Cast and crew mourn the canceled HBO drama.
The producers warned us no one was safe...
They're probably also liars, too.
I hope he got dad's approval first.
HBO aired the pilot a month early to whet our appetites.
Betting on race horses has never been more exciting.
Filmmaker buys his own movie and plans to self-distribute. Is it a good idea?
With the opening of Disney’s 'Tron: Legacy' this weekend and its expected blockbuster debut, we take a look back at the films that made December a month to remember at the movie theatre.
He promises to deliver Walt Disney magic without copying 'Night at the Museum.'
'Meet the Fockers' star added in post-production
Michael Mann to direct new drama series for HBO
Hoffman and Bateman caught on KissCam last night in Los Angeles
Pierce Brosnan bids adieu to James Bond, Dustin Hoffman saves allergic bee sting victim, let the "Seacrest…Out! jokes about Ryan Seacrest begin, and more.
Bill is Donald Trump's New Apprentice, Arnold Schwarzenegger Bolsters Calif. Film Industry, Kurt Cobain Biopic in Works John Malkovich Zooey Deschanel Sam Rockwell
News, Jan. 21: Matthew Perry, Alicia Silverstone Picked As "Fun, Fearless"; Clay Aiken, Kelly Clarkson Go On Tour; Dustin Hoffman Joins "Focker" Cast; Ben Stiller Robert De Niro Janet Jackson Diane Keaton
News, Nov. 20 Johnny Depp is "Sexiest Man Alive," Eleven Films to Compete for Animation Oscar, Salma Hayek and Colin Farrell Covered in "Dust," Finding Nemo Brother Bear Kurt Cobain Mel Gibson The Passion Rush Limbaugh Keith Gordon Ethan Hawke
News, June 27: Kevin Costner Gets Engaged, Pete Townshend Speaks Out on Child Pornography, Music Industry Ads Warn Downloaders
Uncertainty over the U.S.-led war against Iraq has not only cast a shadow on the 75th annual Academy Awards set to take place Sunday night at the Kodak Theater, but on the entertainment industry as a whole.
Hundreds of stars are expected at the British Academy Television Awards in London's Theatre Royal Drury Lane tomorrow Baftas Chris Tarrant Brass Eye Tonya Harding Lance Bass Paramount Pictures War of the Worlds HG Wells Lisa Bonet Cosby Show Reunion NBC the Osbournes MTV Nirvana Courtney Love Krist Novoselic David Grohl EminemRobert Urich Antonio Banderas Anthony Quinn Award Rusty Burrell Judge Wapner The People's Court Animal Planet Jusge Wapner's Animal Court
After 20 years, the Chicago Tribune has dumped its celebrity- and gossip-studded The Inc. Column. It gave no reason.
Smokey Robinson, Sheryl Crow, Mary J. Blige, Melissa Etheridge and Johnny Lang were among some of the performers at Thursday's Motown industry bash, Reuters reports. The event raised more than $1.5 million for the medical research and treatment organization City of Hope. Canadian media mogul Edgar Bronfman Jr., executive vice-chairman of Vivendi Universal, was the evening's honoree.
Barbara Olson, a prominent attorney and news commentator, and David Angell, one of the co-creators of NBC's Frasier, were among the victims in Tuesday's tragedy.
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 5, 2000 -- The Backstreet Boys say that their love is all they have to give. And now not one but two of the dreamy boy banders have proven so. Brian Littrell married actress Leighanne (yes, that’s really how she spells her name) Wallace in the blushing bride’s hometown of Atlanta on Saturday. Littrell’s BSB bandmates -- cousin Kevin Richardson, Nick Carter, A.J. McLean and Howie Dorough -- were among the 300 in attendance at the nuptials, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Wallace, 30, donned a white satin gown by Vera Wang, and Littrell, 25, and his groomsmen were decked out in charcoal gray tuxedoes complete with top hats. There was no word on honeymoon plans. Littrell and Wallace met on the set of the video for the BSB’s 1997 hit "As Long As You Love Me." Wallace has also appeared in TV’s "Silk Stalkings" and "One Life to L
HOLLYWOOD, June 15, 2000 -- No more Ms. Nice "Survivor." After the first two ex-castaways professed to being cool with being booted off the CBS reality series, Stacey Stillman -- the contestant who got the hook on Wednesday's installment -- says she's "pissed." "They kicked off their bug-eating hero instead of their food stealing, stumbling, ornery old Navy Seal," Stillman writes on the CBS Web site (www.cbs.com). The "ornery old Navy Seal" in question is, of course, Rudy, the ornery old Navy Seal, who manuevered himself out of being voted off Wednesday by getting them to evict Stillman instead. Stillman, 27, is a lawyer from San Francisco. For those of you keeping score at home, there are now 13 castaways left -- with 12 elimination rounds to go before the show's $1 million winner is crowned.
China has unveiled a five-year plan to consolidate many of its mainland film studios, reducing them from 40 to 6, the South China Morning Post reported Friday. Currently the mainland film industry produces about 100 movies a year, with revenue of about $115 million -- or an average of only $1.15 million per film in a country with a population of 1.2 billion.
In a development that could have devastating consequences for giant media corporations, the Los Angeles Times has disclosed that several independent record promoters keep detailed logs of songs played by radio stations, the amount of money the promoters receive from record labels for persuading stations to add the songs to their playlists and the amount of payments the promoters subsequently make to stations in the form of cash, travel and tickets to performances. Copies of some of the logs were reproduced in Tuesday edition of the newspaper. The Times quoted Peter Hart, an analyst for media watchdog Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting, as saying, "What you have here is a smoking gun.
Actor Dustin Hoffman will be going behind the camera for the first time for Disney's upcoming legal drama Personal Injuries.
Major record labels announced Friday that they are going to clean up the music industry's bad image by forming a task force that will monitor marketing guidelines in selling violent and lewd lyrics to children. This comes after a blistering report last month by the Federal Trade Commission that reprimanded the music industry and its failure to stop the marketing of such materials, as it had promised to do in the wake of the shootings at the Columbine High School.
A "parental advisory" sticker may warn parents about an album's violent content, but it is not stopping the record industry from targeting such material at young America, according to the Federal Trade Commission.
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 11, 2000 -- The U.S. entertainment industry aggressively markets violent films, music and games to children even when they have been labeled for adults only, says an FTC report released today. The Federal Trade Commission report, which didn’t address the causal link between violence and the media, charged that Hollywood’s marketing plans undermined the ratings system credibility used by the entertainment industry to warn parents about violence. “Target marketing to children of entertainment products with violent content is pervasive and aggressive,” FTC Chairman Robert Pitofsky told a news conference. The FTC report, ordered by President Clinton and congressional leaders after the deadly shootings at Columbine High School in Colorado in April, received immediate responses from the candidates in the presidential race. Vice President Al Gore began
Napster's clone Aimster is suing the Recording Industry Association of America, seeking a "declamatory judgement" that protection of user's privacy is not copyright infringement.