. Times staff writer Nikole Hannah-Jones, who created The 1619 Project, and Oprah Winfrey are teaming with Lionsgate to develop The New York Times Magazine issue and the podcast 1619 into multiple feature films, TV series, documentaries and other cross-platform content for a global audience.
Oprah Winfrey is bringing a new project to film and television.
Dave McNary Film ReporterOprah Winfrey, The New York Times and Lionsgate are partnering on a series of feature films and television shows based on “The 1619 Project.”The collaboration was announced Wednesday, nearly a year after the Times debuted “The 1619 Project” series to re-examine the legacy of slavery in the United States on the 400th anniversary of the first Africans’ arrival in Virginia.
Also Read: NY Times Wins 3 Pulitzer Prizes, Including for Nikole Hannah-Jones' 1619 Project“The 1619 Project” was a landmark undertaking for the Times that connected the centrality of slavery in history with an unflinching account of the brutal racism that endures in so many aspects of American life today.
featured in its six new episodes — a mere day after the show’s Netflix revival, which premiered last Wednesday.“It’s been 24 hours,” UM’s executive producer Terry Dunn Meurer told USA Today, adding that he promises to pass the credible tips “on to the appropriate authorities.” Among the useable tips was info pertaining to alleged suicide victim Rey Rivera and Alonzo Brooks, whose body was discovered in a creek after the 23-year-old attended a party in Kansas.
Denise Petski Senior Managing EditorEXCLUSIVE: Fox has put in development Free Will, a one-hour family drama from writer Kirk A. Moore (American Crime, 13 Reasons Why) and Will Packer Media.
Deadline, the series is currently called Swipe Swap and it sounds absolutely wild.Swipe Swap has two strangers trading lives. They move into their homes and live the other person’s life.They will go through the other person’s routine as well as interacting with their friends and families in hopes of finding romance in a new city.Um, so the plot of The Holiday then?SJP will only work as an executive producer, through her Pretty Matches Productions, so we won’t see her on camera.
released “A Rainy Day in New York,” starring Timothée Chalamet and Elle Fanning, digitally on June 5 in the U.K. and has set a July 27 home video and DVD release.
Andreas Wiseman International EditorEXCLUSIVE: Endemol Shine India has optioned Damyanti Biswas’s bestselling Indian crime novel You Beneath Your Skin to develop as a multi-part drama series, with all proceeds from the option going towards social enterprises in the author’s native New Delhi.Set in contemporary New Delhi, the multi-strand narrative concerns an Indian-American single mother and her autistic teenage son, whose comfortable middle-class lives are turned upside down by a police