The latest entry into the growing catalog of zombie stories in the entertainment world is filming its 13-episode first season in Spokane.
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“Outlaw Prophet” is an exploitative, stomach-churning exercise in shock and disgust. Take a selfie while watching it, and your face will look like you just swallowed some anchovies smothered with cottage cheese. From 1974.
The cable channel will air 25 of the most popular episodes of the series, which got off to a less-than-auspicious start on July 5, 1989.
I approached NeNe Leakes in the lobby of “Zumanity.” She sat tall in her latex costume and Christian Louboutin heels. We were surrounded by a phalanx of “Real Housewives” cameras, microphones and crew workers.
Charleston, S.C., is a steamy place where ladies cool their necks with soda cans and where, if you spot a man anywhere near a woman, odds are they’re either doin’ it, have done it or are about to do it.
An unsuspecting production assistant goes all Parkour on ESPN’s campus to help show off the new SportsCenter studio.
An NYPD detective teams with a French cabdriver to solve crimes. This is something that really exists on an American TV network.
ABC News is making a generational change at the top of its evening newscast, replacing Diane Sawyer with 40-year-old understudy David Muir in an attempt to take a run at longtime ratings leader Brian Williams at NBC’s “Nightly News.”
A police video shows Fox News anchor Gregg Jarrett becoming belligerent and struggling with an officer at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
The Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that a startup Internet company has to pay broadcasters when it takes television programs from the airwaves and allows subscribers to watch them on smartphones and other portable devices.
The new Middle Eastern drama, debuting at 10 p.m. Tuesday, has a few problems, most alarmingly the presence of the main character’s teenage children.
When last we saw Bon Temps — that seemingly sleepy Louisiana town that’s chock-full of more weirdness per square foot than Venice Beach and Hollywood Boulevard combined — “True Blood” (9 p.m. Sunday, HBO) had jumped ahead six months.
They are two guys with a self-described “deep and strange sense of humor,” doing a stage show which champions science and critical thinking while shooting things and blowing stuff up.
A drama about the crew of a Navy destroyer returning to a global pandemic shouldn’t feel derivative. Yet “The Last Ship” (9 p.m. Sunday, TNT) does.
In what truly epitomized the title of his TV show, “My Cat From Hell,” feline behaviorist Jackson Galaxy is calling his attempt to tame the Portland cat notorious for attacking a baby and boxing his panicked owners into a bedroom “the hardest case I have ever worked.”
A recent Wall Street Journal poll of leading economists put the probability of the United States going into recession over the next 12 months at 63 percent. Conventional wisdom is that the Federal Reserve Bank will continue raising interest rates to combat stubborn high inflation, thereby slowing the economy and causing gross domestic product to […]
Stand-up Nate Bargatze scored unexpectedly with an immediately iconic portrayal of George Washington in a skit dubbed “Washington’s Dream.”
Andy Walmsley won an Emmy for “American Idol,” and his latest idol is a puppet named Artie.
The new shop marks the chef and TV personality’s sixth restaurant in Las Vegas, and the fourth with Caesars Entertainment.
The restaurant draws inspiration from hit Netflix titles and continues the launching of experiences by the streaming service.