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News

Charles Black

Drake Says 2020 Was ‘The Hardest Year Maybe In Human History’ Due To Covid-19
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Drake had people talking online this week after calling 2020 the “hardest year maybe in human history.”

The Canadian hitmaker was speaking about Lil Baby’s rise to fame in the Prime Video documentary, “Untrapped: The Story of Lil Baby”, when he said: “The hardest year maybe in human history that we have ever been through?

“Forget music, just as a people, like, the hardest time to ever connect with people, relate to people was clearly…” he added, before the clip shared online cut off.

Read More: Drake Shows Off His New ‘Do And The Internet Can’t Handle It

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A post shared by The Neighborhood Talk (@theneighborhoodtalk)

Read More: Drake Is The Most Shazamed Artist Of All Time 20 Years After App Launch

Drake’s comments sparked an online frenzy, with some reminding him that there were many things that were worse than the pandemic...
See full article at ET Canada
  • 9/2/2022
  • by Becca Longmire
  • ET Canada
The Morning Show Season 3: Everything We Know So Far About The Return Of The Series
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Earlier this year, the Apple TV+ series "The Morning Show" was renewed for a third season, with most of its ensemble cast members set to return. The show features Jennifer Aniston as news anchor Alex Levy and Reese Witherspoon as field reporter Bradley Jackson. It follows Alex struggling to keep her job when a rivalry begins to brew between her and Jackson; an impulsive decision-maker who is quickly rising to the top. The series is an unapologetic, outspoken drama that showcases the ruthless world of morning news through the lens of the people that work there. The series has often gone through last-minute rewrites to incorporate major, ongoing real-life events, including the #MeToo movement and the Covid-19 pandemic.

While the first season of "The Morning Show" followed Alex fighting hard to retain her job as the top news anchor after her on-air partner of 15 years, Mitch Kessler (Steve Carell), is...
See full article at Slash Film
  • 8/20/2022
  • by Fatemeh Mirjalili
  • Slash Film
The Films Of Whit Stillman: A Retrospective
Charlie: Do you know the film, "The Discreet Charm of the Bourgeoise?" When I first saw that title, I though, "Finally, someone is going to tell the truth about the bourgeoisie." What a disappointment. It would be hard to imagine a less fair or accurate portrait.

Cynthia: Well of course, Bunuel is a surrealist. Despising the bourgeoisie is part of their credo.

Nick: (disgusted) Where do they get off?

Charlie: The truth is the bourgeoisie does have a lot of charm.

Nick: Of course it does, the surrealists were just a bunch of social climbers.

- Whit Stillman, "Metropolitan"

Famously dubbed the “the Wasp Woody Allen” and the “Dickens of people with too much inner life” by reviewers and critics when his comedy-of-manners indie pictures arrived in the early 1990s, Whit Stillman’s ironic, clever and urbane examinations of upward and downward social mobility and the shallow concerns and preoccupations of the young,...
See full article at The Playlist
  • 4/6/2012
  • by Oliver Lyttelton
  • The Playlist
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