While you’re sheltering in place or just trying to observe the proper social distancing, streaming TV is an excellent way to keep yourself occupied and connected.
05.03.2020 - 18:11 / metroweekly.com
Dulcé Sloan — Photo courtesy of Loshak
“The LGBTQ crowd, they don’t suffer fools,” says Dulcé Sloan. “You’re not getting a sympathy laugh. They’re not laughing for the sake of laughing. Other crowds, it’ll be like, they’re trying, and they’ll chuckle a little bit.”
Before setting out for Hollywood, Sloan honed her stand-up craft at Hideaway, a gar bar in Atlanta. “I know it helped me become a better comic,” she continues, ticking off a few things she learned from the experience. “You can’t
While you’re sheltering in place or just trying to observe the proper social distancing, streaming TV is an excellent way to keep yourself occupied and connected.
Selma Blair is putting her health first.
"Motherland: Fort Salem" is Freeform's latest highly anticipated TV series that puts its female actors and character on the front lines -- both literally and figuratively. The drama series follows characters Abigail (Ashley Nicole Williams), Tally (Jessica Sutton), and Raelle (Taylor Hickson) who are witches training to fight on the front lines for our country.
RIO RANCHO, N.M. -- The first attempt of the historic march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama, in 1965, led to police violence against peaceful African American demonstrators. The beatings, known as “Bloody Sunday,” generated anger across the nation 55 years ago this month and prompted President Lyndon Johnson to push the Voting Rights Act through Congress.
Witches, despite their increasingly glamorous status in pop culture, have long been symbolic of people’s preconceived notions and fear of othered people, particularly women who deign to seize their own power (literal or otherwise). Women suspected of witchcraft and women who practice witchcraft have met terrible ends as they fought for the right to be taken seriously on their own terms, and for their lives.
The new supernatural alt-America drama Motherland: Fort Salem, in which witches revealed their existence to the world 300 years ago and have since served as the nation's soldiers, offers the kind of sprawling world-building for which television is an ideal medium.
Freeform's latest dive into the world of supernatural YA is one for the history books — literally. Motherland: Fort Salem presents an entirely new world where witches not only exist but have made up the bulk of the U.S. military force for over 300 years.
Forbidden romances. Female rivalries. War. Witches. And that's just in the first episode of Motherland: Fort Salem, Freeform's befuddling new supernatural drama, which premieres Wednesday, March 18. Creator and showrunner Eliot Laurence tries to replicate the meaningful messiness of his previous series, Claws, with this darker, confounding attempt to subvert the traditional female witch narrative with one that gives them unflinching agency. It doesn't always land.
Selena Gomez discussed the meaning behind her latest single "Rare" in a new YouTube video from Genius.She admitted she sometimes feels like she'll be "alone forever," before saying she believes there's "someone for everybody." Gomez also shared her experience with manipulative relationships.
Yesterday, Selena Gomez made a guest appearance on The Kelly Clarkson Show, where she debuted a new (and probably familiar) haircut.Los Angeles–based hairstylist Marissa Marino revealed that the inspiration for Gomez's new hairdo was Rachel Green from Friends.When Friends first aired in 1994, Jennifer Aniston's hairstyle for her character, Rachel Green, came to define a generation.
Selma Blair and Ron Carlson gaze into each other’s eyes while heading out for a brunch date!
Selma Blair enjoys some bonding time with close pals Sarah Michelle Gellar and Shannen Doherty!
Salma Hayek, Ava Duvernay, and Sophia Loren are among the stars who have curated a female-focused selection of shows for Netflix to mark Sunday’s (March 8, 2020) International Women’s Day.