Va-va Vanderpump! Vanderpump Rules star Lala Kent debuted the results of her recent breast augmentation surgery over Independence Day weekend.
18.06.2022 - 03:25 / deadline.com
A column chronicling conversations and events on the awards circuit.
Emmy ballots are live now, this is first weekend of voting before they are due back on June 27, and I have managed to pick up a real sense of anxiety and tension out there from the many campaigners doing everything they can possibly do to grab the attention of the some 20,000+ voting members of the Television Academy. I feel their pain. How do you break throught in this thing if your show isn’t Ted Lasso or Succession?, past winners that benefit from being, well, past winners and that kind of instant recognition. Not that even Apple TV+’s breakthrough Lasso or HBO’s current juggernaut Succession are resting on their laurels.
Every member of the Academy regularly gets the slickly produced Emmy Magazine monthly, and the edition that recently arrived at a very crucial point in the season, had a multi-fold out advertising cover from Warner Bros with Lasso most prominently front and center so the first thing voters see is the mug of Jason Sudeikis. Take that off and there is the actual cover of the magazine (three Native American actors from AMC’s Dark Wind) that has a split down its middle right between the two M’s in EMMY that opens up to a lavish ad of, you guessed it, Succession. And then as you try to find the table of contents a 42 slickly produced booket spotlighting every single Netflix contender falls out. I suppose there are actually some real articles about television in there but you really have to look for them between the tsunami of ads. That goes for every other outlet including Deadline which benefits from this uber-competitive season where studios and networks and streamers try to break through and get the attention that might entice
Va-va Vanderpump! Vanderpump Rules star Lala Kent debuted the results of her recent breast augmentation surgery over Independence Day weekend.
Ginger Alden said the following: "His arms lay on the ground, close to his sides, palms facing upward. "It was clear that, from the moment he landed on the floor, Elvis hadn't moved. "I gently turned his face toward me.
Kyland Young, one of six members of The Cookout alliance that ran Big Brother 23, was a little concerned when he saw so many of his former castmates on The Challenge: USA.
released a campaign ad in the style of “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous” Thursday morning mocking Dr. Mehmet Oz’s Republican primary win in the U.S.
Mexican Immigrant Tale ‘Sansón And Me’ Wins Best Film At Sheffield Doc/Fest
The Colorado Avalanche and Tampa Bay Lightning continued the National Hockey League’s ratings triumph Friday night, pulling in a big 0.8 and total average audience of 3.44 million for ABC’s telecast.
There are so many fan favorites leaving Netflix beginning on July 1, 2022.
Joe Otterson TV Reporter“Killing It” has been renewed for Season 2 at Peacock, Variety has learned.Series star Craig Robinson will return for the second season, with the first season having launched back in April. The first season consisted of 10 episodes.
Addie Morfoot ContributorCara Lawson’s Indeed Rising Voices short “Crooked Trees Gon Give Me Wings” is set in Savannah, Georgia, in the 1880s. The time is 15 years after the Thirteenth Amendment was adopted, abolishing slavery in the United States, but it’s a story that remains uncannily topical more than a century later.The film is seen through the eyes of Bertie Bee Hooks, an optimistic 9-year-old African American girl who converses with spirits in the lush, moss-covered forest surrounding her home.
Chris Stapleton postponed three shows of his "All-American Road Show" tour after testing positive for COVID-19. Stapleton announced his coronavirus diagnosis via Instagram. "To all my friends in Salt Lake City and Denver, I am very sorry to let you all know that I have tested positive for Covid and will be unable to perform this weekend's shows," the country music star said.
Joe Otterson TV ReporterDana Delany has joined the cast of “Tulsa King” opposite Sylvester Stallone at Paramount+, Variety has learned exclusively.Stallone leads the series, with other cast members including Andrea Savage, Martin Starr, Max Casella, Domenick Lombardozzi, Vincent Piazza, Jay Will, A.C. Peterson, and Garrett Hedlund.The show follows New York mafia capo Dwight “The General” Manfredi (Stallone), just after he is released from prison after 25 years and unceremoniously exiled by his boss to set up shop in Tulsa, Okla.
In a nondescript house on a nondescript block in Burbank, California, a “pathologically honest” man named Clark (Ben Falcone) feeds his cats dinner. One won’t come inside, so he heads to his backyard to retrieve it.
Yes, Sylvester Stallone: it’s obvious that you are new in town.