The Hacienda is coming to houses around the world today as Manchester's legendary club hosts its very first stay-at-home rave.
23.03.2020 - 20:17 / variety.com
Welcome back to Tune In: our weekly newsletter offering a guide to the best of the week’s TV.
Each week, Variety’s TV team combs through the week’s schedule, selecting our picks of what to watch and when/how to watch them. As many across the country continue to practice self-isolation due to coronavirus, why not while away a few hours on some of the shows below?
This week, “One Day at a Time” returns on Pop, and “Making the Cut” drops on Amazon.
“This Is Us,” NBC, Tuesday, 9 p.m.
Tune in for the
The Hacienda is coming to houses around the world today as Manchester's legendary club hosts its very first stay-at-home rave.
Fact: There's nothing better than free TV. But free TV doesn't mean it has to be bad TV. While we all sit inside socially distancing ourselves from the global coronavirus pandemic, there's an opportunity for some quality, free television thanks to Showtime, which is offering a 30-day free trial for new subscribers, no catch, if you sign up before May 3.
Contestants were tasked with creating two looks: a haute couture design and an accessible counterpart that could be sold on Amazon. At the end of the week, both looks will be part of a fashion show at the historic Musée Des Arts Décoratifs in Paris.
For those of y'all who have no idea what I'm talking about (and hello, welcome), Making the Cut is a fashion competition hosted by Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn. And if the first thing that comes to your mind is Project Runway, a) same, and b) if you're a Project Runway fan, I'd bet money that you'll also like Making the Cut.
By Meg Zukin
Already obsessed with ? Be sure to check out the latest winning looks on Amazon!
“Making The Cut” contestant Ji Won Choi,a recent Parsons grad, is on a mission to merge her Korean and American heritages through fashion. She’s one of the younger designers on Amazon Prime’s new reality series, though Choi has already started to reaped the benefits by having one of her designs from the show sold on Amazon.
Naomi Campbell does not tolerate irreverence for high fashion.
It was less than two weeks ago that Heidi Klum expressed concern via Instagram about a possible coronavirus diagnosis. "These are strange times," the supermodel and TV personality wrote in an emotional post.
By Denise Petski
SPOILER ALERT: Do not read if you have not yet watched the first two episodes of “Making The Cut.”
Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn are back together on TV, but their new show is not exactly a return to form.
The winning looks from can now be in your own closet.
At this moment in time, it's hard to think about shopping for much besides groceries, paper towels, sanitizing wipes, and maybe a new . With uncertainty touching every industry, it's about saving money for most of us.Which is why it might seem like questionable timing for to launch , Making the Cut, which literally wants viewers to shop.
With the debut of , co-hosted by Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn, there’s now three fashion reality competition series vying for audiences' attention. In addition to the newest entry from Amazon Prime, there’s the long-running, which returned to Bravo for seasons 17 and 18, and the Netflix original,, which debuted its entire first season in January.
There are so many new fashion shows out there, but none of them have been able to beat Project Runway.
Tim Gunn says that “Making the Cut,” the new Amazon series he’s hosting with Heidi Klum, is the result of their unhappiness over the direction of their previous project, “Project Runway.”
The Eiffel Tower lights up the velvety night sky. Blue, red and white lights from the traffic below twinkle through the arches of the landmark — the centerpiece of an opulent outdoor fashion show. The bass thumps, the audience hurrahs and models bathed in gold light strut down the runway. Designers weep backstage in grateful disbelief at where they are and what they are doing, lifelong dreams realized.