The Walking Dead Save the Last One Season 2 Episode 3 «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » The Walking Dead Save the Last One Season 2 Episode 3 «Previous Next» « PreviousEpisode NextEpisode » This episode begins with a flash-forward of a buff, shirtless man standing before a sink, shaving his head. As his face is perfectly framed by the mirror, we realize that it’s not a sneak peek of next season’s Breaking Bad but instead our very own Shane Walsh.
The AMPTP proposed during its date with the WGA on Friday, though it’s not quite as romantic as it might sound. More than 100 days into the writers’ strike, the studios came to the negotiating table with a counterproposal. “We will evaluate their offer and, after deliberation, go back to them with the WGA’s response next week,” the WGA told members in an email obtained by Variety. “Sometimes more progress can be made in negotiations when they are conducted without a blow-by-blow description of the moves on each side and a subsequent public dissection of the meaning of the moves.
Adam Scott and Nick Kroll adding glamour to the picket line in NYC on Wednesday. We’re at the “lords a-leaping” day of the strike, and it’s time to learn the rules. Should you cancel your streaming services to show solidarity? Is that actor doing press to promote their movie undermining labor’s struggle against the interests of capital? In this, the first writers’ strike of the social-media age, the rules are annoyingly fuzzy.
Martin Scorsese and Mick Jagger’s HBO series, Vinyl, is set in the music business of 1973, the point at which the overbearing weight of the reigning Establishment was beginning to foment rebellion. The underground began to bubble up, so there were different choices and new contenders for the charts and the airwaves, as well as more esoteric noises for the ears and minds and hearts of music connoisseurs.
“Does it make you want to call the radio station and find out who the band they just played was?
Bruce came to play. Is Hamilton the only family-friendly programming that exists these days? Host Steve Harvey’s Celebrity Family Feud went to the dogs this Sunday, after former NFL player Bruce Smith went with an admittedly hilarious NSFW answer on the game show. The Hall of Fame defensive end was asked “If Captain Hook was moonlighting as a handyman, he might replace his hook with what tool?” His first answer, “hammer,” was taken, so Smith’s mind immediately went to the next tool he could think of, Standards and Practices be damned: “A penis.
The answer is magic. Spoilers ahead for those who haven’t finished Harry Potter and the Cursed Child.
Now that the script of Harry Potter and the Cursed Child has been loosed upon the world, we can talk all we want about the mechanics of the new Potter play. There’s a lot to discuss: Scorpius and Albus’s friendship, the fact that nearly every Potter adult works for the government (or runs a prank store), and the greatness of the Trolley Witch.
Everyone told me not to do it. It would be too much, they said — too intense, too bleak, too many dicks. But I am a professional, and I needed to catch up with the conversation around Euphoria as we near the second-season finale on February 27. My ignorance was vast: Was there a specific episode that earned Zendaya her first Emmy? Why does everyone hate Nate Jacobs?
Before she was famous (Michelle)! Before she was … famous-ish (Real Housewives’ Kyle)! The DVD of Fantasy Island: Season 2 is out next Tuesday.
Michelle Pfeiffer on Fantasy Island ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7t8HLrayrnV6YvK57kWloa2dganyutcKhnKWklWK9p7HIn52eql2ku26ywKermqupYra0uMCnm2egpKK5
Kristofer Hivju, Richard Dormer, and Pilou Asbæk, with beards. Over the weekend, Saturday Night Live allowed Kit Harington to finally do a thing he wasn’t allowed to do for eight seasons on Game of Thrones. No, not “play a burlesque dancer,” though he did get to do that, too. For the first time since that infamous scene in the pilot, Harington got to shave his beard. Jon Snow’s iconic scruff was the actor’s constant companion throughout his 20s, and he committed to the contractually obligated look even when it meant spoiling that Jon wasn’t really dead.
The new documentary Whitney just premiered at the Cannes Film Festival, and it contains an explosive revelation about the late singing superstar Whitney Houston: According to one of her closest friends, Houston said that she was molested at a young age by Dee Dee Warwick, Houston’s cousin and the sister of Dionne Warwick.
For most of the documentary’s running time, director Kevin Macdonald brings Houston’s sadly curtailed life to the screen in a manner reminiscent of Amy, Asif Kapadia’s 2015 documentary about the late singer Amy Winehouse: It begins with the beautiful voice and the career full of promise, and then come the drugs, the bad-influence husband, the grifting family members, and finally the tragic death.