Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest have been busy hosting their show while under quarantine. Fans were extremely worried about Ryan Seacrest and some even thought he suffered a stroke when he appeared life, following the American Idol finale.
12.05.2020 - 18:39 / hollywoodreporter.com
Those who come to TNT's Snowpiercer as fans of either Bong Joon Ho's ambitious feature film or the original French graphic novel Le Transperceneige are likely to be at least somewhat disappointed by this tonally uneven, narratively confusing TV adaptation.
However, if you've read about the years-spanning, pilot-scrapping, network-hopping production history of Snowpiercer and arethereforeexpecting — apologies here — a trainwreck worthy of "off the rails" puns, disappointment will be yours as
.Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest have been busy hosting their show while under quarantine. Fans were extremely worried about Ryan Seacrest and some even thought he suffered a stroke when he appeared life, following the American Idol finale.
Kelly Ripa, 49, doesn’t mind showing off her TikTok dance moves for the world on Live with Kelly and Ryan, but it turns out her daughter Lola, 18, doesn’t feel the same way! The talk show host spoke with her co-host Ryan Seacrest, 45, about how Lola “heckled” her when she helped her film a TikTok dance sequence that both she and Ryan took part in for the May 29 “virtual prom” episode of their show and explained that her “offspring” didn’t want her to get the popular app for herself.
In 2010, Chilean writer-director Raúl Ruiz debuted his sumptuous, epic romance “Mysteries of Lisbon” at the Toronto International Film Festival. A month later, it debuted on French television in six 55-minute chapters (the feature version is significantly shorter, but four-and-a-half hours is still no walk in the park).
On Friday’s at-home edition of “Live With Kelly And Ryan”, Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest saluted America’s high school graduates, who missed out on the opportunity to go to prom due to the pandemic.
Kelly Ripa will take flack from America, but from her own daughter? That's a no. On Friday's remote episode of Live With Kelly and Ryan, the famed co-hosts helped high school graduates, who lost out on going to prom this year as a result of the coronavirus pandemic, celebrate virtually with a prom-themed show. For part of Friday's episode, Kelly and Ryan Seacrest joined TikTok star Addison Rae to do a TikTok dance, featuring many other teens.
Kelly Ripa and Ryan Seacrest just won #ThrowbackThursday. The Live With Kelly and Ryan co-hosts are celebrating prom this year with a very special treat.
In a recent piece for The New Yorker, Bill Buford movingly recounts the kind of romantic apprenticeship most aspiring chefs imagine when they hear the word "stage": Having moved to Lyon to absorb French food culture, the American humbly offered himself as a student hoping to learn from the crusty character who made the town's best bread. A skill was passed from master to learner, a friendship developed, and a new evangelist for the region's traditions was born.
Kelly Ripa has been suffering from a stye in her eye for weeks, but you wouldn’t know it.
Kelly Ripa was just 20 years old when she landed the role of Hayley Vaughan on the ABC soap opera "All My Children" — and it changed her life forever. Because of the role, Ripa, 49, made a name for herself in the industry and also met her husband, Mark Consuelos, on the set of the iconic daytime series.
Two sets of newcomers alight upon the New France settlement of Wobik at the start of Nat Geo's colonial-era drama Barkskins. "Here, you can be whoever you want," promises Rene Sel (Christian Cooke), a young-ish man who has signed up for three years of indentured servitude and what he hopes will be a wide-open future thereafter.
By Dino-Ray Ramos
Perspective! Kelly Ripa has no time for criticism about her looks right now.
After exploding on the awards season in late 2019, Sam Mendes’ stunning WWI epic 1917 makes its way to the home formats. Visually stunning, stunningly stage, and supremely acted by all involved, the film is deserved of all of its plaudits.
No, did not just pull off what always wanted to do: Kill off its marquee star — originally supposed to be Michael Keaton before Matthew Fox took over the role — at the end of the pilot episode. But showrunner Graeme Manson’s adaptation of Bong Joon-ho’s 2013 cult classic and the 1982 French graphic novel did just shake things up at the front of the train in a major way.
I fondly recall seeing Snowpiercer in the theater. Because I had just become a dad, escapes from the house were few and far between, and the theater was packed and buzzing from the anticipation of seeing the newest and first English-language film from Bong Joon Ho, who had hit some international notoriety many years prior after his monster movie The Host and would go on to become an Oscar-winner for his film Parasite.
The long-awaited TV adaptation of is finally here. The stylized sci-fi saga based on the French graphic novel and Bong Joon-ho’s 2013 film tells a similar story about the remains of humanity living aboard a perpetually moving train after the world has become a frozen wasteland.