People always say that you shouldn’t bring your work home with you. The strict boundaries between your work life and personal life are vital for happiness.
18.06.2020 - 18:01 / thehollywoodnews.com
The Traitor, a 2019 Cannes title which comes to cinemas on 24th July.
The film stars Pierfrancesco Favino (World War Z, Rush, Angels & Demons) as the real-life informant Tommaso Buscetta who helped to bring down the powerful Cosa Nostra Mafia family in the 1980s, and Maria Fernanda Cândido (Edge of Desire, Terra Nostra) as his loyal wife Cristina.Here’s the official synopsis.Based on the true story of the Cosa Nostra in the early 1980’s, the film begins as an all-out war rages between Sicilian
.People always say that you shouldn’t bring your work home with you. The strict boundaries between your work life and personal life are vital for happiness.
EXCLUSIVE: Chris Messina (Birds of Prey), Cory Michael Smith (First Man, Carol), Aida Turturro (The Sopranos) and newcomer Grace Edwards have boarded Call Jane, which is now in production in Connecticut.
Lady Gaga got her dad a box of Oreos for Father’s Day!
Lady Gaga didn't give her dad some cookie cutter gift for Father's Day — she actually gave him cookies.While appearing on Fox Business on Monday, Joe Germanotta, Gaga's dad, told Dagen McDowell that his daughter went the supermarket route to find his gift."My daughter Stefani, you know, aka Lady Gaga, she sent me a box of Oreos," he said. For the record, Gaga is reportedly worth $300 million.
The statue of slave trader Edward Colston has been fished out of Bristol Harbour early this morning by the council.Shortly after 6am, Bristol City Council shared video footage of a salvage crew retrieving the smeared figure and said that it is being '"taken to a secure location".They added that the statue needed to be removed to operate the working harbour, and that it will later form part of their museums collection.The bronze memorial was torn down from its plinth at the Black Lives Matter
statues of slave traders to be taken down. Steve West, from Stand Up to Racism, said that putting up plaques explaining the history of the statues did not go far enough.
Manori Ravindran International EditorPrime Minister Boris Johnson has spoken out on the U.K.’s demonstrations following the death of George Floyd in police custody, warning that protesters who attack public property or the police will face “the full force of the law.”Johnson’s speech on Monday came a day after anti-racism protesters in Bristol tore down a controversial bronze statue of 17th-Century slave trader Edward Colston, rolled it through the streets and tossed it into the River Avon — an
The tearing down of the Edward Colston statue in Bristol was a "criminal act", Downing Street has said.The bronze memorial in the College Green area of Bristol had already been the subject of an 11,000-strong petition to have it removed.But during Black Lives Matter protests in the city on Sunday (June 7) demonstrators pulled down the controversial statue of 17th century slave trader before throwing it into the Bristol harbour.Number 10 has no condemned the actions and said issues such as the
Tim Dams Thousands of people attended anti-racism protests in the U.K. over the weekend, with gatherings in cities such as London, Bristol, Manchester, Wolverhampton, Nottingham, Glasgow and Edinburgh.On Sunday, protesters in Bristol used ropes to pull down the bronze statue of Edward Colston — a prominent 17th-Century slave trader.
Police have launched a criminal investigation to identify those who brought down a statue of 17th century slave trader, Edward Colston.