The Great Tune-Out of 2024
Ratings are low, turnout is weak, and Americans are unenthused about the prospect of a Trump-Biden rematch in November. But given the stakes of the election, will the public start paying more attention?
Ratings are low, turnout is weak, and Americans are unenthused about the prospect of a Trump-Biden rematch in November. But given the stakes of the election, will the public start paying more attention?
“Anything that I tend to appreciate in life that feels fun and spontaneous is actually incredibly systematic, whether it be a movie or a cinnamon roll.”
The comedian has been hot on the awards trail as a producer on May December, but don’t expect him to host: “It’s always fun to steal the spotlight at the Golden Globes just with presenting.”
King cursed and slurred her way through Parton’s “Marry Me.”
Or why Nikki Haley can’t quite catch a break—Iowa, New Hampshire, and Donald Trump’s America be damned.
During a series of solo engagements in Swindon, the queen said her husband was feeling “fine” in the run up to a Tuesday procedure for his prostate condition.
She opted for an all-black ensemble.
Zazie Beetz and Jack Quaid will announce the nominees live in all 23 categories.
The Duchess of York said she’s “taking some time to myself” after sharing the news.
Netflix will change up its own playbook to give the Richard Linklater-directed festival crowdpleaser the audience it deserves.
The Florida governor—who just suspended his campaign for president—acts like a bully. But, in the end, he’s but a yes-man for Trump.
Their latest characters are stunning, stunted—and in the awards race.
After his heart attack in 2019, the Vermont senator’s presidential bid was in dire need of a boost from a young star. (“We were circling the drain,” says one staffer.) But, as Hunter Walker and Luppe B. Luppen recount in an excerpt of The Truce, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez had some serious hang-ups.
When New York State opened its borders to individuals seeking abortions—three years before the Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision on January 22, 1973—it radically expanded access in America. But as The New Yorker documents in its film Deciding Vote, it wouldn’t have happened without the vote of one lawmaker.
Tumult in Trumpland: PB vs. West Palm, entrenched elites vs. Gen X newbies, Everglades Club vs. Carriage House.
Rust Cohle’s Alaska connection, a sex cult callback, and more morsels from episode two.
As the “corpsicle” thaws on the ice rink, Navarro and Danvers discover Annie K.’s mysterious relationship with scientist Raymond Clark. Plus, Christopher Eccleston joins to chat about letting everything hang out in his sex scene with Jodie Foster.
The Philadelphia Eagles center will cheer on his brother, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, alongside the singer and 71,000 other fans.
The Florida governor abruptly ended his 2024 bid for the White House on Sunday and endorsed former President Donald Trump.