Manchester Day will shine a spotlight on the climate emergency this year with an Our Planet, Our City theme for this year's parade.
17.01.2020 - 03:21 / deadline.com
By Dominic Patten
Senior Editor, Legal & TV Critic
“With 190 days to go to Tokyo, we can proudly say, let the games begin,” declared Mike Tirico today at the Peacock Investors Day in the most streamlined offering from the new additions to the streaming wars so far.
The competition was clearly more than the Summer Games of the XXXII Olympiad, if you know what I mean? Aiming for 30 to 35 “active accounts” by 2024 for revenue of $2.5 billion, according head honcho Matt Strauss, Peacock
Manchester Day will shine a spotlight on the climate emergency this year with an Our Planet, Our City theme for this year's parade.
Peaches the pug, whose love of cheese and crisps has left her struggling on walks, is hoping to shed the pounds by signing up for the UK’s largest pet slimming competition – PDSA Pet Fit Club.
The Japanese film “37 Seconds” is deceptively delicate and quietly tough. Not unlike its protagonist.
Mxmtoon is giving her fans what they want. Following the release of her latest single "Fever Dream," she's officially announcing a brand new tour.
Another bite of ‘Future Nostalgia’ is on the way.
Tokyo Vanity, 25, looks fitter than ever — and not because of her clothes! The Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta star revealed before and after photos documenting her weight loss to Instagram fans on Jan. 16, cheekily captioning her progress pictures, “Haters gonna say it’s cause it got black on.” We know, though, that her black jumpsuit in the picture had nothing to do with her figure — rather, Tokyo has been putting in hard work in the gym.
With several streaming services having already been at your disposal (Netflix, Hulu, CBS All Access) for years and a slew of high-profile options competing for your wallet (Apple TV+, Disney+), it's almost impossible to subscribe to everythingon top of a cable bill. So, which streaming services are right for you?
Peacock, NBC's official streaming service, is delivering a special treat for fans of Dick Wolf's iconic procedural shows. Back episodes of Wolf's Law & Order franchise, including Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, along with Chicago Med, Chicago Fire, and Chicago P.D. will be available to stream on the service when it launches nationwide on July 15. As it stands, fans can only catch episodes from seasons currently airing via the NBC website and Hulu.
Ch-ching! The original “Law & Order” is finally make its streaming debut later this year on NBCUniversal’s Peacock.
By Nellie Andreeva
By Erik Pedersen
Wolfgang Puck is cooking up a new series at HBO Max.
Go, Diego, go!
The visionary stickman passed away on Tuesday