Dawn Ward has updated about her daughter's progress after she was injured in a car accident.
13.01.2020 - 21:06 / variety.com
Showtime has renewed “The L Word: Generation Q” and “Work in Progress” each for a second season.
Both of these series will deliver 10-episode sophomore seasons.
“The L Word: Generation Q,” which currently airs on the premium cabler Sundays at 10 p.m. and will conclude its first season on Jan. 26, follows the intermingled lives of Bette Porter (Jennifer Beals), Shane McCutcheon (Katherine Moennig) and Alice Pieszecki (Leisha Hailey) from the original “The L Word” drama series that aired from
Dawn Ward has updated about her daughter's progress after she was injured in a car accident.
Johnny Flynn has been cast opposite Andrew Scott in the upcoming Showtime series based on Patricia Highsmith’s Tom Ripley novels.
By Jake Kanter
The L Word: Generation Q has been renewed for a second season.
Though the network will not air live coverage during the election cycle, Showtime still very much so intends to have its finger on the political pulse, doubling its dose of “The Circus” during this presidential election year.
By Peter White
By Peter White
Showtime has renewed “Shameless” for an 11th and final season.
Showtime’s upcoming Documentary Films slate includes “Kingdom of Silence,” “The Kingmaker,” “The Longest War” and “Love Fraud,” “The Trade” the premium cabler announced Monday.
More The L Word: Generation Q episodes are headed your way. During the Television Critics Association's winter press tour on Monday, Showtime's President of Entertainment Jana Winograde announced that The L Word spin-off has been renewed for a 10-episode second season.
He left the Corrie cobbles in 2018 after receiving wide praise for his role as Aidan Connor and now Shayne Ward is treading the boards for the first time in a play.
New Orleans rapper and bounce music icon 5th Ward Weebie has died, CNN and The Times-Picayune/The New Orleans Advocate report. Weebie’s publicist Johnathan Thomas told CNN that the artist had a “heart attack which turned into emergency heart surgery and ultimately heart failure.” 5th Ward Weebie was 42 years old. When reached for comment by Pitchfork, Thomas provided the following statement on Weebie’s death:
5th Ward Weebie, the New Orleans rapper who had a hand in bringing the local sound of bounce music to the world, has died after complications from a ruptured artery. He was 42. A representative confirmed the rapper's passing to WWLTV on Thursday.