Rose McGowan was arrested and released on bond after turning herself in to authorities in connection with a felony drug possession charge, E! News confirms. Authorities with the Loudoun County Sheriff's Office in Virginia say the actress was booked and took a mug shot on Tuesday evening before being released on a $5,000 unsecured bond. Late last month, an arrest warrant was issued for McGowan after her personal belongings, which she left on a plane after flying to Washington D.C. last January, tested positive for narcotics. After making attempts to contact the Charmed star, the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority issued a bench warrant and submitted it to a national...
- 11/14/2017
- E! Online
The Telluride Film Festival is about a lot more than Oscars. Co-directors Tom Luddy and Julie Huntsinger certainly set out to program the year’s likeliest Oscar contenders, including Joe Wright’s Gary Oldman vehicle “Darkest Hour,” Greta Gerwig’s “Lady Bird,” starring Saoirse Ronan, Guillermo del Toro’s “The Shape of Water,” starring Sally Hawkins, and “Battle of the Sexes,” starring a luminous Emma Stone as real-life hero Billie Jean King.
But Telluride was also a crucible for conversations about the state of the motion picture industry throughout the weekend, as Netflix and Amazon threw parties and checked out several high-profile movies without distribution — including Francis Ford Coppola’s musically-enhanced “The Cotton Club Encore” — that banked on the festival boosting their critical and audience cred before top buyers.
Here’s what we learned over the Labor Day weekend:
1. Christian Bale is fat.
The subject of two well-deserved weekend tributes...
But Telluride was also a crucible for conversations about the state of the motion picture industry throughout the weekend, as Netflix and Amazon threw parties and checked out several high-profile movies without distribution — including Francis Ford Coppola’s musically-enhanced “The Cotton Club Encore” — that banked on the festival boosting their critical and audience cred before top buyers.
Here’s what we learned over the Labor Day weekend:
1. Christian Bale is fat.
The subject of two well-deserved weekend tributes...
- 9/4/2017
- by Anne Thompson
- Thompson on Hollywood
President Donald Trump shocked many Americans with his press conference on Tuesday.
Trump held a press conference which was intended to be about infrastructure, but quickly devolved into him accusing "both sides" of violence in the weekend's white nationalist demonstrations in Charlottesville, Virginia, where protesters -- many bearing flaming torches, weapons, and Nazi symbols -- marched to protest the town's removal of a statue of Confederate Army general Robert E. Lee.
Trump was initially criticized for taking two days to condemn white supremacists, and hate groups such as the Kkk, in his remarks about the protests, where one woman was killed and 20 were injured after a 20-year-old man drove his car into a crowd, in an act of domestic terrorism.
Watch: Late-Night Hosts Get Serious Addressing Charlottesville Rally and President Trump's Response to Violence
In addition to calling out the "alt-left," counter-demonstrators who Trump accused of being "very, very violent...
Trump held a press conference which was intended to be about infrastructure, but quickly devolved into him accusing "both sides" of violence in the weekend's white nationalist demonstrations in Charlottesville, Virginia, where protesters -- many bearing flaming torches, weapons, and Nazi symbols -- marched to protest the town's removal of a statue of Confederate Army general Robert E. Lee.
Trump was initially criticized for taking two days to condemn white supremacists, and hate groups such as the Kkk, in his remarks about the protests, where one woman was killed and 20 were injured after a 20-year-old man drove his car into a crowd, in an act of domestic terrorism.
Watch: Late-Night Hosts Get Serious Addressing Charlottesville Rally and President Trump's Response to Violence
In addition to calling out the "alt-left," counter-demonstrators who Trump accused of being "very, very violent...
- 8/16/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
Days after a car attack killed a 32-year-old woman in Charlottesville, Virginia, President Trump faced swift criticism for retweeting — and then deleting — an image of a “Trump train” running over a person with a CNN logo on their face.
Trump blasted out the violent image, posted by a supporter who added the caption “Nothing can stop the #TrumpTrain!!,” to his nearly 36 million followers on Tuesday morning.
He quickly deleted the image amid the backlash — but not before it was retweeted by hundreds of followers and captured in screen shots by journalists and critics who called the president’s handiwork “more...
Trump blasted out the violent image, posted by a supporter who added the caption “Nothing can stop the #TrumpTrain!!,” to his nearly 36 million followers on Tuesday morning.
He quickly deleted the image amid the backlash — but not before it was retweeted by hundreds of followers and captured in screen shots by journalists and critics who called the president’s handiwork “more...
- 8/15/2017
- by Tierney McAfee
- PEOPLE.com
2017-08-15T08:05:39-07:00Jimmy Fallon Calls Out Trump for His Response to Charlottesville Violence
Taking a stand. Late-night hosts responded to the horrifying violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, that occurred over the weekend and slammed President Donald Trump’s response during their shows on Monday, August 14.
On Saturday, August 12, white supremacists gathered to protest the removal of a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, where they clashed with counter-protestors. A car drove into the crowd of counter-protestors, killing one woman and injuring dozens of others. Trump, 71, initially blamed “many sides” for the violence in his Saturday statement, and didn’t denounce the Kkk, neo-Nazis and white supremacists until Monday.
Jimmy Fallon spoke about standing up against racism and setting an example for the next generation.
"Even though The Tonight Show isn’t a political show, it’s my responsibility to stand up against intolerance and extremism as a human being.
Taking a stand. Late-night hosts responded to the horrifying violence in Charlottesville, Virginia, that occurred over the weekend and slammed President Donald Trump’s response during their shows on Monday, August 14.
On Saturday, August 12, white supremacists gathered to protest the removal of a statue of Confederate general Robert E. Lee, where they clashed with counter-protestors. A car drove into the crowd of counter-protestors, killing one woman and injuring dozens of others. Trump, 71, initially blamed “many sides” for the violence in his Saturday statement, and didn’t denounce the Kkk, neo-Nazis and white supremacists until Monday.
Jimmy Fallon spoke about standing up against racism and setting an example for the next generation.
"Even though The Tonight Show isn’t a political show, it’s my responsibility to stand up against intolerance and extremism as a human being.
- 8/15/2017
- by EG
- Yidio
There was not much “front-stabbing,” but you could cut the cringeworthy moments with a knife.
Stopping by The Late Show on Monday, Anthony Scaramucci chatted with Stephen Colbert to share his 11-day tenure at the White House and his current relationship with President Donald Trump.
We’re guessing The Mooch is a big fan of Game of Thrones as he answered many of Colbert’s questions with references from the hit HBO series.
Here are the highlights from the short-lived White House Communications Director’s interview:
1. “I’m like Arya Stark.”
Scaramucci’s first comments after arriving at his guest...
Stopping by The Late Show on Monday, Anthony Scaramucci chatted with Stephen Colbert to share his 11-day tenure at the White House and his current relationship with President Donald Trump.
We’re guessing The Mooch is a big fan of Game of Thrones as he answered many of Colbert’s questions with references from the hit HBO series.
Here are the highlights from the short-lived White House Communications Director’s interview:
1. “I’m like Arya Stark.”
Scaramucci’s first comments after arriving at his guest...
- 8/15/2017
- by Karen Mizoguchi
- PEOPLE.com
President Trump’s former communications director Anthony Scaramucci appeared on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Monday night, where he dished on all things Trump administration.
“The Mooch from Long Island would say there was no love lost there,” Scaramucci told host Stephen Colbert about his relationship with Reince Priebus, who was replaced by John Kelly as White House chief of staff in late July.
Colbert also pressed Scaramucci about his opinions regarding who could be leaking information from the White House, even calling Trump’s chief strategist.
“Is Steve Bannon the leaker?” the late-night emcee asked before Scaramucci responded: “I said he was.
“The Mooch from Long Island would say there was no love lost there,” Scaramucci told host Stephen Colbert about his relationship with Reince Priebus, who was replaced by John Kelly as White House chief of staff in late July.
Colbert also pressed Scaramucci about his opinions regarding who could be leaking information from the White House, even calling Trump’s chief strategist.
“Is Steve Bannon the leaker?” the late-night emcee asked before Scaramucci responded: “I said he was.
- 8/15/2017
- by Tierney McAfee and Karen Mizoguchi
- PEOPLE.com
It was announced that Tony nominee Max von Essen An American in Paris, Evita, Les Mis will play Dr.BradKris in the sold out, one-night-only benefit reading of Hollywood Nurses, the new pulp comedy written by Sheila Head Head Games, PBS's 'Cyberchase' and Peter Michael Marino Desperately Seeking the Exit, Late with Lance, and directed by Carl Andress Die, Mommie, Die, The Tribute Artist. Von Essen joins Golden Globe Award winner Kathleen Turner Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf, Tony Award nominee Geneva Carr Hand to God, Olivier Award winner Lesli Margherita Matilda and Taylor Louderman Kinky Boots.
- 6/16/2017
- by BWW News Desk
- BroadwayWorld.com
Late on the night of April 14, 2014, armed men burst into a boarding school in the Nigerian town of Chibok, where Joy Bishara and Lydia Pogu were among hundreds of teenage girls in their beds, fast asleep. Shooting guns into the air, the men began herding the frightened girls into a group, shouting “Allahu akbar!” (“God is great” in Arabic), the telltale rallying cry of Nigeria’s ruthless terrorist group, Boko Haram.
“We were all crying and screaming,” Joy tells People. “They told us to keep quiet or else they’re going to kill us.”
Boko Haram kidnapped nearly 300 girls that night,...
“We were all crying and screaming,” Joy tells People. “They told us to keep quiet or else they’re going to kill us.”
Boko Haram kidnapped nearly 300 girls that night,...
- 6/15/2017
- by Abigail Pesta
- PEOPLE.com
Late director Jonathan Demme’s horror masterpiece The Silence of the Lambs was only the third movie to sweep “The Big Five” at the Academy Awards when it took home trophies for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Actress and Best Screenplay at the 1992 ceremony.
More than a quarter-century later, the first horror movie in history to win Best Picture remains a pop culture touchstone. The serial-killer thriller starring Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins earned more than $272 million worldwide, launched multiple sequels and a television series, and continues to spook new viewers — who may or may not watch with...
More than a quarter-century later, the first horror movie in history to win Best Picture remains a pop culture touchstone. The serial-killer thriller starring Jodie Foster and Anthony Hopkins earned more than $272 million worldwide, launched multiple sequels and a television series, and continues to spook new viewers — who may or may not watch with...
- 4/26/2017
- by Stephanie Petit
- PEOPLE.com
For many children, zipping a jacket is a simple task. But for 6-year-old Evan, it proved to be a monumental milestone.
Evan, who has autism, spent about a month in a program learning to zip his jacket by himself. And the boy drew cheers from hundreds of social media users after his mother, Mandy Farmer, posted a Facebook video of the sweet moment.
“You know how we say autism families don’t take things for granted? This is what we mean,” Farmer, of Virginia, wrote alongside the video. “It is so exciting to see him meet these milestones, even if...
Evan, who has autism, spent about a month in a program learning to zip his jacket by himself. And the boy drew cheers from hundreds of social media users after his mother, Mandy Farmer, posted a Facebook video of the sweet moment.
“You know how we say autism families don’t take things for granted? This is what we mean,” Farmer, of Virginia, wrote alongside the video. “It is so exciting to see him meet these milestones, even if...
- 3/30/2017
- by Char Adams
- PEOPLE.com
Election Day is almost upon us, and as candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump make their final pleas to voters and await the results of the 2016 race, they’ll be doing so under the watchful eye of law enforcement officials.
The Secret Service and the NYPD are taking extraordinary steps to brace for potential violence of the kind that, in this especially vicious campaign, has seen fistfights erupt at rallies and nervous Secret Service agents several times rush the campaign stage to protectively surround the candidates.
With both Trump and Clinton spending Election Night in Manhattan, just blocks away from each other,...
The Secret Service and the NYPD are taking extraordinary steps to brace for potential violence of the kind that, in this especially vicious campaign, has seen fistfights erupt at rallies and nervous Secret Service agents several times rush the campaign stage to protectively surround the candidates.
With both Trump and Clinton spending Election Night in Manhattan, just blocks away from each other,...
- 11/7/2016
- by Tierney McAfee
- PEOPLE.com
"The Walking Dead" Season 6 is on a mini filming break right now, but it'll be back in business on August 17 to shoot the second half of the 16-episode season, which premieres Sunday, October 11 on AMC. In the second half, we should visit at least one new location from the comic book: Hilltop Colony.
*Comic book and filming spoilers ahead*
In the second half of Season 5, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and company arrived in Alexandria, Virginia, which is the No. 1 location where the story should be based for a long time (although filming is still based in Georgia). But in the comic book, once Rick and company are in Alexandria, they start to learn about other communities in the area. They come across a guy named Paul Monroe, who has the nickname "Jesus" in part for his appearance. He's based at a large farming community called Hilltop Colony and the "Walking Dead...
*Comic book and filming spoilers ahead*
In the second half of Season 5, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) and company arrived in Alexandria, Virginia, which is the No. 1 location where the story should be based for a long time (although filming is still based in Georgia). But in the comic book, once Rick and company are in Alexandria, they start to learn about other communities in the area. They come across a guy named Paul Monroe, who has the nickname "Jesus" in part for his appearance. He's based at a large farming community called Hilltop Colony and the "Walking Dead...
- 8/14/2015
- by Gina Carbone
- Moviefone
The premiere post-tiff destination (September 20-25th) in the film community and a major leg up for narrative and non-fiction films in development, the Independent Filmmaker Project (Ifp) announced a whopping 140 projects selected for the Project Forum at the upcoming Ifp Independent Film Week. Made up of several sections (Rbc’s Emerging Storytellers program, No Borders International Co-Production Market and Spotlight on Documentaries), we find latest updates from the likes of docu-helmers Doug Block (112 Weddings) and Lana Wilson (After Tiller), and among the narrative items we find headliners in Andrew Haigh (coming off the well received 45 Years), Sophie Barthes (Cold Souls and Madame Bovary), Terence Nance (An Oversimplification of Her Beauty), Lawrence Michael Levine (Wild Canaries), Jorge Michel Grau (We Are What We Are), Eleanor Burke and Ron Eyal (Stranger Things) and new faces in Sundance’s large family in Charles Poekel (Christmas, Again) and Olivia Newman (First Match). Here...
- 7/22/2015
- by admin
- IONCINEMA.com
The world bid farewell to many brilliant actors, artists and musicians this year. From Philip Seymour Hoffman and Maya Angelou, to Robin Williams and Joan Rivers, we pay tribute to the stars we lost in 2014.
Maya Angelou
Renowned poet and author Dr. Maya Angelou passed away at the age of 86 on May 28. Among her achievements, she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011 and the Lincoln Medal in 2008.
Watch: Oprah Tears Up While Talking About The Late Maya Angelou
Lauren Bacall
Hollywood legend Lauren Bacall, best known for her string of celebrated noir performances opposite husband Humphrey Bogart, passed away at the age of 89 on Aug. 12. Bacall is survived by her three children, Stephen and Leslie Bogart, and Sam Robards.
Oscar de la Renta
Iconic fashion designer Oscar de la Renta passed away Oct. 20 at the age of 82 following a long battle with cancer. De la Renta came to fame in the 1960s as one of [link...
Maya Angelou
Renowned poet and author Dr. Maya Angelou passed away at the age of 86 on May 28. Among her achievements, she received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2011 and the Lincoln Medal in 2008.
Watch: Oprah Tears Up While Talking About The Late Maya Angelou
Lauren Bacall
Hollywood legend Lauren Bacall, best known for her string of celebrated noir performances opposite husband Humphrey Bogart, passed away at the age of 89 on Aug. 12. Bacall is survived by her three children, Stephen and Leslie Bogart, and Sam Robards.
Oscar de la Renta
Iconic fashion designer Oscar de la Renta passed away Oct. 20 at the age of 82 following a long battle with cancer. De la Renta came to fame in the 1960s as one of [link...
- 12/31/2014
- Entertainment Tonight
This story originally appeared in EmmyWrap: Movies/Miniseries. At the age of 17, Mark Ruffalo figured he knew a thing or two. He'd left the wrestling program at his high school and switched to the drama department for his senior year, acting in plays and hanging out in a community that included one openly gay choreographer. “He was the only gay person that I thought I'd ever known in my life,” Ruffalo said with a laugh. “And the only gay person that I thought lived in Virginia Beach at the time.” Late in the school year, Ruffalo told TheWrap, he learned differently.
- 6/19/2014
- by Steve Pond
- The Wrap
Feature Ryan Lambie 8 May 2014 - 07:11
Thrillers may be increasingly rare in Hollywood, but the genre continues to thrive in the hands of great indie filmmakers, Ryan writes...
Fatal Attraction. Presumed Innocent. Basic Instinct. Double Jeopardy. They’re all Hollywood thrillers of the 80s and 90s, and were all, to a greater or lesser extent, sizeable box-office hits. It’s easy to forget, in the current era of superhero-led blockbusters, that the humble thriller was once a go-to genre for Hollywood - its mid-budget bread and butter which could reliably turn a profit in both theatres and on VHS (or later, DVD).
The past 20 years, however, have seen a sizeable shift in the way Hollywood makes and sells its films. There’s an increased need to hook the biggest possible audience in on a movie’s opening weekend, resulting in a greater emphasis on loud, flashy moments which can be...
Thrillers may be increasingly rare in Hollywood, but the genre continues to thrive in the hands of great indie filmmakers, Ryan writes...
Fatal Attraction. Presumed Innocent. Basic Instinct. Double Jeopardy. They’re all Hollywood thrillers of the 80s and 90s, and were all, to a greater or lesser extent, sizeable box-office hits. It’s easy to forget, in the current era of superhero-led blockbusters, that the humble thriller was once a go-to genre for Hollywood - its mid-budget bread and butter which could reliably turn a profit in both theatres and on VHS (or later, DVD).
The past 20 years, however, have seen a sizeable shift in the way Hollywood makes and sells its films. There’s an increased need to hook the biggest possible audience in on a movie’s opening weekend, resulting in a greater emphasis on loud, flashy moments which can be...
- 5/6/2014
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
On TV this Tuesday: Cougar Town returns on TBS to find out how merlot the Cul-de-Sac Crew can go, a Pretty Little Liar slips back to the fold, it’s Lying Game on for Sutton and Emma, Jimmy Kimmel goes Live a bit earlier and you’re Justified in your joy at the FX drama’s return. As a supplement to TVLine’s original features (always linked within), here are 10 programs to keep on your radar.
Photos | NCIS Hot Shots: What Brings Ziva’s Father Back?
Preview | NCIS Star Cote de Pablo Previews David Family Drama
8 pm Pretty Little Liars...
Photos | NCIS Hot Shots: What Brings Ziva’s Father Back?
Preview | NCIS Star Cote de Pablo Previews David Family Drama
8 pm Pretty Little Liars...
- 1/8/2013
- by Kimberly Roots
- TVLine.com
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