Before Guy Fieri ever wrapped his mouth around the smoked-wing nachos or Nashville hot fried chicken he regularly nibbles on TV, he had to navigate the twists of the pretzel business.
13.03.2020 - 23:59 / pitchfork.com
Back in June, Soundgarden, Steve Earle, and Hole, as well as the estate of Tupac Shakur and a former wife of Tom Petty sued Universal Music Group for over $100 million in damages. The suit was in response to The New York Times Magazine’s bombshell investigation of a 2008 fire at UMG’s Hollywood warehouse that left hundreds of thousands of master tapes destroyed.
Hole dropped out of the suit in August “solely based on UMG’s written assurances to Plaintiffs’ counsel that no Hole master recordings
Before Guy Fieri ever wrapped his mouth around the smoked-wing nachos or Nashville hot fried chicken he regularly nibbles on TV, he had to navigate the twists of the pretzel business.
With the coronavirus outbreak going rampant as the days go by and the death toll increasing at an alarming rate, many celebrities have been stepping up to make sure to contribute to the cause. This includes Ryan Reynolds and Blake Lively, who generously donated USD 1 million to be split between Feeding America and Food Banks Canada on March 17, 2020.
Lust can be a tricky thing to balance. Sometimes it's hard to judge if the other person shares the same feelings, and other times -- like with Kill Nigel -- you find yourself in too deep. The New York-based rapper expresses such on new single, "Attached."
As the novel coronavirus continues to spread throughout New York, Ty Warner, the owner of the Four Seasons hotel, will provide free rooms for medical personnel in order to curb the spread of COVID-19. Doctors, nurses and other medical professionals working on the frontlines of the pandemic are being offered complimentary stays at the luxe hotel on East 57th Street.
We got a glimpse at in New York before 9/11 (and learned she's had affairs before, which was pretty important info), learned that Cormac met his late wife at a medical conference just like this. Maggie had a whirlwind fling, while Richard had stroke (or something similar) that caused him to imagine a reunion with Catherine. Any one of these, had it been a standalone episode, would have been more believable. Pushing them all together and devoting roughly 15 minutes to each one felt rushed.
Executors managing the late Michael Jackson’s estate are donating $300,000 to coronavirus response efforts.
Executors managing the late Michael Jackson’s estate are donating $300,000 (£252,000) to coronavirus response efforts.
Harvey Weinstein’s attorneys are using the coronavirus pandemic to request extra time as they prepare a response to a sexual assault civil case.
NEW YORK -- The drive-in theater, long a dwindling nostalgia act in a multiplex world, is experiencing a momentary return to prominence.
NEW YORK -- News organizations across the United States are lifting paywalls to share coverage of the coronavirus pandemic, a public service many hope will convince more readers to eventually become paying customers.
Act fast — Kate Spade New York's Surprise Sale will be ending soon!
Somehow, this is becoming almost normal to report. Today, here in New York, it’s the last day that bars, gyms, restaurants, and of course, movie theaters, will be open.
The Tupac Estate and Soundgarden have pulled out of a lawsuit against Universal Music Group that was filed by five artists last year over damage the artists’ musical recordings suffered in a 2008 fire that destroyed many assets in the company’s vaults.
Broadway is going dark to keep actors, producers, theatre staff, and fans safe amid the ongoing coronavirus chaos.
Broadway is going dark to keep actors, producers, theatre staff, and fans safe amid the ongoing coronavirus chaos.
The next time James Corden, Jimmy Kimmel or David Spade deliver a few jokes, they won’t hear anyone in the audience clapping or laughing. And that will be by design.
TV’s late-night laughs will continue. But they will have to do so without live audiences to make them.
LOS ANGELES -- The ripple effect of the new coronavirus on the entertainment industry reached late-night television and far beyond to the series “Survivor” in Fiji.
TV’s late-night laughs will continue. But they will have to do so without live audiences to make them.