A brand new Netflix show based on the true story of a fake German heiress is due to hit screens next year.
03.11.2021 - 21:18 / nme.com
The xx has been released to coincide with the launch an online archive from independent label Young.‘Young then’ is a new platform that compiles a collection of new and unreleased material from artists in the label’s roster including The xx, Sampha, Jamie xx, Koreless and more.The archive includes a new documentary by Jamie-James Medina on The xx’s 2014 shows at New York’s The Armory, where they played a run of 25 shows for just 40 people at a time.A statement at the time said the gigs would be
.A brand new Netflix show based on the true story of a fake German heiress is due to hit screens next year.
Selome Hailu editorFork Films, a New York production company co-founded by Abigail Disney, has announced 11 grantees for its 2021 round of documentary funding. Topics explored in the slate of films include social justice, the impact of the pandemic on historically marginalized communities, climate gentrification and maternal mortality. The company has funded over 100 projects over 14 years, adding up to over $4.5 million in documentary grants and support.
New York Times documentary, , viewers were given a clear picture of Jackson's historic career leading up to one of the biggest controversies in music history—and the absolute devastation that followed the artist afterward.
Janet Jackson and Justin Timberlake's infamous Super Bowl Halftime Show scandal that took place in 2004 has been reexamined once again in a new docuseries that proves there are still many questions brewing about what went wrong.
Coronation Street favourites headed to the Gay Village to flick the switch on the Christmas festivities.
Kim Kardashian West has a passion to help people and the bank account to be able to do it. On Tuesday, November 18th the Associated Press revealed that a New York rabbi, a U.K.
EXCLUSIVE: NBA great Shaquille O’Neal is joining a new team—the one behind the award-winning documentary The Queen of Basketball.
Sam Huff, the subject of a documentary series that was one of the earliest reality looks at NFL football, died Saturday. He was 87 and passed from “natural causes” in Winchester, Virginia, according to a family lawyer.
We’re getting a first look at Starz’s Power Book IV: Force, the latest spinoff in the Power universe, headlined by Joseph Sikora. Starz also announced the series will premiere on Sunday, February 6 at 9 pm ET.
Despite her status as one of the most influential women in the world, Meghan Markle has revealed that she is just like the rest of us when it comes to scoring a bargain.
EXCLUSIVE: Hello Sunshine and Jennifer Siebel Newsom have partnered on a feature documentary, Fair Play, inspired by the New York Times bestselling author Eve Rodsky’s book, Fair Play: A Game-Changing Solution for When You Have Too Much To Do (And More Life to Live).
Malfunction: The Dressing Down of Janet Jackson, a documentary looking into Janet Jackson's infamous "wardrobe malfunction" at the 2004 Super Bowl, will be available to stream later this month. The FX and Hulu doc is the latest in the New York Times Presents...
Following the success of “Framing Britney Spears,” the team behind The New York Times Presents series is taking on Janet Jackson’s story.
Janet Jackson’s infamous incident at the 2004 Super Bowl (Super Bowl XXXVIII), when Justin Timberlake exposed her breast during their halftime performance, has been set for release in a couple of weeks.Titled Malfunction: The Dressing Down Of Janet Jackson, the new film will air on FX at 10pm EST on Friday November 19, streaming on Hulu concurrently.It marks the latest in a series of documentaries produced by The New York Times, following last month’s Controlling Britney Spears.
Janet Jackson’s infamous Super Bowl performance is the subject of FX and Hulu’s latest “The New York Times Presents” series.
Janet Jackson is set to become the subject of a new documentary.
Will Tizard ContributorWhen Chinese indie documentarian Rikun Zhu set about chronicling the struggles of a young Maoist true believer artist, who dreams of a new life in New York, he knew he was taking on a puzzling contradiction, he says.“It interested me a lot,” the filmmaker says, “because he always says he is a communist and loves China and Mao Zedong.”As Zhu’s subject frets and plans, his efforts take him through long nights of lecturing and teasing his girlfriend and eventually to Beijing