New York's daily toll of coronavirus deaths hit its lowest point in more than two weeks, but Gov. Andrew Cuomo warned Saturday that the state isn't ready to ease up on shutdowns of schools, businesses and gatherings.
31.03.2020 - 23:45 / abcnews.go.com
NEW YORK -- Florida Sen. Marco Rubio, pressed to identify media figures that he said expressed “glee” at Americans getting coronavirus, has cited an editorial cartoonist, a magazine writer, an online tech publication and an online editor.
The Republican senator took heat for a tweet over the weekend that said some media members “can't contain their delight” at reports that the United States had surpassed China in the number of coronavirus cases.
He was criticized for using the vague term “some
New York's daily toll of coronavirus deaths hit its lowest point in more than two weeks, but Gov. Andrew Cuomo warned Saturday that the state isn't ready to ease up on shutdowns of schools, businesses and gatherings.
It only takes a few minutes for ingenious show runner Gloria Calderon Kellett to remind LGBT audiences why they fell in love with the reboot of “One Day at a Time.”
Almost a century before the recent, wildly popular Hilma af Klint retrospective at New York's Guggenheim, the Swedish artist imagined a spiraling white temple, not unlike that Manhattan landmark, as the home for her paintings. Most of what she envisioned for her art was denied her during her lifetime, but af Klint, ever prescient and prolific, understood her work's power and importance and, planning for posterity, she managed, in a way, to have the last laugh.
[Note: In the wake ofthe Tribeca festival's postponement this year,The Hollywood Reporteris reviewing select entries that elected to premiere digitally.] Israeli director Eytan Fox, who landed on the map with his 2002 gay military romance, Yossi & Jagger, brings sensitivity, restraint and slow-burn sensuality to a story of cross-generational emotional awakening in Sublet.
By Denise Petski
The first thing people will talk about when it comes to Penny Dreadful: City of Angels is its title. The new Showtime drama, premiering April 26, isn't a revival or a spin-off of Penny Dreadful, and it isn't exactly a new chapter in an American Horror Story-type anthology, although if series creator John Logan wants to go in that direction, he's got my blessing.
We were treated to a rare sight in the Season 10 premiere of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills. All of the 90210 ladies actually got along during their girls' trip to New York Fashion Week without even an ounce of drama during the vacay (clip above).
Kelly Ripa has worn many hats in her lifetime. Aside from her tv hosting duties, Ripa also acts and produces, and she even got her start as a dancer on "Dance Party USA" -- not to mention she's a mother of three.
Twelve-year-old Abe has a background you can only find in a city as culturally vibrant as New York.
The Inter-American Court of Human Rights has issued a landmark ruling that says Peru is responsible for the rape and torture of a transgender woman.
America's opioid crisis would seem too dire a subject to receive shallow cinematic treatment. So it's ironic, then, that Spencer T.
Crazy Rich Asians may have been named after (a tiny minority of) Asians in Asia, but it likely became so widely embraced by Asian Americans because it acknowledged us as a group distinct from our ethnic counterparts on the other side of the Pacific. Director Jon M.
'Master of None' producer Alan Yang reveals insights into his own upbringing, but falls short of fully capturing his immigrant father's experience, in this intimate drama now available on Netflix.
The body count nearly matches the cast list in this bloody but inventive festival favorite from first-time Russian director Kirill Sokolov.
Jackie Chan and Arnold Schwarzenegger share the screen for the first time in the utterly bonkers The Iron Mask.
NEW YORK -- Quibi may specialize in small, bite-sized videos, but its volume of shows is large. The media platform launches Monday with 175 new original shows — everything from scripted series, comedic diversions, deep dramas and celebrity fluff. Here's a look at some of the notable and less notable shows.
The pact at the heart of Run, the new HBO comedy-thriller, is dizzyingly romantic, until you think about it for half a second. Text "RUN," promised teenage college sweethearts Ruby (Merritt Wever) and Billy (Domhnall Gleeson), and if the other replies in kind, they'll drop everything in their lives to meet each other on a train departing from New York's Grand Central Station.
Last spring, the White House and the Dow Jones were telling people the American economy was stronger than ever. Meanwhile, broadcast networks were in development on a bevy of new sitcoms based on the premise that every extended family is just one medical bill or questionable investment away from being forced to live under one roof.