TV star Nicky Campbell has urged prosecutors to take action against a former teacher accused of brutalising him as a boy.
22.06.2023 - 04:37 / deadline.com
Voting for the 2023 Primetime Emmy Awards closes this coming Monday, June 26. Nominations for the 2023 Primetime Emmy Awards will be announced July 14. Beyond that, things are very much in flux.
The Television Academy and Fox, which is carrying this year’s ceremony, have been discussing contingencies amid a writers strike which is in its 51st day. Writers play a key part of the Emmy ceremony, and the show also requires a production lead time, so the consensus is that, if there is no resolution to the work stoppage in sight by end of July or early August, the Emmys, currently scheduled for Sept. 18, will have to be postponed.
That is real possibility as AMPTP is still negotiating with SAG-AFTRA, with talks looking to go down to the wire on the Jun 30 deadline and maybe beyond if negotiations are extended as rumored. That would send writers and studios back to the negotiating table in mid-July at the earliest, so a deal by beginning of August is not very realistic.
This is a big year for the Primetime Emmys which mark their 75th anniversary so not going through with a ceremony celebrating the awards’ milestone does not seem likely, at least for now. The Daytime Emmys, which are hitting a 50th milestone this year, were supposed to air on CBS last week but were postponed due to the strike. No new date has been set.
As for when the Primetime Emmys show would air if postponed, November is considered likely. January also is being considered, I hear. (that possibility was reported by NYT today) However, a 2024 date is less likely as that would make for a 6+ month gap between nominations and awards ceremony and a year and a half from the time some of the nominated seasons of TV shows had aired.
The Primetime Emmys were
TV star Nicky Campbell has urged prosecutors to take action against a former teacher accused of brutalising him as a boy.
A warning has been issued that supplies of Irn-Bru could “fizzle out” this summer as workers have voted to strike in a row over pay.
A mum has gone viral on TikTok after she shared a hilarious school photo of her daughter which turned out to be much ruder than she expected
Thousands of music fans will be getting ready to head to Glasgow Green this weekend for TRNSMT Festival 2023.
A tax dodging pimp who posed as a plumber to con HMRC into paying him nearly £10,000 while he was running a string of Romanian prostitutes across Dundee has been warned he is facing jail.
A mum-of-two who is believes she is the ' world's most tattooed person ' has been banned from her local pub and school over her inkings.
Scotland's water scarcity has worsened to the degree that four more areas face "critically" low levels, warns a government agency.
Deadline’s Strike Talk podcast is now in its ninth week, coming at a critical day with the expiration of the SAG-AFTRA contract. Deadline has revealed a high likelihood that the union agrees to kick the can down the road and beyond the holidays, but the tension is growing after more than 1000 major actors signed a solidarity letter that they are serious and will go on strike. That development would put every part of Hollywood in a deep sleep, because there will be no one to make projects, or promote the ones that are done. The Emmys also are threatened.
With the news that SAG/AMPTP negotiations could push into next week, international acting unions are for the most part taking a cautious approach to supporting a potential actors strike.
By now, you might have seen that Netflix is adding the 1997 blockbuster movie Titanic back to the streaming service on July 1. The film stars Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet.
June 30 2023 marks the end of the contract of David de Gea. A bigger Manchester United-related story is brewing on that date than De Gea's future.
Carole Horst “Top Chef” last won an Emmy in the competition category in 2010 (it won an editing Emmy in 2008) but it’s been shut out of wins for too many years. Until “RuPaul’s Drag Race” took over the reality competition category, trophies tended to go to the most familiar — albeit well-crafted options — rather than the best shows. Now, reality competition is, well, super competitive. Last year’s winner, “Lizzo’s Watch Out for the Big Grrrls,” was an empowering and joyful series that captured the mood of America, while nominees such as “Nailed It!,” and perpetual nominees “The Voice,” “The Amazing Race” and “RuPaul’s Drag Race” crowd out worthies such as “Making the Cut,” “Next in Fashion,” “American Ninja Warrior,” “Dancing With the Stars,” “America’s Got Talent” and any number of Gordon Ramsay cooking series. (For that matter, many Food Network series fail to make the cut as well.)
Selome Hailu At the end of Boots Riley’s 2018 debut feature, “Sorry to Bother You,” Cassius (LaKeith Stanfield) gets stretched and mutilated beyond recognition until he becomes a horse — all in service of the film’s cutting narrative about how capitalism is crushing us all. In “I’m a Virgo,” Riley’s new Amazon Prime Video series, that stretching comes before the story begins: 19-year-old Cootie (Jharrel Jerome) is 13 feet tall, and he ends up under attack when the city of Oakland learns about the giant living in its backyard — again, all in service of a cutting narrative about how capitalism is crushing us all. “I believe that people should democratically control the wealth that we create with our labor,” says Riley, 52. The writer-director has identified as a communist since before he gained recognition for founding the political hip-hop group the Coup in 1991. “How do you get the working class to organize together? Through them understanding where their power is, and under capitalism, our power is in the withholding of labor. There needs to be a mass, militant, radical labor movement that turns more radical as it goes on, until the people actually take over the places that they work and change the nature of society.”
will exit next week.Rivera posted on Twitter Friday that he had spoken to Brian Kilmeade on his WABC radio show and said, “I am unsure about my next career move & will announce next Friday here on Twitter & Live on @TheFive whether I stay with Fox or do something else, with your support.”The correspondent for the conservative news network, who was recruited by founder Roger Ailes in 2001, said June 30 will be his last appearance on the talk show.While the post generated a few inevitable references to his ill-fated 1986 live excavation of Al Capone’s vault, most of the comments were positive.Some followers suggested that the social media platform may be all the veteran journalist needs. “5 to 10 minutes every couple of days on Twitter would be great,” suggested Thomas Fabick, who identifies himself as a retired architect.
The US Coast Guard has said a "debris field" has been found within the search area for the missing Titan submersible.
Broadcaster Nicky Campbell has hit out at delays in bringing an alleged abuser at his former school to justice while he lives in luxury.
Morgan Wallen‘s son Indigo was bitten on the face by his mother’s dog — and now, the pooch is being rehomed elsewhere.
Metrolink staff have accepted a pay deal, ending a dispute which almost led to tram strikes during Parklife festival and other major events earlier this month. Workers will now get a pay rise of 6.5 pc as well as a £1,000 one-off payment.
Owners across the UK face being hit with a fine for not adding a significant detail to their dog's collar.
The war within the NHS wears on, as strikes pass the sixth month mark. Paramedics, nurses, physiotherapists, hospital staff have all walked out over the course of the last year.