WATCH: Finally The ‘All Eyez On Me’ Trailer Officially Released!
ALL EYEZ ON ME tells the true and untold story of prolific rapper, actor, poet and activist Tupac Shakur. The film follows Shakur from his early days in New York City to his evolution into being one of the world’s most recognized and influential voices before his untimely death at the age of 25. Against all odds, Shakur’s raw talent, powerful lyrics and revolutionary mind-set propelled him into becoming a cultural icon whose legacy continues to grow long after his passing.
Release Date: June 16, 2017
‘Hip-Hop Squares’, Hosted By DeRay Davis, Renewed For Second Season At VH1
Courtesy of VH1
It’s hip to be square at VH1.
The Viacom-owned cable network has renewed reality competition series Hip-Hop Squares for a second season, The Hollywood Reporter has learned.
Exec produced by Ice Cube, the game show ranks as VH1’s highest-rated new show in a year — a key win for network president Chris McCarthy, who recently added oversight of MTV to his purview. The series ranks as the No. 1 non-sports cable show in its time period among adults 18-34. The order is for an additional 20 episodes — on par with its freshman haul. The series will return in 2018.
“Hip-Hop Squares smashed ratings records as one of the most-watched new series of the year,” McCarthy said. “We couldn’t ask for a better creative force to steer the show than Ice Cube or a better partner than CBS Distribution, and we are thrilled to keep this party going.”
Ice Cube and his Cube Vision executive produce the series in conjunction with Jesse Collins Entertainment, Scott St. John and Jeff Kwatinetz’s The Firm and CBS Television Distribution.
“VH1 and Ice Cube have done a remarkable job modernizing the game elements of the legendary Hollywood Squares,” said Scott Koondel, chief corporate licensing officer at CBS Corp. “We are proud to be part of the team introducing VH1 Hip-Hop Squares to a new generation, and are delighted that the series has been picked up for a second season.”Hosted by DeRay Davis, the series is the latest incarnation of the game show originally created by Merrill Heatter and Bob Quigley. All told, more than 5,000 episodes have been produced over six decades.
“The positive response to Hip-Hop Squares has been an incredible experience,” Ice Cube said. “My team and I are grateful to VH1 and everyone who has worked incredibly hard to make the show a success. The fan excitement and their commitment has us fired up and we can’t wait to start shooting. Viewers can look forward to a louder, crazier party with the next season.”
Hip-Hop Squares marks a key renewal for VH1, which while a key brand was not one of Viacom CEO Bob Bakish’s core areas of focus as he looks to reinvigorate the conglomerate. VH1 has been doubling down on content of late, reviving America’s Next Top Model and handing out a straight-to-series order based on Star Jones’ saga at The View, starring Vanessa Williams, in addition to ordering the original film The Breaks as an ongoing scripted drama series.
Nia Long Joins Terrence Howard In ‘Life In A Year’
REX/Shutterstock
On Empire this season, Nia Long plays maybe the best female foe Taraji P. Henson’s Cookie Lyon has ever had. But she’s now going to be Terrence Howard’s wife in Life In A Year, Sony’s romantic drama starring Jaden Smith and Cara Delavigne.
Howard, of course, plays Cookie’s ex-husband and music mogul Lucious Lyon on the Fox series.
In Life In A Year, Long (The Best Man) will play Catherine, the spouse of Howard’s no-nonsense patriarch and the supportive mother of Daryn (Smith). The movie, now filming in Toronto, centers on 17-year-old Daryn’s love for his girlfriend Isabelle (Delavigne) who is diagnosed with cancer, and his desire to make the most of the little time they have left together.
The project also reunites Long with her on-screen Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air boyfriend from a couple of decades ago: Will Smith is producing the Mitja Okorn-directed pic for Sony and Overbrook Entertainment along with his business partner James Lassiter and Marc Bienstock.
As well as playing scheming club owner Giuliana on Fox’s hip-hop family blockbuster and co-starring in Lifetime’s Beaches remake that aired in January, Long appears on the big screen this year in the Sundance pics Lemon and Roxanne Roxanne, which Deadline exclusively revealed in January that Neon picked up out of the Robert Redford-founded fest. Long also is set to topline The Goldbergs spinoff pilot in the works at ABC.
She is repped by CAA, Primary Wave Entertainment and attorneys at Meyer & Downs.
Tickets To Chris Rock’s Aussie Tour Accidentally Sold For Hundreds Less Than Advertised
Read more at http://www.craveonline.com.au/culture/1243885-tickets-chris-rocks-australian-tour-sold-hundred-less-advertised#fxerSB6uq0D5lXyh.99Ticketing giant Ticketek has accidentally sold some VIP tickets to Chris Rock‘s upcoming Australian stand-up tour for hundreds of dollars less than they were originally advertised.
24-year-old Sydneysider Kailey is one of the fans who purchased tickets when the pricing error took place. She tells Crave Australia that she purchased a VIP ticket (which includes access to a pre-show party, VIP merchandise and more) to Rock’s upcoming Sydney show for $138.05, despite the original advertised price being $529.55.
“When I logged on to the website, 15 minutes before pre-sale started, all the VIP tickets were cheaper than the regular seats,” Kailey says.
“I thought it was odd but the number for Ticketek was engaged, as always, so I couldn’t clarify.
“[The price] was the same when pre-sale started, so I purchased the ‘Total Blackout’ VIP package because it was advertised as one of the cheapest.”
The Incorrect Price & The Current Price / Image: Supplied
Kailey says she received a phone call from Ticketek the next day. She claims the company requested she pay the difference between the price she purchased the ticket for and the correct price of $529.55, which is what the tickets are currently listed for.
“On their website it claims all sales are final and no refund would be issued,” Kailey says. “But in the regular terms and conditions it states that if there was a system error they would call to collect extra money or cancel the order.
“The money had already come out of my account, so the transaction at that point was complete. After an hour on the phone, they offered me the seats only without the VIP extras, which I was fine with because the delay would have caused me to end up paying for crap seats.
“They were going to cancel my order and give me a refund but I put up a fight, did the whole ‘annoying customer consumer rights speech’ with some Fair Trading thrown in — not to be a dick; the money had been taken out so I knew I had some ground there.
“It’s not like it’s a wrong display price for a banana at Woolies and they catch it at the register — the money was no longer ‘pending’ in my account.”
Kailey says she’s “happy” with how Ticketek amended the situation, because she has now been given “third row seats for cheaper than the nosebleed section”.
Ticketek declined to comment for this story.
Chris Rock is set to bring his ‘Total Blackout’ tour to Australia this June, for his first local shows in nine years.
Source: CraveOnline
Don Rickles, Comedy Icon, Dies At 90
Don Rickles, in 2007.CreditRichard Drew/Associated Press
Don Rickles, the acidic stand-up comic who became world-famous not by telling jokes but by insulting his audience, died on Thursday at his home in Los Angeles. He was 90.
The cause was kidney failure, said a spokesman, Paul Shefrin.
For more than half a century, on nightclub stages, in concert halls and on television, Mr. Rickles made outrageously derisive comments about people’s looks, their ethnicity, their spouses, their sexual orientation, their jobs or anything else he could think of. He didn’t discriminate: His incendiary unpleasantries were aimed at the biggest stars in show business (Frank Sinatra was a favorite target) and at ordinary paying customers.
His rise to national prominence in the late 1960s and early 1970s roughly coincided with the success of “All in the Family,” the groundbreaking situation comedy whose protagonist, Archie Bunker, was an outspoken bigot. Mr. Rickles’s humor was similarly transgressive. But he went further than Archie Bunker, and while Carroll O’Connor, who played Archie, was speaking words someone else had written — and was invariably the butt of the joke — Mr. Rickles, whose targets included his fellow Jews, never needed a script and was always in charge.
One night, on learning that some members of his audience were German, he said, “Forty million Jews in this country, and I got four Nazis sitting here in front waiting for the rally to start.” He said that America needed Italians “to keep the cops busy” and blacks “so we can have cotton in the drugstore,” and that “Asians are nice people, but they burn a lot of shirts.” He might ask a man in the audience, “Is that your wife?” and, when the man answered yes, respond: “Oh, well. Keep your chin up.”
As brutal as his remarks could be, they rarely left a mark. (“I’m not really a mean, vicious guy,” he told an interviewer in 2000.) Sidney Poitier was said to have once been offended by Mr. Rickles’s racial jokes. But in “Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project,” a 2007 documentary directed by John Landis, Mr. Poitier sang Mr. Rickles’s praises.
Recalling the first time he saw Mr. Rickles perform, Mr. Poitier said: “He was explosive. He was impactful. He was funny. I mean, outrageously funny.”
Mr. Rickles got his first break, the story goes, when Sinatra and some of his friends came to see him perform in 1957 — in Hollywood, according to most sources, although Mr. Rickles said it was in Miami. “Make yourself at home, Frank,” Mr. Rickles said to Sinatra, whom he had never met. “Hit somebody.” Sinatra laughed so hard, he fell out of his seat.
Mr. Rickles was soon being championed by Sinatra, Dean Martin and the other members of the show business circle known as the Rat Pack. Steady work in Las Vegas followed. But he was hardly an overnight success: He spent a decade in the comedy trenches before he broke through to a national audience.
In 1965, he made the first of numerous appearances on “The Tonight Show,” treating Johnny Carson with his trademark disdain to the audience’s (and Carson’s) delight. He also became a regular on Dean Martin’s televised roasts, where no celebrity was safe from his onslaughts. (“What’s Bob Hope doing here? Is the war over?”)
Mr. Rickles’s wife, who he said “likes to lie in bed, signaling ships with her jewelry,” was not immune to his attacks. Neither was his mother, Etta, whom he referred to as “the Jewish Patton.” But off the stage, he didn’t hesitate to express his gratitude to his mother for unflaggingly believing in his talent, even when he himself wasn’t so sure.
Photo
Mr. Rickles performing in Niles, Ill., in 1975.CreditDon Levitt, via Everett Collection
“She had a tremendous drive,” he recalled in “Mr. Warmth.” “Drove me crazy. But she was like the driving force for me.”
He shared an apartment with his mother and did not marry until he was almost 40. After marrying Barbara Sklar in 1965, he saw to it that his mother had the apartment next door. His wife survives him, as do a daughter, Mindy Mann, and two grandchildren. Mr. Rickles’s son, Lawrence, died in 2011.
Donald Jay Rickles was born in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens on May 8, 1926, to Max Rickles, an insurance salesman, and the former Etta Feldman. During World War II, he honed his comedic skills while serving in the Navy. (“On the ship that I went over to the Philippines,” he told The New York Times in 2015, “out of 300 men I was the class comedian.”) After being discharged, he followed his father into the insurance business, but when he had trouble getting his customers to sign on the dotted line, decided to try acting.
He studied at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in New York, an experience that he later said gave him a greater sense of himself. But he found it difficult to get acting jobs and turned to stand-up comedy.
For a while, he pursued acting and comedy simultaneously. He did his stand-up act at Catskills resorts and in strip clubs, and his movie career got off to an auspicious start with a small part in the 1958 submarine drama “Run Silent, Run Deep,” starring Clark Gable and Burt Lancaster. But the bulk of his film work in the 1960s was in low-budget beach movies: “Bikini Beach,” “Muscle Beach Party” and “Pajama Party,” all in 1964, and “Beach Blanket Bingo” in 1965.
Photo
Mr. Rickles and his mother, Etta, celebrating her 74th birthday in Las Vegas in 1975.Credit-Associated Press
By that time, his comedy career had begun gathering momentum. Focusing less on prepared material and more on interaction with his audience, he had found his voice. He was not the first insult comedian — and in fact an earlier master of the comic insult, Jack E. Leonard, was known to complain that Mr. Rickles’s act was too similar to his — but he soon became far and away the most successful.
Bookings in the late 1950s at the Slate Brothers nightclub in Hollywood and the lounge of the Sahara Hotel in Las Vegas spread the word. During his Slate Brothers engagement, Carl Reiner recalled in “Mr. Warmth,” the biggest names in show business felt that “if they hadn’t been insulted by Rickles, they weren’t with it.”
His appearances insulting celebrities on the Dean Martin roasts and his sparring matches with Carson cemented Mr. Rickles’s reputation, but his unscripted brand of humor proved an uneasy fit for weekly television. A variety show in 1968 and a situation comedy in 1972, both called “The Don Rickles Show,” were short-lived, as was “Daddy Dearest,” a 1993 sitcom in which he and the comedian Richard Lewis played father and son. The closest thing to a hit show he had was “CPO Sharkey,” a Navy comedy, which aired from 1976 to 1978.
Critics were often not sure what to make of Mr. Rickles. John J. O’Connor of The Times wrote in 1972 that for some his humor “will always remain tasteless,” while for others “it has its delicious moments of madness.” Tom Shales of The Washington Post, 26 years later, was more enthusiastic, praising him as “mythic, timeless, fearless — endowed by the gods with some absurd miraculous gift.”
No critic, however thoughtful, could quite explain Mr. Rickles’s durability in show business, given that until the end of his career he was peppering his act with slurs and stereotypes long out of favor. And yet he not only got away with it, but he also flourished.
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From left, Mr. Rickles, Frank Sinatra and the host, Johnny Carson, on “The Tonight Show” in 1976.CreditGene Arias/NBCU Photo Bank, via Getty Images
His own theory was that he was being rewarded for saying things others wanted to say but couldn’t. “I’m the guy at the Christmas party,” he said more than once, “who makes fun of the boss on Friday night and still has his job on Monday morning.”
Although Mr. Rickles sometimes expressed regret that he did not have more of a career as an actor, he did enjoy unexpected cinematic success late in life. In 1995, Martin Scorsese cast him in “Casino,” with Robert De Niro and Sharon Stone, and that same year he found a new audience as the voice of Mr. Potato Head in the hugely successful animated feature “Toy Story,” a role he reprised in its sequels. “Toy Story 4” is scheduled for release in 2019, but it is not known whether Mr. Rickles had done any recording for it before his death. In 2011, he was the voice of a frog in the movie “Zookeeper” and played the long-lost husband of Betty White’s character on the sitcom “Hot in Cleveland.”
In 2007, Mr. Rickles published a loosely structured memoir, “Rickles’ Book,” and was the subject of Mr. Landis’s documentary, shown on HBO, which was built around a performance at the Stardust Hotel-Casino in Las Vegas shortly before it was torn down.
In 2014, he was the subject of an all-star tribute (inevitably, it turned out to be more like a roast) broadcast on the Spike cable channel. That show included appearances by David Letterman, Jerry Seinfeld, Jon Stewart and Bob Newhart, whose soft-spoken style of comedy could not be further removed from Mr. Rickles’s, but who he often said was his closest friend in show business.
Health problems inevitably slowed Mr. Rickles down, but even after a leg infection in 2014 affected his ability to walk, he continued performing, making occasional concert and television appearances. In May 2015, he was one of the last guests on “Late Show With David Letterman.”
As recently as 2007, the year he turned 81, Mr. Rickles had been working, by his count, about 75 nights a year.
“The only way I would stop is if my health goes, God forbid, or the audience isn’t with me anymore,” he told The Times that year. “Besides, I got to keep going. My manager told me he has to put his kid through college. His kid is 10 years old.”
Source; NY Times
Rick Ross Plea Deal Nets No Jail Time For Assault & Kidnapping
Rick Ross was sentenced to five years probation after entering a plea to multiple charges Tuesday in Fayette County court in Fayetteville, GA. The Rick Ross plea deal had Ross pleading guilty to aggravated assault, battery, simple assault, three counts of pointing a pistol at another and possession of less than an ounce of marijuana.
The Rick Ross plea deal stems from an incident from June 2015 when Roberts and his bodyguard, Nadrian James, were accused of holding service workers in his guest house against their will. He was also accused of beating one of the victims with a pistol.
Initially, Ross and his attorneys claimed that there was a party going on in the house, put together by one of his worked, but when Ross arrived the lights were off so he entereed only to be attacked in the dark, which prompted him to act in self-defense.
Ross’ probation is conditional, including no drugs or alcohol, anger management, no possession of any firearm and no contact with the victims. Rick Ross’ bodyguard, Nadrian James, also entered a plea to aggravated assault, battery, simple assault, three counts of pointing a pistol at another and driving without a license. He was also sentenced to five years probation on the came conditions.
The WBLS April Fools Day Comedy Show Still Delivering Huge Laughs
The WBLS April Fools Day Comedy Show did it again! For the 19th year, New York and the tri-state area’s home for R&B put together one of the funniest shows of the weekend with an A-List list line-up of talent for their April Fools Day Comedy Show.
Hosted by one of the Queens of Comedy, the lovely and talented Sommore aka the Human Chandalier, because “I compete with no one and shine no matter what.” She kicked off what would be a long night of some of the best Donald Trump jokes I’ve heard yet, more proof that bad presidents are great for comedians, if nothing else.
As the only woman on the bill for the WBLS April Fools Day Comedy Show, she did more than hold her own. She represented and stood out as a performer, comedian and a woman with impeccable taste in her sparkling pants suit.
Don “DC” Curry, the ageless veteran was next, imparting jokes about age and the realities of getting older. He’s been doing comedy so long that some in the audience may have forgotten just how funny he really is.
Comedians Arsenio Hall and Michael Blackson backstage
The only disappointment from the show came shortly after Arsenio Hall took the stage. A majority of the crowd instantly gravitated to him for his history in New York City (Coming To America) and his legendary late night television run, but a small group of hecklers, who decided to come to a comedy show with their panties in a bunch, tried to ruin his set for the rest of the crowd. Admittedly, Hall wasn’t laugh out loud funny, but he was the second comedian on the bill for a reason and furthermore that’s just not his style of comedy. He’s a storyteller.
Once Arsenio realized he was being heckled his clap back was absolutely vicious! And that became the best part of his set.
Thankfully, Sommore was able to steady the crowd back to normalcy after his set was done.
Michael Blackson, the African King of Comedy was up next and he was just a barrel of laughs, delivering punchline after punchline for his set. He joked in himself, joked on the demographics of the crowd and had more jokes on himself. But the laughs were nonstop.
Atlanta’s own, Arnez J was next on the bill. The former host of BET’s Comic View was consistent as ever. He was everything fans remember from his Comic View days, but of course updated to fit the times and to cover his age. He started his set saying that his jokes are based on race and he indeed talked about just about everyone throughout his memorable set.
Tommy Davidson and Sommore backstage
The headliner for the night was Tommy Davidson. For me at least, he was the wild card. While I know he is hilarious from his In Living Color days, I had never seen a stand-up set from Tommy. The D.C. native didn’t disappoint. A visual comedian in the utmost sense, Tommy was in his element, using the entire stage to pull out the laughs. He also joked about the differences between different races, particularly Black women and White women. And he played out the assassination of Agent Orange in one of the most hilarious moments of the night.
Funny doesn’t even begin to say it. The WBLS April Fools Day Comedy Show was epic!
Stay connected to all the comedians and WBLS for more event news:
Donald Glover’s ‘Atlanta,’ Becomes A Peabody Awards Finalist!
COURTESY OF FX/HBO
Beyonce’s visual album “Lemonade” and Donald Glover’s freshman FX series “Atlanta” were among the finalists for the 76th Annual Peabody Awards, the Peabody Awards Board of Jurors announced Wednesday.
Other notable finalists this year include the first season of the Marvel-Netflix series “Luke Cage,” which stars Mike Colter as a man with superhuman strength and impenetrable skin, and Ava DuVernay’s Oscar-nominated documentary “13th,” which explores racial issues within the U.S. prison system.
The full list of finalists below represents the 60 finalists that represent the most compelling and empowering stories released in electronic media during 2016. Over the next several weeks, the awards organizers will winnow that list down to 30 winning programs. Peabody Award winners and finalists will be celebrated at a gala event on May 20 in New York. The event will be taped for a television special to air on both PBS and Fusion networks on June 2 at 9 p.m/8c. Rashida Jones, a previous Peabody winner for “Parks and Recreation” and current star of “Angie Tribeca,” will serve as host.
Read the full list of finalist below.
CHILDREN’S PROGRAMMING
“Ask the Storybots” JibJab Bros. Studios (Netflix)
“Tumble Leaf” Amazon Studios and Bix Pix Entertainment (Amazon)
DOCUMENTARY
“A Girl in the River: The Price of Forgiveness” HBO Documentary Films and SOC Films (HBO)
“Audrie & Daisy” AfterImage Public Media in association with Actual Films (Netflix)
“Chasing Heroin” FRONTLINE (PBS/WGBH)
“Confronting ISIS” FRONTLINE (PBS/WGBH)
“Exodus” FRONTLINE (PBS/WGBH)
“4.1 Miles” The New York Times Op-Docs (NYTimes.com)
“Great Performances: Hamilton’s America”
A RadicalMedia Production in association with THIRTEENTH PRODUCTIONS LLC for WNET (PBS)
“Hip-Hop Evolution” Banger Films (Netflix, HBO Canada)
“Independent Lens: The Armor of Light” Purple Mickey Productions, in association with Fork Films (PBS)
“Independent Lens: The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution”
Firelight Films, Inc. and the Independent Television Service (ITVS) (PBS)
“Independent Lens: Trapped”
Trilogy Films LLC Bigmouth Productions, Cedar Creek Productions and the Independent Television Service (ITVS) (PBS)
“Islamic State’s Most Wanted” BBC World Service (BBC News Online)
“Last Chance U”
A Netflix production in association with Conde Nast Entertainment, Endgame Entertainment and One Potato Productions (Netflix)
“Marathon: The Patriots Day Bombing”
HBO Documentary Films and Break Thru Films in association with The Boston Globe (HBO)
“MAVIS!” Film First and HBO Documentary Films (HBO)
“O.J.: Made in America” ESPN Films and Laylow Films (ESPN)
“POV: Hooligan Sparrow” POV | American Documentary (PBS)
“POV: The Look of Silence” POV | American Documentary (PBS)
“POV: The Return” POV | American Documentary (PBS)
“POV: What Tomorrow Brings” POV | American Documentary (PBS)
“Southwest of Salem: The Story of the San Antonio Four”
Deborah S. Esquenazi Productions, LLC (Investigation Discovery)
“The Forger” The New York Times (Video)
“The Secret Life of Muslims”
Seftel Productions (Vox, The USA Today Network, PRI’s The World, CBS Sunday Morning)
“13th” Forward Movement LLC and Kandoo Films (Netflix)
“Zero Days”
Magnolia Pictures and Participant Media, in association with Showtime Documentary Films, Global Produce/Jigsaw Productions (Showtime)
ENTERTAINMENT
“American Crime” ABC Studios (ABC)
“Atlanta” FX Productions (FX Networks)
“Better Things” FX Productions (FX Networks)
“Cleverman”
Goalpost Pictures and Pukeko Pictures for ABC-TV Australia in co-production with SundanceTV and Red Arrow International, with the assistance of Screen Australia, Screen NSW and The New Zealand Screen Production Grant (SundanceTV)
“Happy Valley” BBC One (BBC One, Netflix)
“Horace and Pete” Pig Newton, Inc. (louisck.net)
“Lemonade” HBO Entertainment in association with Parkwood Entertainment (HBO)
“Marvel’s Luke Cage” Marvel Television in association with ABC Studios for Netflix (Netflix)
“National Treasure” The Forge (Channel 4)
“Stranger Things” 21 Laps for Netflix (Netflix)
“This Is Us” Rhode Island Ave. Productions, Zaftig Films, 20th Century Fox Television (NBC)
“The Night Of” HBO Entertainment in association with BBC, Bad Wolf Productions and Film Rites (HBO)
“VEEP” HBO Entertainment (HBO)
NEWS
“Arrested at School: Criminalizing Classroom Misbehavior” KNTV Bay Area (NBC)
“Charity Caught on Camera” WTHR-TV Indianapolis (NBC)
“Dangerous Exposure” WTHR-TV Indianapolis (NBC)
“Heart of an Epidemic, West Virginia’s Opioid Addiction”
The CBS Evening News with Scott Pelley (CBS)
“ISIS in Iraq and Syria” (CNN)
“Student Debt” HBO, VICE, Bill Maher (HBO)
“Undercover in Syria” (CNN)
PUBLIC SERVICE
“#MoreThanMean-Women in Sports ‘Face’ Harassment”
Just Not Sports & One Tree Forest Films (YouTube/Twitter/Facebook)
“100 Women” BBC World Service (BBC World Network)
RADIO/PODCAST
“A Life Sentence: Victims, Offenders, Justice, and My Mother” Transom.org
“Homecoming” Gimlet Media
“How to Be a Girl” Marlo Mack, in partnership with KUOW Seattle
“In The Dark” APM Reports
“The Heart: Silent Evidence Series” The Heart
“This American Life: Anatomy of Doubt”
This American Life, PBC in collaboration with The Marshall Project and ProPublica (Multiple stations/platforms)
“The Unexplainable Disappearance of Mars Patel” (Panoply)
“Unprisoned” WWNO and AIR
“Wells Fargo Hurts Whistleblowers” (NPR)
WEB
“Hell and High Water” ProPublica and The Texas Tribune
Source: Variety
Hannibal Buress Joins Jeremy Renner And Ed Helms In New Line’s ‘Tag’
REX SHUTTERSTOCK
Jeremy Renner and Hannibal Buress are in negotiations to join Ed Helms in the New Line comedy “Tag,” sources tell Variety.
Jeff Tomsic is on board to direct from a script by Mark Steilen and Rob McKittrick. Todd Garner, Steilen, and Sean Robins are producing.
The film is based on a true story featured in the Wall Street Journal about a group of friends who have been playing a no-holds-barred version of the children’s game Tag for the last 30 years.
Details of Renner and Buress’ roles are currently unknown, other than the fact that they will be part of the core group of friends.
For Renner, the role marks a change of pace. The actor is known more for his dramatic and action-heavy roles in the “Mission: Impossible” franchise and “American Hustle.” Renner was most recently seen in the Oscar-nominated “Arrival” and is starring in Taylor Sheridan’s “Wind River,” which will be released this August. He is currently working on “Avengers: Infinity War.”
Buress, on the other hand, has emerged as one of the hot tickets on the comedy tour scene. On the film side, he can be seen next be seen in “Baywatch” and “Spider-Man: Homecoming.”
Renner is repped by CAA and Felker, Toczek, Suddleson and Abramson. Buress is repped by WME, 3 Arts Entertainment, and Hansen, Jacobson, Teller, Hoberman, Newman, Warren, Richman, Rush, Kaller & Gellman.
Source: Variety
‘That’s So Raven’ Spinoff Comedy Ordered By Disney Channel
Disney Channel
Disney Channel has ordered That’s So Raven spinoff Raven’s Home, a multi-cam series that continues the story of the award-winning family comedy. Production is scheduled to begin this month in Los Angeles for a scheduled premiere later this year.
The planned sequel originally was announced last year, with series stars Raven-Symoné and Anneliese Van Der Pol attached to reprise their roles as best friends Raven Baxter and Chelsea Daniels. Raven announced at the time that she was leaving her then-spot on The View to work on the sequel.
Disney Channel
Rounding out the cast are Issac Brown (black-ish, Miles from Tomorrowland) and Navia Robinson (Being Mary Jane) as Raven’s 11-year-old twins Booker and Nia, respectively, and Jason Maybaum (Superstore) who will play Chelsea’s nine-year-old son Levi. Sky Katz (America’s Got Talent) also joins the cast as Nia’s best friend Tess.
Disney Channel
“There is only one Raven – and for over 25 years, she has blessed audiences around the world with the greatest gift of all – the pure, unadulterated joy of laugh-out-loud funny. After being a part of over 20 different Disney projects, we are thrilled to be bringing Raven home to Disney Channel once again,” said Gary Marsh, president and chief creative officer, Disney Channels Worldwide.
Geared toward kids 6-14 and their families, the series will pick up with Raven and Chelsea, who are now divorced single mothers raising their two separate families in one chaotic, but fun household full of friends. When one of Raven’s kids begins to show signs that they have inherited her trait of catching glimpses of the future, the already hectic household gets turned upside down, keeping even Raven on her toes.
As previously announced, Raven-Symoné will serve as an executive producer on the series. Longtime writer/producer partners Scott Thomas and Jed Elinoff (Disney Channel’s Best Friends Whenever, Emmy nominees for R.L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour) will also executive produce.
That’s So Raven was a breakout hit for the network, setting ratings records with its January 2003 premiere, and ran for four seasons and 100 episodes. Nearly 10 years after airing its final episode, the series still delivered 1.057 million total viewers for its midnight telecasts on Disney Channel in 2016.
The original series also broke new ground, with Raven becoming the first African-American woman to have her name in a comedy series title. At age 19, she also was named producer on the series. With That’s So Raven, she won four NAACP Image Awards and two Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards, among others The series also received a primetime Emmy nomination in the Outstanding Children’s Program category.