Those crazy kids have relationships all figured out.
'Desperate Housewives' trial takes a nastier turn.
A new look at summer's action-packed revisionist history.
There's a lot of scowling going on.
Because nothing says country music like dumping your NBA player husband?
Philosophical or just a distraction?
HBO: #1 destination for depressing history.
Also joining is 'Prison Break's' Wentworth Miller
The corps. is looking good!
"What lies in the shadow of the Bat?"
We've got a huge Millennium Trilogy giveaway for you!
Overture Films has released a poster for the upcoming cop drama 'Brooklyn’s Finest.'
Ken Kesey author of One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest dead
HOLLYWOOD, Sept. 1, 2000 -- Amnesty International is honoring seven individuals in its first Enduring Spirit Awards in recognition of personal commitments to helping others secure fair, equal and secure treatment around the world. This year’s honorees are: Ellen Degeneres, Martin Sheen, Rhino Records co-founder and President Richard Foos, California Sen. Barbara Boxer, Degeneres’ former lover Anne Heche, teenager Anthony Colin and Digna Ochoa y Placido. Anthony Colin was a 10th grader at Orange County, Calif.’s El Modena High School when school officials dismissed his proposal to start a Gay-Straight Alliance club to foster respect among gay and heterosexual students. The Orange Unified School District voted not to allow the formation of the club, but Colin and his supporters fought, and a federal district judge in February ordered the school district to permit the club, which h
Paul Reubens, who built his career as Pee-Wee Herman on the hit Saturday morning television show Pee-Wee's Playhouse, to Entertainment Weekly on his idea of a good name for a porn star:
"I'd probably just use my own name."
SANTA MONICA, Calf., Feb. 10, 2000 -- "Hey Vern," roll the credits. Jim Varney, the big-nosed, gawky actor who brought empty-headed hayseed pitch-man Ernest P. Worrell to life in a series of popular, albeit arguably annoying TV commercials and then in a skein of kids' movies, died today of lung cancer. He was 50. Varney, an actor since his teen years, had been in the public eye for more than 25 years. He was a stand-up comic in New York in the early 1970s, and became a regular on the TV variety series "Johnny Cash and Friends" in 1976. He also was a regular on "Fernwood 2-Night," "Operation Petticoat" and other late 1970s TV comedy shows. His (literally) in-your-face TV ads, with his nose pressed against the camera and his incessant "Hey Vern" sales spiels, began airing in 1980. But it was Varney's "Ernest" movies, with their innocent brand of slapstick, goofball comedy
The 'Ringer' star has some funny business under his belt.